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7/27/2019 McElhanney MapInfo-Discover2 Course-Notes Surfaces
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©McElhanney Consulting Services 2012
This is an excerpt from Exercise 7, “Surfaces”, of the course manual provided for
the McElhanney course MapInfo Professional and Encom Discover Mineral
Exploration Module 2.
Modify Grid DisplayWhen a grid is first created it may not have a satisfactory appearance. The grid created in the
previous exercise may be too dark, have strong shadows or might have the wrong colour scheme.
In this exercise you will use the Modify Grid Display utility to change the appearance of the grid.
Modify Sun-Shading
1. Click Surfaces >
Modify Grid Display (or click the Sun-shade
Grid button on theSurfaces toolbar).
2. Click the Sun tab and
check the box for Auto
Apply (Note that thismay cause long delays
when large data sets are
used).3. Modify the settings for
Saturation, Intensity
and Shadow. Observethe results in the map
window. The sun angle
can be modified by
dragging the sunsymbol to different
locations. Once a
suitable result isachieved, click the
Close button at the
bottom right.
Modify Grid Colors
1. If the Modify Grid
Display window is not
open, click Surfaces >Modify Grid Display (or click the Alter grid
colours button on the
Surfaces toolbar).
2. The default setting is alinear stretch using
Pseudocolour.lut (lut =
Move this to
interactivelychange the sunan le.
Step 4
Step 3
Acceptdefaults orclick tochange
colours orvalues.
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‘look up table’). Change this to geochemistry.clr. Note that there are two file extension for
colour tables; *.clr and *.lut. Percentile breaks can only be created for the *.clr type.3. Experiment with the different method options; you will need to click the Apply button after
each change.
4. Select the Percentile Breaks
option, and then choosePercentile Breaks (10) from
the dropdown list underOptions. Accept the default
colours and percentile values,
or click in the rows to changethat values or colours. If you
then select the option to
Colour to Data Breaks, you
will see the actual values thatcorrespond to the percentile
values.
Create a Grid LegendThere is no setup procedure for
creating a grid legend, other than toto match grid colours to values, as
was done when grid colours were
modified. The appearance of thelegend is determined by how colours are matched to values.
1. From the Surfaces menu click Make Legend for Grid. Alternatively, you can click the Grid
Legend button on the Surfaces toolbar. If more than one grid files are open, you will be
asked to specify the grid.
Why are there Negative Values in the Grid?
Depending on the input data values and the method you used to create a grid, you might end upwith negative values in the grid. Negative values can occur for two reasons:
• There are actually negative values in the data. These values could indicate no data, lostsamples, samples not taken, etc. These should be dealt with through data conditioning on theInput page of the gridding tool. As you did earlier in the exercise (on the Input page of the
gridding tool), use the statistics explorer button to see if negative values exist in the sample
data. If negative values exist, use data conditioning to specify values less than or equal to
zero as invalid.
• Negative values can occur in a grid even if there are no negative values in the input datapoints, and even if data conditioning was used to exclude negative values. This is particularly
prevalent when using the minimum curvature method, but it does not happen when using the
triangulation method. Negative values are created when the gridding process projects adecreasing value trend into an area where there are no input samples points. For example,
suppose that along a constant direction the gridding tool encounters values of 100 ppm; then
50 metres away, 60 ppm; then another 50 metres away, 10 ppm; then another 50 metresfurther away, no sample. Given the trend of rapidly decreasing values and the fact that the
Notice negativevalues. See belowfor explanation.
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last value encountered was close to zero, the gridding tool will likely create a negative value
in the area where no sample was encountered.
False Anomalies
Something important to note here is that false anomalies of high values can be created for the
exact same reason that negative values can be created. Reversing the trend (looking in theopposite direction) in the example on the previous page could result in the creation of values
much higher than 100 ppm in an area where possibly no samples exist. This is particularlycommon when using the minimum curvature method, though the effect can be reduced by
increasing the boundary tension value and by using a buffer to limit the maximum distance
from a sample that a value can be calculated. It does not happen when using the triangulationmethod.
Deriving Elevation Values from a Digital Elevation ModelIf you have a DEM (digital elevation model), you can use the Surfaces menu to update point
data, such as drillhole collars or sample locations, with elevation values derived from the DEM.
This can be useful if elevation values are not known for those points or if the DEM has moreaccurate elevation values than those currently stored for those locations. For example, initial
elevation values stored for drillholes may have been collected with a handheld GPS with ± 10
metre accuracy, but the DEM may have been generated using satellite imagery or LiDAR data
might have ± 1.5 m and ± 0.2 m respectively. Values derived from the DEM can be used toreplace those collected with the handheld GPS, or they can be added to an additional
ELEV_DEM column.
1. If it is not already open, open the Soil_Samples.tab file from the Geochem folder.2. Open a browser for the soil samples table.
3. From the BaseMap folder, open the file DEM_1.tab. The tab file will open a digital
elevation model, saved in the Geosoft grid format. The DEM will need to be displayed in the
same map window as the soil samples table.4. In MapInfo, click Table > Maintenance > Table
Structure.
5. Select the Soil_Samples table and then add an
ELEV_DEM field (elevation derived from a DEM) to
the table. The field should be Float type. A safe place
to put the new column is at the end of existing columns. As drillhole projects and
workspace files may make reference to
columns by their order number, reorderingthose columns may lead to problems when
opening workspaces or drillhole projects.6. Select all points in the Soil Samples table -the fastest way to do this is to right click the
layer in the Enhanced Layer Control, and
from the resulting menu, click Select All.
7. Click Surfaces > Assign Values from
Grid. Note that you are not asked to choose
a table at this step, as the assigning of
Step 8
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values depends on having selected points.
8. In the Assign Grid Values window, select the ELEV_DEM column. 9. Click OK. The Soil_Samples Elevation column will now show the elevation values assigned
from the DEM file.
Using a DEM to Check for Elevation Survey IssuesAt this point you should be aware that coordinates for a location are ambiguous unless they are
accompanied by projection and datum information. For example, given East-North or Latitude-Longitude coordinates for a drillhole, you won’t know where that drillhole is unless you know
whether the datum is NAD27 or NAD83. Did you know that similar issues arise with elevation
data? There are two common earth models used when surveyors report elevation data, the Geoid
model and the Ellipsoidal model. Problems arise when elevations measured in the two systems
(common on projects involving multiple stages/generations/eras of exploration) are used on the
same project, particularly when they are mixed in the same elevation column. Mixing elevation
models can lead to offsets of up to 25 metres or more (a typical difference between the twomodels at the same point). Imagine the problems that would be created in mineral deposit
resource calculation or drillhole planning if some of the drillholes had a 25 metre elevation offsetcompared to other drillholes.These problems can be found with the use of the Surfaces model and a sufficiently accurate
DEM. The following method outlines how it is done for a hypothetical drillhole collar table.
1. The collar table must already have a column containing elevation values (ELEV_SURV, for
example).
2. A new elevation column, called ELEV_DEM is added to the collar table. An Additional
column called ELEV_DIFF (elevation difference) is also created.3. A DEM with a known (and low) elevation error must be available for the drilling area.
Preferable DEM files would have been created using LiDAR (~± 20 cm) , high resolution
airphoto or satellite imagery (~± 1.5 to ± 2.5 metres). DEM files created from less accuratemethods (Geophysical RADAR, or government DEM files, for example) may have too much
error. SRTM (Space Shuttle) or ASTER DEM files are particularly unsuitable – the error is
just too high.4. The Surfaces > Assign Values tool is used to update the ELEV_DEM column with values
derived from the DEM.
5. Table > Update Column is used to update the ELEV_DIFF column with the difference
between the surveyed elevation column and the ELEV_DEM column. The expression wouldbe ELEV_DEM – ELEV_SURV, for example. The order of the expression does not matter.
The difference values will vary by several metres, according to the accuracy of the DEM, butwhat you are looking for is two distinct populations of differences – this can be accomplished by
creating a histogram of the difference values in Discover’s GraphMap module. If geoid and
ellipsoidal elevations have been mixed in the same elevation column, one population of differences will be within a few metres of zero and the other population is likely to be in the 15 –
30 metre range. Modern DEM files, such as those created with LiDAR, are often created using
the geoid model (though you will need to check with the data provider). This implies that anyelevations that are close to the DEM values created with the geoid model must also be geoid
elevations. Elevations that differ greatly from the DEM values might have been surveyed using
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the ellipsoidal model, or they might be a result of poorly surveyed points or a data entry error. If
there is a large variation in elevation differences but there are not two distinct populations, thismight mean that you have a poor DEM, poorly surveyed points or both. If you have a DEM with
high accuracy, such as one created with LiDAR, elevations derived from that DEM may be used
to replace any suspect surveyed elevation values. For further discussion refer to the section at the
back of this manual titled “Using a DEM and Discover’s GraphMap Module to IdentifyElevation Survey Issues”.
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