Agp 307 - Introduction To Magnetic Interpretation-1
Agp 307 - Introduction To Magnetic Interpretation-1
Agp 307 - Introduction To Magnetic Interpretation-1
INTRODUCTION
The interpretation of magnetic data is very similar to the interpretation of gravity data, but
considerably more complex because the magnetization of a material has not only a
magnitude, but also a direction. The earth itself has a steady magnetic field as if a strong
magnet were situated at the centre of the earth with its north pole pointing nearly
southwards. Practical measurements thus show that the natural magnetic field at the north
and south poles is vertical, with little or no horizontal component and approximately equal
to 60,000 nT, while at the equator the field is horizontal with little or no vertical component
and approximately equal to 30,000 nT(1 nT = 1 gamma).
MAGNETIC MATERIALS
A large number of materials exhibit magnetic properties with the most strongly magnetic
elements being iron, nickel and cobalt. The magnetic properties of materials vary over very
wide limits, this variation being the result of the variation in volume density of the
elementary magnets, the ease with which they can be oriented, and the persistence with
which they maintain a given orientation once it has been acquired.
Rocks become magnetized because they contain magnetic minerals. There are several such
minerals, including magnetite, hematite, pyrrhotite, ilmenite, but magnetite is by far the
most magnetic and the most common of these minerals. The other rock-forming minerals
are essentially non-magnetic. For most practical purposes, therefore, one can say that rocks
are magnetizable if they contain magnetite, and their magnetic properties depend on the
amount of magnetite disseminated among the non-magnetic minerals which make up the
principal material of the rock. This means that igneous and metamorphic rocks are much
more magnetic than sedimentary rocks, so that magnetic effects observed by airborne
magnetometers are essentially the same as they would be if the sediments were absent.
The analogue of density in the gravity method is the magnetic susceptibility. As with
density, it is not always possible to measure susceptibility directly in the field, but there are
instruments designed to be used on outcrops or rock samples. The magnetic susceptibility
is not a constant for a magnetic substance but varies with H, the inducing field. It is
therefore important in making susceptibility measurements, to use a value of H about the
same as the earth’s field.
The form of the magnetic anomaly from a given body depends on the following factors:
1.2
1
0.8
0.6 I= 90 degrees
0.4 I=60 degrees
0 I= 0 degrees
-0.2
-0.4
-0.6
We note that the magnitude and nature of the curves are greatly modified by the direction
of magnetization, where the curves have been calculated on the assumption that the body is
magnetized in the direction of the earth’s field.
Note: I = 67.50 corresponds to a magnetic latitude of 50 0. For this and higher latitudes the
assumption of a vertical primary field is usually made for quick interpretive procedures.
This assumption is however not valid at the latitude of Nigeria.
Because of the complexities mentioned above, calculations for the magnetic effect are now
made almost entirely by digital computers.
INTERPRETATION
Although magnetic interpretations are often qualitative, the procedure of matching field
anomalies with models, as done in gravity, is also used. In one method, type curves are
generated for several simple geometrical shapes under different possible conditions for
curve-matching with anomalies obtained in ground surveys. This will be done in another
laboratory assignment. In another method, the magnetic effect of a simple geometrical
body is computed and compared with the observed anomaly; modifications are then made
to the model until a good fit is obtained. Very often, a starting model is obtained with the
type curves.
EXERCISES
Note: In the following examples we assume, for simplicity, that the bodies are vertically
polarized. We again note that this assumption is not valid for the latitude of Nigeria.
1. Using the analytic expressions for the magnetic effect of the sphere, horizontal
cylinder, vertical cylinder, and thin vertical sheet (see Appendix), determine the
expressions for the maximum value of V, and the value of X (X 1/2) at which V has
fallen to half of its maximum, and the depth of the body in terms of X 1/2. If the
anomaly curve crosses X-axis, give the value of X at which this occurs.
Using the formulae and curves derived in Q.1, calculate the radius and depth
of (a) a sphere (b) a horizontal cylinder, that would give rise to this profile.
Assume:
REFERENCES
Nettleton, L.L.: Gravity and magnetic in Oil Prospecting, McGraw Hill Book Company, 1976.
APPENDIX I
TYPE CURVES
The following notation is used for the equations for the anomaly over various simple shapes
Z Z
R R
V = (4/3)IR3 V = 2IR2
= I = 2I
O P
x O P
x
Z
Z
∞ ∞
V = IR2 V = It
= I = 2I
t << z
Thin Horizontal Sheet (of Fault) The error of this approximate formula is
less than 2% when t = z/2 and decreases
rapidly for smaller values of t.
O P
V = It = 2I x
Z
∞
t