Analysis of the Czech magnetic anomaly data obtained by ground-based and airborne magnetic surveys
- 1Institute of Geophysics of the CAS, Prague, Czechia (ph@ig.cas.cz)
- 2Czech Geological Survey, Prague, Czechia
The modern epoch of ground magnetic surveying activity on the Czech territory was started by the Institute of Geophysics by setting up a fundamental network of the 1st order in 1957-58. It consists of 199 points and was reoccupied in 1976-78 and 1994-96. The anomaly maps were constructed by subtraction of the IGRF model.
Extensive aeromagnetic measurements have been performed from 1959 to 1972 by permalloy probe of Soviet provenience. The accuracy of the instrumentation was about (and often above) 10 nT. The second period of airborne survey started in 1976. Thanks to the deployment of proton precession magnetometer, the accuracy improved to ~ 2 nT. Since 2004 the measurements were carried out by caesium magnetometer. The data were digitized, known anthropogenic anomalies were cleared away and data were transformed to the regular grid with step 250 m. The final data file of magnetic anomalies ΔT, administered by the Czech Geological Survey, represents a substantial contribution to the exploration of ore deposits and to the structure geology in general.
In view of the fact that data file of magnetic anomalies was compiled from data acquired by heterogeneous methods in the course of more than 50 years, our recent study is aimed at looking into the homogeneity of the data by comparison them with ground-based magnetic survey. A simple comparison of the contour maps showed good similarity of the large regional anomalies. For more detailed analysis, the variation of ΔT in the neighbourhood of all points of the fundamental network was inspected and the basic statistic characteristics were computed. Summary results as well as several examples will be presented accordingly as the INSPIRE compliant services and eventually as the user-friendly web map application and made available on the CGS Portal http://mapy.geology.cz/ and on the updated web of the CzechGeo/EPOS consortium www.czechgeo.cz. Incorporating the map into the World Digital Magnetic Anomaly Map (WDMAM – IAGA) is also under consideration. This data will also be interesting for the EPOS.
How to cite: Hejda, P., Čápová, D., Hudečková, E., and Kolejka, V.: Analysis of the Czech magnetic anomaly data obtained by ground-based and airborne magnetic surveys, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-3314, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-3314, 2020.