Exposed soil and mineral map of the Australian continent revealing the land at its barest
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Roberts, Dale
Wilford, J
Ghattas, Omar
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Macmillan Publishers Ltd
Abstract
Multi-spectral remote sensing has already played an important role in mapping surface
mineralogy. However, vegetation – even when relatively sparse – either covers the underlying
substrate or modifies its spectral response, making it difficult to resolve diagnostic mineral
spectral features. Here we take advantage of the petabyte-scale Landsat datasets covering
the same areas for periods exceeding 30 years combined with a novel high-dimensional
statistical technique to extract a noise-reduced, cloud-free, and robust estimate of the
spectral response of the barest state (i.e. least vegetated) across the whole continent of
Australia at 25 m2 resolution. Importantly, our method preserves the spectral relationships
between different wavelengths of the spectra. This means that our freely available
continental-scale product can be combined with machine learning for enhanced geological
mapping, mineral exploration, digital soil mapping, and establishing environmental baselines
for understanding and responding to food security, climate change, environmental degradation, water scarcity, and threatened biodiversity
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Nature Communications
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
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