Workshop on Geological Applications of Thermal Infrared Remote Sensing Techniques : a Lunar and Planetary Institute workshop, February 11-13, 1980

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1980
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Lunar and Planetary Institute
Abstract
The Workshop on Geologic Applications of Remote Sensing to the Study of Sedimentary Basins was held January 10 to 11, 1985 in Lakewood, Colorado. Disciplines represented ranged from vertebrate paleontology to geophysical modeling of continents. Deliberations focused on geologic problems related to the formation, stratigraphy, structure, and evolution of foreland basins in general, and to the Wind River/Bighorn Basin area of Wyoming in particular. Geological problems in the Wind River/Bighorn basin area that should be studied using state-of-the-art remote sensing methods were identified. These include: (1) establishing the stratigraphic sequence and mapping, correlating, and analyzing lithofacies of basin-filling strata in order to refine the chronology of basin sedimentation, and (2) mapping volcanic units, fracture patterns in basement rocks, and Tertiary-Holocene landforms in searches for surface manifestations of concealed structures in order to refine models of basin tectonics. Conventional geologic, topographic, geophysical, and borehole data should be utilized in these studies. Remote sensing methods developed in the Wind River/Bighorn Basin area should be applied in other basins.
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Infrared technology--Congresses
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