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Understanding airborne radiometric survey signals across part of eastern England
Authors:B G Rawlins  R M Lark  R Webster
Institution:1. British Geological Survey, Keyworth, Nottingham, UK;2. Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, Hertfordshire, UK
Abstract:A low‐level airborne radiometric survey provides data on the concentrations of gammaemitting elements including potassium (K), thorium (Th) and uranium (U) in the upper half metre of the soil. Where weathering has not penetrated much beyond this depth, as in the young soils that cover much of England and Wales, the signal is likely to be related to the soil's clay content and its parent material. In these situations radiometric survey could be valuable for mapping soil digitally. We wished to understand how the radiometric signal relates to parent material and soil geochemistry, and to identify the spatial structure, if not the sources, of any unexplained variation. We analysed the joint spatial variation of the airborne gamma signal and high‐resolution soil geochemical survey data across part of eastern England by modelling their coregionalization. We also used reml to assess the joint effects of soil geochemistry and parent material on the radiometric signals of K and Th. The overall correlations of radiometric estimates with soil survey data for K and Th were large, as were the structural correlations for components of variation spatially dependent up to 49 and 16 km for K and Th respectively. This suggests that the radiometric signals for these two elements provide effective estimates of the amounts in the soil and their patterns of distribution. Although class of parent material accounted for a third of of the variance in the radiometric K signal, much of the variation within the classes is explained by geochemistry, suggesting that subtler changes can be detected. A larger proportion of the Th signal was accounted for by parent material. This supports our expectation that radiometric signals for K and Th provide information on parent material in the young landscapes of England and Wales. We are therefore confident that airborne radiometric surveys would be useful for making thematic maps of soil, particularly the soil's texture and closely related properties across England and Wales. Copyright © 2007 Natural Environment Research Council. Published in 2007 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:geochemistry  soil mapping  geostatistics  coregionalization  reml
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