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Lineaments are any linear features that can be picked out as lines (appearing as such or evident because of contrasts in terrain or ground cover on either side) in aerial or space imagery. If geological these are usually faults, joints, or boundaries between stratigraphic formations. Other causes of lineaments include roads and railroads, contrast-emphasized contacts between natural or man-made geographic features (e.g., fence lines), or vague "false alarms" caused by unknown (unspecified) factors. The human eye tends to single out both genuine and spurious linear features, so that some thought to be geological may, in fact, be of other origins. Examples are shown. Lineaments and Fractures We turn now to lineaments. In the early days of Landsat, perhaps the most commonly cited use of space imagery in Geology was to detect linear features that appeared as tonal discontinuities. Almost anything that showed as a roughly straight line in an image was suspected to be geological. Most of these lineaments were attributed either to faults or to fracture systems that were controlled by joints (fractures without relative offsets). Lineaments are well-known phenomena in the Earth's crust. Rocks exposed as surfaces or in road cuts or stream outcrops typically show innumerable fractures in different orientations, commonly spaced fractions of a meter to a few meters apart. These lineaments tend to disappear locally as individual structures, but fracture trends persist. The orientations are often systematic meaning, that in a region, joint planes may lie in spatial positions having several limited directions relative to north and to horizontal. For example, 60% of the joint planes might fall into a cluster of fractures with azimuths between N40W and N60W and inclinations between 30 and 40 degrees). Where continuous subsurface fracture planes that extend over large distances and intersect the land surface produce linear traces (lineaments). A linear feature in general can show up in an aerial photo or a space images as discontinuity that is either darker (lighter in the image) in the middle and lighter (darker in the images) on both sides; or, is lighter on one side and darker on the other side. Obviously, some of these features are not geological. Instead, these could be fence lines between crop fields, roads, or variations in land use. Others may be geo- topographical, such as ridge crests, set off by shadowing. But those that are structural (joints and faults) are visible in several ways. They commonly are opened up and enlarged by erosion. Some may even become small valleys. Being zones of weak structure, they may be scoured out by glacial action and then filled by water to become elongated lakes (the Great Lakes are the prime example). Ground water may invade and gouge the fragmented rock or seep into the joints, causing periodic dampness that we can detect optically, thermally, or by radar. Vegetation can then develop in this moisture-rich soil, so that at certain times of year linear features are enhanced. We can detect all of these conditions in aerial or space imagery. 2-15: Do you know the difference between a fault and a fracture? How might the two types be separated visually on an aerial photo or space image? ANSWER

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Lineaments are any linear features that can be picked out as lines (appearing as such or evident because

of contrasts in terrain or ground cover on either side) in aerial or space imagery. If geological these are

usually faults, joints, or boundaries between stratigraphic formations. Other causes of lineaments include

roads and railroads, contrast-emphasized contacts between natural or man-made geographic features

(e.g., fence lines), or vague "false alarms" caused by unknown (unspecified) factors. The human eye tends

to single out both genuine and spurious linear features, so that some thought to be geological may, in

fact, be of other origins. Examples are shown.

Lineaments and Fractures

We turn now to lineaments. In the early days of Landsat, perhaps the most commonly cited use of space imagery in Geology was to detect linear features that appeared as tonal discontinuities. Almost anything that showed as a roughly straight line in an image was suspected to be geological. Most of these lineaments were attributed either to faults or to fracture systems that were controlled by joints (fractures without relative offsets). Lineaments are well-known phenomena in the Earth's crust. Rocks exposed as surfaces or in road cuts or stream outcrops typically show innumerable fractures in different orientations, commonly spaced fractions of a meter to a few meters apart. These lineaments tend to disappear locally as individual structures, but fracture trends persist. The orientations are often systematic meaning, that in a region, joint planes may lie in spatial positions having several limited directions relative to north and to horizontal. For example, 60% of the joint planes might fall into a cluster of fractures with azimuths between N40W and N60W and inclinations between 30 and 40 degrees).

Where continuous subsurface fracture planes that extend over large distances and intersect the land surface produce linear traces (lineaments). A linear feature in general can show up in an aerial photo or a space images as discontinuity that is either darker (lighter in the image) in the middle and lighter (darker in the images) on both sides; or, is lighter on one side and darker on the other side. Obviously, some of these features are not geological. Instead, these could be fence lines between crop fields, roads, or variations in land use. Others may be geo-topographical, such as ridge crests, set off by shadowing. But those that are structural (joints and faults) are visible in several ways. They commonly are opened up and enlarged by erosion. Some may even become small valleys. Being zones of weak structure, they may be scoured out by glacial action and then filled by water to become elongated lakes (the Great Lakes are the prime example). Ground water may invade and gouge the fragmented rock or seep into the joints, causing periodic dampness that we can detect optically, thermally, or by radar. Vegetation can then develop in this moisture-rich soil, so that at certain times of year linear features are enhanced. We can detect all of these conditions in aerial or space imagery.

2-15: Do you know the difference between a fault and a fracture? How might the two types be separated visually on an aerial photo or space image? ANSWER

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When we illuminate a space image, particularly a transparency on a light table, we can often spot numerous linear or boundary discontinuities that we can record on tracing paper. The resulting lineaments map may have dozens, even hundreds of straight or slightly curved lines. But, scientific skepticism can raise key questions: Are they real? Do they all correspond to the same feature or phenomenon? If not, what is the proper identity of each one? And, finally, how do we verify their existence and determine their identities? These are important issues since we know lineaments (particularly faults) play key roles in location minerals and some oil or /gas deposits. They may also give clues to structural activities that bear on earthquakes. We save responses to these queries until the end of this section, after we cover how lineaments appear in images. Near the end of Section 5, we will again consider how human operator variations affect the correctness and consistency in picking valid lineaments amidst phony lines.

The very first practical use of ERTS-1 (Landsat-1) imagery in any discipline was the drawing by Dr. Paul D. Lowman, Jr, of a geologic structures map superimposed on the first color composite image, based in part on already known field information and in part on his interpretation of this scene. He is a geologist at Goddard Space Flight Center, and an expert on space photography (he prepared Section 12 on Astronaut Imagery in this Tutorial). The image was of the central California coast around Monterey Bay, acquired 3 days after launch.

This map confirmed predictions from his studies of astronauts' photos that Landsat would be an efficient tool for recognizing faults and other known structural trends in small-scale imagery. In spite of lower resolutions, these images excel in portraying regional geologic settings and are easily enhanced by digital processing.

Within a month of the Landsat launch, images of the central Rocky Mountains were delivered to a team of investigators at the University of Wyoming. On this team, Professor Ronald Parker, a

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structural geologist, had been field mapping lineaments and other deformation features in the Wind River Mountains in the west-central part of the state. This great block of metamorphic and igneous basement rocks, flanked and patchily-covered by Paleozoic sedimentary rocks, is part of a segment of the Rockies where sections of the crust had been uplifted six km or more above other segments. Other segments stayed put or had downdropped to form deep (up to six km below the present surface) basins now back-filled by erosional debris from the surrounding mountain groups. As shown here by this Landsat image, the Wind River Mountains (center right) lie between the Wind River Basin (upper) and Green River Basin (lower), with the Gros Ventre and Hoback Ranges to the west. The Wind River Mountains rise to more than 3940 m (13,000 feet) above sea-level and have been strongly dissected by rivers and glaciers that exposed and carved many major faults and lineaments.

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We can easily map most of these lineaments in the field or from the limited aerial photos. As part of the project, NASA had previously flown a U-2 on a single pass, taking pictures of terrains similar to our next image. This photo shows an eroded granitic surface with numerous lineaments.

Source : http://fas.org/irp/imint/docs/rst/Sect2/Sect2_8.html