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Minerals and Gravity Gradiometry – The Whole World in Your Hands

Gravity and density are both critical to mineral explorers. The art of measuring variations in it, called gravity gradiometry, is of key importance to the oil and gas and mining industries. To glean some expert insights, A Propensity to Talk Density host Tyler Kern spoke with experts Dr. Tim Wright, Director and Principal Geoscientist at…

By Sciences · June 4, 2021, 3:07 PM UTCDensityFull Tensor GradiometryGravity GradiometryMagnetism
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Key takeaways

01

Gravity gradiometry measures variations in gravity for mineral exploration.

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It is essential for oil, gas, and mining industries.

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Experts Tim Wright and Gaud Pouliquen provided insights into its applications.

Gravity and density are both critical to mineral explorers. The art of measuring variations in it, called gravity gradiometry, is of key importance to the oil and gas and mining industries.

To glean some expert insights, A Propensity to Talk Density host Tyler Kern spoke with experts Dr. Tim Wright, Director and Principal Geoscientist at Scorpion Geoscience Ltd, and Gaud Pouliquen, Business Development Manager EAMEAA at Bell Geospace.

Dr. Wright first explained the connection between gravity and density. “It’s a fundamental force of nature that every object experiences. Density and gravity are related,” Wright said. “Density affects gravity, and gravity is a measure of density. We can use that to our advantage in exploring.”

Gravity and density help identify rocks and materials because of the contrast. “These changes are measurable with a gravity gradiometer. It measures the rate of change of gravitational acceleration due to underlying rock properties. It’s the second most accurate instrument after the atomic clock” Pouliquen said.

The detected contrasts can be due to a change in density or a change in geometry. Much of the time, the contrasts indicate the rocks and materials that the oil and gas and mining industries seek to discover.

Wright also explained the basics of rocks and minerals.“ Rocks are often described by colors and textures. The rocks we are looking for are harder to find but have characteristics we can detect,” Wright said. “There’s a density spectrum.” Next, he shared samples of a variety of rocks and their attributes.

Full Tensor Gravity Gradiometry (FTG) is even more exact in finding anomalies, as it measures the full gravity field in all directions.

“With this 3D gradiometry, we can use magnetism and gravity to determine different physical properties,” Pouliquen added.

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About the Experts

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Sciences

Host, A Propensity to Talk Density

Tyler Kern is the host of the podcast series A Propensity to Talk Density, where he explores scientific topics with industry experts.

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Dr. Tim Wright

Director and Principal Geoscientist

Scorpion Geoscience Ltd

Dr. Tim Wright is an experienced geoscientist specializing in gravity gradiometry. He is the Director and Principal Geoscientist at Scorpion Geoscience Ltd.

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Gaud Pouliquen

Business Development Manager EAMEAA

Bell Geospace

Gaud Pouliquen is the Business Development Manager for the EAMEAA region at Bell Geospace. He focuses on advancing geophysical technologies in the mining and oil sectors.