- 1Department of Geophysics, University of Calabar, Calabar, Nigeria
- 2Department of Physics, University of Uyo, Uyo, Nigeria
- 3Geology Department, Faculty of Science, Suez University, Suez, Egypt
- 4Department of Geology and Geophysics, College of Science, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
- 5Department of Biology and Geology, Physics and Inorganic Chemistry, ESCET, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Móstoles, Spain
In this paper, a geophysical strategy based on the recently proposed Manta-Ray Foraging (MRF) Optimization algorithm is adapted and presented for the blind computation of depth/shape defining parameters from magnetic anomalies due to buried geo-bodies. The model parameters deciphered are the coefficient of amplitude (K), buried structure’s origin (x0), the depth (z), magnetization angle (α), and a shape factor (q). After detailed and piecewise design, the new inversion tool is originally trial-tested on anomaly data generated synthetically. The uncorrupted version of the test data is first analyzed, then - it is corrupted with noise varied at 5, 10, 15, and 20% corruption levels. Thereafter, it is experimented with magnetic profiles taken from exploration fields in the United States, Peru, and Egypt. From the evaluation of results obtained, the new procedure is observed as exhibiting outstanding stability and flexibility especially with noisy dataset and notable efficiency in the quantitative resolution of magnetic inversion problems. The results obtained for the field cases are also mostly consistent especially when compared with background results from similar studies conducted with other methods; further affirming the new tool as reliable for the geophysical investigation of buried minerals.
Introduction
Magnetic, gravity, electromagnetic, DC resistivity and self-potential techniques have successful applications in mineral exploration (e.g., Biswas et al., 2014; Portniaguine & Zhdanov, 2000a; Mehanee & Zhdanov, 2004; Pellerin & Wannamaker, 2005; Essa et al., 2021; Mehanee, 2022a; Mehanee, 2022b). Synonymous with other conventional geophysical methods, optimal interpretations require that magnetic field data be analyzed in ways generally deemed best for the recovery of characteristic parameters mirroring those of the features causing the anomalies (Klein et al., 2016; Balkaya et al., 2017; Xie et al., 2019; Ben et al., 2021c). Generally, geologic structures are extensively classified into four geometrical categories: spheres, thin sheets, infinitely long cylinders, and geological contacts (Ben et al., 2021a). These simple geometric models conveniently approximate structures that are commonly in during magnetic data interpretation. Geophysical inversion aims at unraveling parameters characteristic of geologic structures through numerical adjustments to these already defined models (Essa & Elhussein, 2020; Essa et al., 2020). The notably sought-for parameters are usually those defining anomaly position (in space), depth, and those characterizing the anomaly shape (Ekinci et al., 2021; Essa et al., 2021; Mehanee, 2022b).
A review of published literature reveals that several strategies have been priorly employed for magnetic inversion. An adept number of them take advantage of computational approaches such as those consistent with classical/numerical theories. Gay (1965) using conventional curve fitting theories developed standard curves for common geologic structures. Abo-Ezz & Essa (2016) introduced a linear least-squares method for the deciphering of buried geologic bodies from magnetic anomaly profiles. Araffa et al. (2018) employed Euler deconvolution to delineate subsurface structural features of basement complex from magnetic data. Ouyang & Chen (2020) iteratively modeled magnetic anomalies using the Fourier transform technique. Duong et al. (2021) interpreted magnetic data at low latitude areas using Marquardt algorithm and continuous wavelet transform. Some of other deterministic methods experimented and reported in literature for magnetic anomalies include fair function minimization procedures (Asfahani & Tlas, 2012; Abbas & Fedi, 2013), simplex algorithm (Pan et al., 2009; Abdelrahman et al., 2019), regularized inversion and image focusing (Portniaguine & Zhdanov, 2000b) and Hilbert Transform (Dondurur and Pamukçu, 2003). However, these inversion techniques sometimes generate poor solutions mostly accrued to causatives such as recursive noise, window size incompatibility and the number of data points considered in the interpretation out of the entire magnetic data profile. Furthermore, the majority of them rely heavily on a series of initializations derived from subjective historical geologic deductions. This pre-knowledge is not always available and even if they are, their reputability can sometimes be disputed.
With recent advancements in machine intelligence and with increased efforts to address the aforementioned challenges, interpretative heuristic methodologies are increasingly being introduced for magnetic anomaly interpretations. Some of these methodologies are based on; genetic algorithm, particle swarm, differential evolution, ant colony optimization, and genetic-price algorithm. Liu et al. (2015) optimized interpretation of surface and subsurface magnetic measurements using ant colony optimization. Biswas & Acharya (2016) deployed VFSA for the interpretation and modeling of magnetic anomaly over a vertically magnetized rod-like structure. Biswas et al. (2017) developed an approach to the estimation model parameters from the total gradient of magnetic data based on Very Fast simulated Annealing (VFSA). Agarwal et al. (2018) developed a grey-wolf optimer based methodology for the inversion of magnetic datasets from surface and airborne surveys. Ekinci et al. (2019) in their comparative study analyzed the performance of differential evolution against particle swarm optimization for magnetic parameterization through direct search. Essa & Elhussein (2020) emphasized the employment of particle swarm optimization for the inferring of residual magnetic anomalies. Di Maio et al. (2020) introduced a hybrid genetic-price heuristic for the inverse modeling of magnetic anomalies due to simple geological structures. Gobashy et al. (2020) introduced the Whale Optimization Algorithm for the assessment of model parameters from magnetic anomalies over mineralization structures. Balkaya & Kaftan (2021) conducted inverse modeling of intrusive structures using differential search algorithm. Essa et al. (2021) applied the variance analysis method for magnetic profile interpretation. Mehanee et al. (2021) carried out magnetic modeling using a R-parameter imaging approach. Balkaya & Kaftan (2021) interpreted magnetic anomalies caused by dyke-shaped bodies using differential search algorithm. Du et al. (2021) proposed a new method to conduct lp norm magnetic inversion of 2D data using adaptive differential evolution technique. The most obvious advantage of meta-heuristics techniques is that unlike their analytical strategies, improvements in directions referencing the feasible solution are not influenced by the gradients of the minimized objective function (Kombe & Muguthu, 2019; Elaziz et al., 2020; Hayyolalam & Pourhaji Kazem, 2020).
Noting the meritoriousness of the aforementioned, especially in interpretative resolvability of buried structures, the reader may be puzzled as to why a new optimizer-based procedure is still developed to solve problems that previous optimizers have already solved. A geophysical interpretation of the infamous No Free Lunch Theorem of Optimization (Salcedo-Sanz et al., 2018; Gharehchopogh & Gholizadeh, 2019; Gupta & Deep, 2019) presents an appropriate response to this question. This is that, while the majority of the previously proposed methodologies based on intelligent optimization algorithms have greatly improved anomaly interpretation quality, analytical perfection has yet to be achieved, particularly in terms of convergence and computation complexity. The continuous pursuit of analytical perfection necessitates the testing of new optimizers. This is also the primary motivation for this research. In this research paper, we present a new interpretative methodology for describing geophysical anomalies over different geometrically-shaped geologic bodies. The methodology is based on the manta-ray foraging (MRF) optimization algorithm.
The MRF algorithm–originally introduced by Zhao et al. (2020) leverages the foraging actions of manta rays for resolving physical optimization problems. This is accomplished by imitating the chain, cyclone, and saumasault foraging techniques–three of the manta ray’s most efficient foraging strategies. Ensuing experimentations in other fields such as pharmacy and engineering, the optimization technique was found to outperform existing metaheuristic algorithms especially in the aspects of computing cost, performance, and solution accuracy (Elaziz et al., 2020; Hemeida et al., 2020; Xu et al., 2020; Ghosh et al., 2021; Hassan et al., 2021; Houssein et al., 2021), the method has been recommended for the resolution of structural problems such as those in geophysics (Elaziz et al., 2020; Xu et al., 2020; Ghosh et al., 2021; Houssein et al., 2021). It is worthy to note the efforts of Ben et al. (2021b) with vertically dipping dykes and Ben et al. (2021a) with gravity anomalies. Howbeit, to the best of the authors’ knowledge, and at the time of preparation of the initial drafting of this research paper, no study in published literature has explicitly employed MRF algorithm for the modeling of magnetized subsurface materials of geometric structure. The new method presents a couple of merits. First, unlike deterministic schemes, iterative computations are independent of the gradient of the objective function, technically limiting immature convergence. Also, the wild function injected during the cyclone foraging stage of the algorithm design allows initial models to parametrize from anywhere within a size-independent range (as would be seen in the examples)—reducing reliance on subjectivity. Most importantly, the superiority of the MRF tool actually lies with its foraging character. With MRF algorithm, the search agents are allowed to switch intelligently and at any point between the strategies of chain foraging and cyclone foraging. The chain foraging behavior allows significant local search while the cyclone foraging behavior concurrently assures non-deteororation of global search during the process; a mutualization of the two as allowed by the new technique ensures comparatively quality solutions through thorough exploration of the whole domain of the geophysical problem.
The paper begins with a magnetic inversion problem layout and a step-by-step architecture of the MRF-based inversion technique. The approach is then trial-tested through applications to synthetic models that have been contaminated with varying degrees of Gaussian random noise (0, 5, 10, 20, and 20%) as well as anomalies from multiple/interfering models. The methodology’s performance with real-world anomalies is gauged using field profiles taken from geologically-contrast exploration mining areas. The resultant parameter values are then compared against drilling results and those obtained using other traditional approaches and documented in literature. Finally, we conclude the paper with a review of the adaptability and performance of MRF optimization method as an inversion tool for magnetic anomalies as well as its gains and limitations with respect to previous techniques.
Methodology
Geophysical Inversion and the Magnetic Anomaly Problem
In geophysical exploration, magnetic data inversion is generally initiated by transforming so-called ill-posed problems to optimization models constructed such that the parameters of the model explained by observation data are good descriptions of the subsurface anomaly (Mehanee et al., 1998; Liu et al., 2015; Essa & Elhussein, 2020; Mbonu et al., 2021). The process of finding a solution to an inverse problem normally begins with the supposition of a good initial model. This initial model commonly made from drilling data or reports from previous geophysical expositions is progressively smoothened in stepwise iterative runs until a subjectively suitable fit between the measured and estimated data is acquired. The smoothening is executed by making meta-heuristic forward adjustments to the parameters of the model (Gharehchopogh & Gholizadeh, 2019; Wang & Li, 2019; Hayyolalam & Pourhaji Kazem, 2020). In this research, the model parameters of interest are amplitude coefficient (K) related to the composition of the body, depth (z), location of the origin (xo), angle of magnetization (α), and a shape factor (q) whose value is unique for each different structural shape (Figure 1)
FIGURE 1. Schematic cross-sections showing configurations of simple geometrical shaped models and their parameters; (A) Sphere (B) Horizontal cylinder (C) Thin sheet.
For this study, we employ the general formula for magnetic anomaly profile -T (xj) over simple-geometrically shaped structures meticulously extrapolated from the inductive analysis of mathematical expressions for horizontal, vertical, and total magnetic anomaly of spheres (Prakasa Rao & Subrahmanyam, 1988), horizontal cylinders (Rao et al., 1973) and thin sheets (Gay, 1963). The formula (Equation 1) is given as (Mehanee et al., 2021):
where z is depth to the buried anomaly, K the amplitude coefficient and, α the angle of magnetization normally in the plane of the principle profile coinciding with the x-direction. This is illustrated by Prakasa Rao and Subrahmanyam, 1988) for spheres and compiled by Gay (1965) for horizontal cylinders and thin sheets (Table 1). x0 indicates the coordinate of the center of the structure, §-the dip, IT the effective inclination of the geomagnetic field in the vertical plane normal to the body’s strike while q is the shape factor taken as 2.5 for spheres, 2.0 for infinitely-long horizontal cylinders, and 1.0 for thin geologic sheets (Mehanee et al., 2021). FHD and SHD are the first and second derivatives of the anomaly respectively while A, B, and C constants are defined in Table 2;
TABLE 1. Characteristic inclination parameter for vertical, horizontal and total magnetic field anomalies due to thin sheets and horizontal cylinders (after Gay, 1963, Gay, 1965).
The five controlling model parameters (K, z, α, xo, and q) are computationally obtained by strategically introducing procedures outlined in the succeeding section on the objective function expressed in Equation 2 (Essa & Elhussein, 2020). Puzzling of optimal parameters for the geophysical model of interest is carried out such that the misfit between the true and estimated data (calculated using the objective function - Equation 2) is minimized (Mehanee et al., 1998; Ouadfel & Taleb-Ahmed, 2016).
where Tim and Tic are respectively the magnetic anomaly from observed data and that estimated using the proposed methodology.
Manta Ray Foraging Optimization Algorithm
The MRF optimization algorithm (which is the backbone of our new methodology) is designed based on the foraging strategies of marine-living Manta rays (Figure 2). The foraging strategies include chain, cyclone, and somersault techniques (Ghosh et al., 2021). For our geophysical case, the iterating vectoral positions of the Manta-rays (search agents) represents the probable positions of physical parameters sought-for. The position of the plankton itself (also vectoral) points to the geoscientific optimization problem’s solution. For the chain foraging strategy, the agents identify and frame a head-tail formation (also referred to as foraging chain) towards a potential plankton. As a result, any plankton lost by one Manta-ray will not escape the next; thereby improving the overall rate of exploitation. In the cyclone style of foraging, the manta rays swim towards the food in design spirals such that while maintaining its foraging chain-line, each agent is concurrently advancing towards its target food. Alternatively, the solution to the magnetic problem is placed as a pivot in the summersault foraging technique; such that the agents recurrently translate about this pivot before moving into new positions. The result of this is that the new positions are not purely random but rather, circumvents of the best position found (at least up to that point). These numerical constructs for these foraging strategies as adapted from Zhao et al. (2020) and remodeled for our geophysical case are described below; Chain foraging: Equation 3
where
Cyclone foraging:
where µ, known as the cyclone foraging’s coefficient of weight, is generated stochastically using Equation 6;
It is noteworthy to add that after executing Equation 5 for our structural problem, we uncomfortably observe that the optimizing parameters for our geophysical structure tend to vacillate around a certain position in a loose loop-like manner. To resolve this particularity, we force each of our agents to find new positions far from its current best position in the search space by randomly injecting a wild function qDrand with the whole search taken as the reference position (Ben et al., 2021b). qDrand was constructed numerically using Equation 7.
as such, Equation 7 became;
This strategy that the algorithm extensively performs global search; substantially improving general exploration. Equation 8.
Summersault foraging:
where the term P - a constant known as the somersault factor determines the range at which the Manta rays somersault. Equation 9.
Generally, the chain strategy encourages individual positioning based on short-term historical positioning and current global best. The cyclone foraging strategy makes each individual update its position with respect to both its preceding neighbor and the reference position while the summersault foraging technique enforces thorough adaptive search.
For exhaustive details about the adoption of the MRF algorithm for optimization scenarios, the readers are referred to Zhao et al. (2020). In our new method, we start by initiating a random population of Manta-rays in the search domain (designed around the upper bound (UB) and lower bound (LB) of our magnetic model parameters) with each agent position in the space representing characteristic parameters of the geologic structure. In our geophysical case, the selection of bounds are done based on priori geological knowledge such as information from maps, geophysical data and drilling reports. At each iterative step, the individuals are coerced to update these positions based on the referential position and the individual out front. This reference position depends on t/T which decreases from 1/T to 1 (Xu et al., 2020; Mbonu & Ben, 2021). With t/T less than rand (), exploitation is implemented else, exploration is performed. Based on this, our MRF optimization algorithm allows the individuals to decide and when necessary, switch between chain and cyclone foraging behaviors. Then through somersault foraging, the agents adaptively update their positions within the space and with respect to the most optimal position so far found.
It is noteworthy to add that these calculations and updates explained are interactively performed step-wise until the stopping criterion is met. After each step, the quality is assessed. This is done by gauging the misfit between the measured and estimated anomalies. The misfit is calculated using the root mean technique (Abdelrahman et al., 2012; Mehanee, 2014).
Eventually, convergence is achieved and the four required model parameters are returned. The pseudo-code for the whole optimization process is shown in Figure 3.
Algorithm Configuration/Processing Time
The algorithm for this study is designed using the PYTHON programming language and implemented on the virtual studio code IDLE. The IDLE is installed on a PC operating with a Windows 10 operating system and a core i7 processor. The duration of the compilation process is found to depend on the complexity of the anomaly. For simple structures, the iteration process rounds off in 30–50 s. However, there was a 20% increase in processing time for multi-model cases such as those in Conclusion Section and Section 5.3. Howbeit, in all cases, the process is found to completely round off in less than 100 s.
Results and Discussion
The goal of this study is to assess the effectiveness of the MRF optimization technique in modelling magnetic anomalies over geometric geological structures. To monitor this performance, the tool is tested on synthetic and then on field magnetic data.
Synthetic Examples
The proposed method is subjected to controlled experiments using data generated synthetically for idealized spheres, horizontal cylinders, and thin sheet models. First, analysis is done on the synthetic anomaly constructed such that it is noise-free; then the data is consciously corrupted with different levels of noise and reanalyzed.
Noise-Free Models
The MFRO technique is employed to noise-free synthetic anomalies due to geometric interpretative models consisting of: a sphere with K = 11,000 nT m3, z = 11 m, q = 2.5, α = 60°, xo = 0 m, and profile length = 80 m; a horizontal cylinder with K = 400 nT m2, z = 5 m, α = 35, q = 2, xo = 0 m, and profile length = 120 m, and a thin sheet with K = 550 nT m, z = 9 m, α = 30, q = 1, xo = 0 m, and profile length = 180 m. The magnetic field anomalies due to these models are computed using Equation 1.
The proposed methodology is initiated with 80 initial models and broad search space. For the sphere, we set the range for K to be from 5,000 to 300,000 nT m3, z from 3 to 15 m, α from -90° to 90°, q from 0 to 3, and xo from–30 to 30 m. For the horizontal cylinder model, we set K from 100 to 9,000 nT m2, z from 3 to 15 m, α from -90° to 90°, q from 0 to 3, and xo from–30 to 30 m. For the thin sheet model, we set K from 100 to 20,000 nT m, z from 0 to 30 m, α from -90° to 90°, q from 0 to 3, and xo from–30 to 30 m. A total of 800 repetitive iterations are allowed for each algorithm run. MFRO has very extensive and strong search ability. Impressively, the best model parameters are arrived at in under a quarter of that number of iterations.
From the result obtained (Table 3), it is observed that the output for each of the five considered parameters (K, z, α, q, xo) agree with those originally used to design the three models (with very negligible errors).
Noisy Models
It is well recognized that geophysical data from real buried anomalies are scarcely (if ever) pure. More also, due to the heterogeneity of the earth, it is often very difficult to understand what degree of noise is muddled up in such data. Hence, to delineate the method’s efficiency, all the synthetic test data were tweaked to simulate non-ideal geologic scenarios. For this research, the non-ideal geologic scenarios are simulated by contaminating the error-free synthetic anomalies with 5, 10, 15 and 20% white gaussian noise. The noise is generated using a combination of the rand () function and the SCIPY library in PYTHON. The noise percentage are computed using Equation 10 (Mehanee, 2022b).
where Tn and T are vectors of the noisy and noise-free anomaly data respectively.
The proposed methodology is once again employed for the estimation of the model-describing parameters. For this, Equation 2 is re-adopted as the cost function and bounds consistent with the noiseless cases are re-selected. After each iteration session, the convergence and level of misfit are meticulously analyzed.
At the end of the optimization process, it is observed that the algorithm estimates (Table 3; Figures 4–6) and the true parameter values are to an appreciable level, consistent. However, it is noticed from the results in Table 3 that the M parameter tends to exhibit more sensitivity with increasing levels of noise. This sensitivity - which would only have likelihood of affecting interpretation when dealing with extremely complicated and deep-seated surface structures is not unrelated to the fact the K is a multiplier factor in Equation 2; it can easily be handled by flexibly narrowing ranges for UB and LB. Also, results indicate the misfit after acceptable convergence and the RMS error at the end of the run as marginally upsurging with increasing levels of noise. Nevertheless, this does not wholly affect the general inversion process as parameter results consistently remain attractive even to 20% noise level (Table 3). It can thus be concluded that the new methodology is inherently stable and exhibits admirable adeptness in handling noisy anomalies.
FIGURE 4. Synthetically generated noisy and estimated (MFR) magnetic anomalies for a sphere model with K = 11,000 nT.m3, z = 11 m, q = 2.5, α = 600, xo = 0 m with (A) 5% (B) 10% (C) 15% (D) 20% gaussian random error.
FIGURE 5. Synthetically generated noisy and estimated (MFR) magnetic anomalies for a horizontal cylinder model with K = 400 nT.m2, z = 5 m, α = 35, q = 2, xo = 0 m, with (A) 5% (B) 10% (C) 15% (D) 20% gaussian random error.
FIGURE 6. Synthetically generated noisy and estimated (MFR) magnetic anomalies for a thin sheet model with K = 550 nT m, z = 9 m, α = 30, q = 1, xo = 0 m, with (A) 5% (B) 10% (C) 15% (D) 20% gaussian random error.
Figures 4–6 are plots illustrating the performance of the new technique with synthetic data generated for the three geometric models.
Applicability in Multi-Model Cases
We now seek to assess the new procedure’s performance with anomalies from complicated and interfering subsurface structures. To simulate this scenario, we once again generate model data synthetically but, in this scenario, from multiple source bodies (with multifarious parameters) placed at proximity. For the sake of this example, we adopt a horizontal cylinder model with K = 55,000 nT m2, z = 15 m, α = 25, q = 2, xo = 30 m, and a thin sheet model with K = 75 nT m, z = 9 m, α = -15, q = 2, xo = 120 m. The profile length is 400 m. The magnetic field anomaly generated is as shown in Figure 7.
FIGURE 7. Synthetic and predicted magnetic anomalies of multimodel example consisting of a cylinder model K = 55,000 nT.m2, z = 15 m, α = 25, q = 2.0, xo = 30 m, and a thin sheet model with K = 75 nT m, z = 9 m, α = -15, q = 2, xo = 120 m.
We then apply steps consistent with the proposed methodology (as with those in the two preceding sections). However, in this case, the structures are modeled together with parameter bounds as displayed in Table 4 selected. From results (Figure 7; Table 4), the parameters can be observed as being well recuperated from and showing admirable consistency with the actual field anomaly confirming the congruency of the methodology.
TABLE 4. Selected ranges of model parameters and numerical results for the synthetic multimodal anomaly example.
Comparative Analysis of MRF Optimization With Other Inversion Techniques
In this section, we compare the optimization performance of MRF with those from other methods commonly used for geophysical inversion. In our analysis, we are concerned with the convergence rate, quality/depth of exploration, and accuracy.
For the analysis, three common inversion techniques were selected namely; PSO, SA, and GA.
Particle Swarm Optimization
PSO originally introduced by Kennedy & Eberhart (1995) mimics the behavior of swarms in nature. These swarms may be fish schools or bird flocks. Members of the swarms represent exploring search agents. The technique achieves optimization by updating the positions and velocities of the swarm members based on the positions and velocities of their in-swarm neighbors their movement history. These updates are made using Equations 11, 12;
where ω is the inertia constant, c1 and c2 are respectively cognitive and social coefficients, pi is the personal optimum of xi, and pg is the global best. For this study, values of 0.729, 2.041, 0.948 were assigned for the inertia weight (ω) and the cognitive and social coefficients.
Simulated Annealing
SA is an optimization procedure the mimics the cooling of metals. The value for the cost function corresponds to energy levels in a melted metal while model parameters are depicted by its molecules’ position. For any given parameter set with error ε0, a new set is methodically generated using random walk. If ε < ε0, the new set is discarded, and another is generated. Alternatively, if ε ≥ ε0, then the set is accepted with a probability defined by Boltzmann’s distribution (Equation 13):
where Δε = ε - ε0, T is the temperature while k is the Boltzmann constant. This step is repeated iteratively until an equilibrium state is arrived at. This is a penultimate state where the new set possesses minimum energy at fixed temperature. A generalization of the strategy introduced by Kirkpatrick et al. (1983) adopts a controlled cooling scheme (annealing) where the temperature is gradually (but strategically) reduced with minimum error gauged at each temperature until it arrives at a global minima. For this comparative study, the temperature was reduced by multiplying the previous value by a coefficient less than unity (0.85).
Genetic Algorithm
GA is a search heuristic inspired by the theory of natural evolution. The algorithm reflects the process of natural selection where the fittest individuals are selected to reproduce for the next generation. A generational GA is initialized by a randomly generated population (set containing probable solutions), then the fitness (the objective function) of each individual is evaluated. Then, a new population is generated from the original one; this is aided by some GA operators: selection, crossover, and mutation. To form this new population, two solutions from the original population are selected considering their fitness. They are crossed over with the crossover probability to generate two new offspring who are then mutated with a mutation probability. The mutation guides against local minima. After obtaining the new generation, the steps are repeated. The algorithm terminates after reaching a finite number of generations; and the individual with the best fitness value returned as the solution to the problem. For this study, a crossover probability of 0.7 and a mutation probability of 0.1 was used for producing 800 generations.
Procedures consistent with PSO, SA, and GA were concurrently implemented on the synthetic sphere model constructed in Synthetic Examples Section. More also, bounds consistent with those used for MRF optimization were adopted. The results obtained are shown in Table 5. From the table, it can be observed that with an RMS of 3.22 × 10–5, MRF optimization technique produced results of greater quality than its comparative counterparts. Figure 8 shows the convergence character for the four techniques after 800 iterations. From the plots, it is observed that while all the methods achieved minimum errors in less than 250 iterations, MRF clearly boasted the fastest convergence. This advantage is accrued to the somersault foraging behavior of the procedure (as earlier explained in Manta Ray Foraging Optimization Algorithm Section). Notably, SA and GA did not achieve convergence even after 800 iterations. More too, from Figure 9, the MRF presented the greater error variability compared to GA, SA, and PSO. The superior interquartile curve indicates that the MRF algorithm possesses greater exploration capabilities than GA, SA, and PSO. This is expected as the MRF optimization algorithm allows for intelligent/situational switching between cyclone and chain foraging strategies. The chain foraging strategy favors local search while the cyclone foraging technique allows for extensive global exploration.
TABLE 5. Parameter results from inversion of sphere model anomaly using MRF, PSO, SA and GA techniques.
Case Studies
The performance of the new technique is further investigated using three field cases.
The Pima Copper Mine Anomaly
The Pima mine is an open pit, “complex” porphyry copper deposit located off the northeast flanks of the Sierrita Mountains at about 30 km south of Arizona, United States. At full production, the mine can produce up to 50,000 tons of copper per day (Hamel, 1979; Cox et al., 2006; Biswas et al., 2017).
Stratigraphically, the mine is fixated in an east-north-eastly striking and south-eastly dipping Paleozoic to Mesozoic sedimentary sequence intermediately intruded by quartz monzonite porphyry believed to be of Tertiary age (Abbas & Fedi, 2013). These Paleozoic sediments notably observed to be dolomites, limestones, and sandstones have historically been anti-frigidly metamorphized into calco-silicate skarns, marble, and quartzite and then, unconformably overlain by marginally recrystallized and hydrothermally altered Mesozoic to Triassic clastic (Cox et al., 2006). The intrusions have characteristically resulted in mineralization of high grade in the Paleozoic rocks and ore dissemination in the relatively younger Mesozoic sediments. Structurally, the area is dominated by east-west post-mineralization faults in the western part of the mine, and strong shearing and faulting of low angle truncating the ore body at depth (Hamel, 1979; Barter & Kelly, 1982; Abbas & Fedi, 2013).
Figure 10 (red line with round markers) is a magnetic anomaly profile over a buried ore body retrieved from magnetic survey data taken across the Pima mine (Gay, 1963). The profile was digitized with a sampling interval of 25 m. In this research, the new method attempts at deciphering the parameters characterizing the geologic feature whose structure (initially unknown) can take any of the three studied geometric shapes. We initialize the algorithm using bounds indicated in Table 6. The algorithm is set to terminate after 1,000 iterations. At the end of the MRF optimization session, the misfit was monitored using the RMSE technique (Figure 10). The results obtained are displayed in Table 6.
FIGURE 10. Magnetic anomaly profile over the Pima copper mine anomaly, Arizona using the MRF algorithm.
Results from analysis suggest that the investigated structure’s shape compares appositely with that of a perfect thin sheet model. The parameters characterizing the model are estimated as K = 6,081.213 nT m, α = 39.106, xo = -8.230 m and z = 61.748 m. More also, the obtained RMSE of 2.14 indicates that the actual and estimated data fits excellently.
We now attempt to compare these results with those from similar studies. Notably, the Pima anomaly has been widely interpreted in literature. Initially Gay (1963) used classical curve matching techniques to interpret the buried geologic feature as a sheet-like structure inclined at about -50° at a depth of 21.34 m. Venkata Raju, 2003) employed a LIMAT computer program for least-squares magnetic inversion over the Pima anomaly. After adequate smoothening of the initial solution using Marquarst’s algorithm, he interpreted the anomaly as a thin sheet of depth -76.81 m. Recently, the buried anomaly was interpreted as between a thin sheet and dyke like structure using the simplex algorithm (Tlas & Asfahani, 2015). After calculations, Tlas & Asfahani (2015) gave the depth of the Pima copper anomaly as 64.1 m. Mehanee et al., 2021) employed an R-Parameter imaging method to pin-point the anomaly to a sheet-like structure buried at depth of 71 m. Petrophysical information reports the drilling depth as 64 m (Biswas, 2018). Considering these findings (Table 7), it can be concluded that results from our new methodology comparably agree acceptably with previous studies.
The Parnaiba Anomaly
In our second field case, we analyze crustal anomaly in the Parnaiba basin.
The Parnaíba basin is a 500,000 km-square wide Paleozoic basin structurally situated between the São Francisco and Amazonian cratons (Cordani et al., 2013; Daly et al., 2018) in north-east Brazil and widely regarded by explorationists as one of the world’s most promising modern onshore gas basin. Priori regional studies report that the basin which is characterized by Neoproterozoic structures mapped to the Brazilian Orogenic Cycle (Mckenzie & Tribaldos, 2018) is accrued with 3–5 km of sediments in the main depo-center of its Phanerozoic-aged sedimentary rocks (Solon et al., 2018). These rocks overlie the Neoproterozoic structures of the Brazilian Orogenic Cycle. Oregenically, the crustal masses of this basin are convicted to be resultant from the massive splitting of the Rodinia believed to have occurred before the development of the trending Brazilian fold belts around 900 Ma (Cioccari & Mizusaki, 2019; Jurandyr Luciano Sanches Ross, 2020). Basement inliers were then formed with the surrounding of these classical cratonic fragments by Neoproterozoic fold belts during the amalgamation process of the Gondwana supercontinent. These inliers were further reworked thermally and contracted into cratonic nuclei during the Brazilian orogeny. However, the inclusive geo-magmatism widely observed in greater portions of the Parnaíba Basin has been associated with events of distention events and faults remobilization that followed the rupturing of the Pangea and the opening of the Atlantic Ocean (Cioccari & Mizusaki, 2019). Macedo Filho et al., 2019) reports that these magmatic occurrences in the basin as well as their associated geothermal gradients may have generated the much-acclaimed hydrocarbons in the sedimentary sequences of the Parnaíba Basin.
Figure 11 (red line with round markers) shows the vertical magnetic anomaly resulted from a 26 m-long profile over a Mesozoic diabase intruded into the Paleozoic sediment of the Parnaiba basin. The profile was sampled at an interval of 0.5 m. The uniqueness of this anomaly problem lies in the fact that the oxidization of magnetite resultant from extensive weathering of the upper part of the buried structure has led to the loss of most of its magnetism (Silva, 1989). As a result of this geological peculiarity, we expect the magnetic anomaly to be largely affected by random noise at gross levels. This field case is also a test of the stability of the method in the presence of such peculiarity.
The anomaly depth, magnetic angle, amplitude coefficient, anomaly origin, and shape factor are estimated using MRF algorithm are guided by UB-LB outlined in Table 8. This magnetic anomaly is inverted with the cylinder model considered as the priori anomaly causative.
After each iterating round, the misfit between sample data and those from the estimated parameters are calculated (Figure 11). The obtained results are displayed in Table 8.
Comparatively, it can be observed that depth to the center of the anomaly estimated using our new method (z = 3.355 m) agrees with previous reports from similar studies by Silva (1989); Abdelrahman et al., 2019), Tlas and Asfahani, 2011), and Tlas and Asfahani, 2015). Silva (1989) obtained a depth of 3.5 m after converting the problem from non-linear to linear using the M-fitting technique; Abdelrahman et al., 2019 using the least square minimization method reported that the cylinder is buried at a depth of 3.5 m. On the other hand, Tlas & Asfahani (2011) and Tlas & Asfahani (2015) estimated the depth to the center of the cylinder as 3.36 and 3.4 m by respectively employing the deconvolution technique and simplex algorithm. Furthermore, the obtained values of K and RMSE confirm the algorithm’s stability in the presence of contamination.
The results obtained using the present technique as well as those reported from the previous studies are displayed in Table 9.
The Hamrawein Field Anomaly
In our final case study, we will be analyzing a multi-model anomaly from Hamrawein field–an Egyptian mining field situated around the western throat of the Red Sea in North Africa. This geologic region is a constituted part of the East-African rift system believed to have been structurally architected from the anti-clockwise rotational divergence of the Arabian plate from the African tectonic Plate with the central Mediterranean Sea as the pole of rotation (Noweir & Fheel, 2015). The field is petrologically dominated with volcanic rocks such as pillow tholeiitic basalts overly genetically on layers of ultramafic and gabbroic strata. These layers of strata are unevenly covered with volcanic and sedimentary rocks of calco-alkaline geochemistry (Salem et al., 2005; Smith & Salem, 2005). Figure 12 is a geological map of Qusier area showing the Hamrawein field.
FIGURE 12. Geologic map of the Quseir area, Egypt showing the Hamrawein shear (modified after Essa and Elhussein, 2018).
Figures 13, 14 show a 15 km magnetic anomaly profile (MN) extracted from a magnetic map designed from an extensive high definition aeromagnetic survey data originally carried out by Salem et al. (1999). For this study, the profile is digitized at a 200 m interval. From priori geologic studies, we can ascertain that the profile is characterized by two prominent anomalies. However, the structure or characteristics of these anomalies cannot be distinctly defined initially and as such could be interpreted broadways as a combination of any of the simple shapes. This situation normally renders inherent non-uniqueness around solutions for the anomaly.
FIGURE 13. Magnetic intensity map of the Hamrawein field area showing Profile MN (redrawn after Essa and Elhussein, 2018).
Fudging in the peculiarity of this problem and to resolve this technical complication, we run the algorithm for all possible dual-combinable shapes. The least RMSE error of 3.341 is achieved and accepted for model shapes with q values of 1.032 and 0.981 respectively which proximate synonymously with models of thin sheet structure. Then too, our algorithm eliminants K = 115,018.987 nT m, z = 494.74 m, α = 68.276° and xo = 4571.033 m as optimal model parameters for the first buried structure while the parameters of the second structure are computed to be K = 61,836.497 nT m, z = 458.023 m, α = 51.383° and xo = 14897 m (Table 10). From Figure 14, it can be observed that the fit between the observed and estimated anomalies is consistently excellent.
Table 11 compares results obtained in this present study with those obtained from similar studies reported in literature. Salem et al., 2005) modified the enhanced local wavenumber method and used it to interpret the two subsurface anomalies as thin sheet structures buried at depths of 555.7 and 441.2 m respectively. Salem et al., 2005) did heterological computation of the anomaly using analytic signal derivative but reported depths of 540 and 447 m respectively. Salem (2011) on the other hand conducted his analysis of the Hamrawein anomaly using both total gradient (TG) and local wave number (LW) methods. The LG methodology outputted depths of 486.5 and 440.4 m while the LW method out-turned 432.6 and 422.8 m as respective depths to the two anomalies. Essa & Elhussein, 2018 and Essa & Elhussein (2020) used particle swarm optimization (PSO) to carry out magnetic inversion for the area. While the former employed robust PSO for this task and reported the subsurface structures as thin sheets with depths of 623.05 and 494.14 m, the latter who emphasized the use of the optimization technique to infer second moving average residual magnetic anomalies also interpreted the structures as thin sheets but emplaced them at depths of 604 and 500 m respectively. Comparing results from this study with these previous findings, it can be generally deduced that resolutions using this new methodology stand in good agreement with those from previous reports. Figure 15 shows the convergence behavior of the investigated case studies (Pima, Parnaiba, and Hamrawein anomalies).
FIGURE 15. Convergence behavior of the investigated case studies (A) Pima anomaly, (B) Parnaiba anomaly and (C) Hamrawein anomaly.
Evaluation of results obtained using this new methodology has revealed that the technique exhibits admirable stability in the presence of noise, remarkable flexibility especially when confronted with interfering anomalies, and great pervasiveness in the quantitative resolution of magnetic inversion problems. The consistency of the results obtained from the analysis of the field examples when compared with background results from other similar studies conducted with other methods further affirms the reliability of the new methodology. While this consistency is continuous for shape and depth parameters, Tables 6, 8, 10 show that there are significant variations in the amplitude parameter for all field cases. This large variation could be attributed to two main reasons. The first, which is the mathematical role of K in the forward model (Equation 1) has already been explained in Synthetic Examples Section. Ambiguity makes up the second reason. The K parameter—directly related to the magnetic susceptibility is a physical property that points to the type of materials making up the buried anomaly. As has been explained severally in literature (Clark, 1996; Crowther, 2003; Marques et al., 2014; Teixeira et al., 2018; César de Mello et al., 2020), magnetic susceptibility is a very non-unique rock property and could sometimes range up to factors of 104. It is therefore not surprising to find authors reporting different values for K. Howasmuch, it will be rather skewed to conduct appraisal of this parameter based on these literature reports alone. The efficiency of the new method in the estimation of K would only be assessed without bias if the result were gauged against laboratory findings for cores harvested from these field sites. Unfortunately, this information is not available for any of the three field cases. Nonetheless, the new technique still exhibited comparative edge over other well-known and conventional techniques especially on the grounds of convergence rate, and quality of the anomaly parameters (depth and shape) resolved.
Conclusion
In this study, we have introduced and investigated the applicability and the performance of the Manta Ray Foraging Optimization algorithm in elucidating distinctive physical parameters of simple geometrically shaped geologic structures (spheres, horizontal cylinders, and thin sheets). This new inversion technique has been demonstrated successfully on synthetically generated magnetic anomalies corrupted with different levels of Gaussian noise (0, 5, 10, 15, 20%), applied to cases of anomalies from multiple and intercalating structures, and finally experimented on heterologous field cases taken from mining sites in Brazil, United States, and Egypt.
Generally, the test examples (real and synthetic) treated in this research work have all affirmed the MRF-based algorithm’s suitability for the inverse modeling of magnetic anomalies caused by conventional geometrically shaped structures. Furthermore, the examples enabled us in the evaluation of the new technique’s strengths with regards to geophysical optimization and extendedly, as compared with existing methods. First, considering reports so far published and even that from the comparative study in this work, it has been observed that amongst stochastic geophysical optimization techniques, the proposed algorithm presents one of the best convergence rates. This rate, however, has no effect on its optimization abilities, as the misfits calculated at the culmination of the procedure still fell within acceptable levels. Most significantly, the method was able to address the reoccurring challenge of immature convergence and local optima (commonly resulting in poor solutions) encountered by conventional intelligent methods such as DE, PSO, GA, and ACO. This is enabled by the search agents’ propensity to transition between chain and cyclone foraging strategies. The chain strategy contributes to the algorithm’s local search ability, whereas the cyclone foraging behavior is significantly dedicated to the algorithm’s global search capacity; a combination of these two, as permitted by our new method, enables extensive exploration of the entire problem domain and practically, greatly improved the quality of solutions. It should however be added that while the algorithm converge in fewer iterations, it took a longer time to complete an iteration. This is but a limitation of this method. As a recommendation, this temporal cost could be improved through modifications (e.g., binary-MRF, quantum-MRF, Chaotic-MRF) and hybridization (e.g., PSO-MRF, GA-MRF, ACO-MRF) of the technique. Considering these gains, and the significantly lower computational effort required to attain them (gauging the limitation), MRF has been proven to positively outperform conventional optimizers in the resolution of geophysical optimization problems with respect to geometrically shaped magnetic anomalies.
Hereto, the novel methodology can be recommended for ore/mineral exploration as well as reconnaissance studies aimed at efficiently resolving subsurface structures from magnetic field data. As a recommendation for future studies, the method can be further developed for the interpretation of other potential field data such as resistivity and self-potential data.
Data Availability Statement
The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article/Supplementary Material, further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding author.
Author Contributions
UB, SE, AA, and CM prepared data, applied methodology, writing the first draft of the manuscript. AE, KA, and DG-O revised the manuscript, methodology, and editing the manuscript.
Funding
We declare all sources of funding received for the research being submitted. Researchers Supporting Project number (RSP-2022/351), King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Conflict of Interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Publisher’s Note
All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.
Acknowledgments
Deep thanks and gratitude to the Researchers Supporting Project number (RSP-2022/351), King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia for funding this research article. The authors wish to thank the management of the University of Calabar for providing the facilities used for this research.
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Keywords: shapes, anomaly, optimization, manta ray minerals, interpretation, magnetics
Citation: Ben UC, Ekwok SE, Akpan AE, Mbonu CC, Eldosouky AM, Abdelrahman K and Gómez-Ortiz D (2022) Interpretation of Magnetic Anomalies by Simple Geometrical Structures Using the Manta-Ray Foraging Optimization. Front. Earth Sci. 10:849079. doi: 10.3389/feart.2022.849079
Received: 05 January 2022; Accepted: 28 February 2022;
Published: 23 March 2022.
Edited by:
Mourad Bezzeghoud, Universidade de Évora, PortugalReviewed by:
Khalid ESSA, Cairo University, EgyptArkoprovo Biswas, Banaras Hindu University, India
Salah Mehanee, Cairo University, Egypt
Copyright © 2022 Ben, Ekwok, Akpan, Mbonu, Eldosouky, Abdelrahman and Gómez-Ortiz. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Ahmed M. Eldosouky, dr_a.eldosoky@yahoo.com