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Using Satellites to
Help Conserve Aggregate Resources in
California
Background of the
Project
Aggregate (sand and
gravel, crushed stone) is currently the
most important mineral resource consumed
in California. It is the foundation of
the modern construction industry. Land
use that precludes mining of this
resource is a problem in many urbanizing
areas of the state. The cost of
aggregate rises significantly when it
has to be mined and transported from
increasingly greater distances from its
point of use. In California, the cost to
consumers for each ton of concrete-grade
can range from $7 to $20 at the mine,
plus an additional $0.10 to $0.15 for
every mile it is transported from the
mine to its site of use.
The Department of Conservations
California Geological Survey is mandated
by state law to map aggregate resources
and forecast demand for them throughout
California, particularly in urbanizing
areas. Previously, the CGS has used
field observations and aerial
photographs to accomplish these tasks.
Field work is expensive, however, and
available photographs are often
inconsistent in coverage or outdated.
In
late 2001, the CGS was awarded a 2-year
research grant by the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) for a project to use satellite
images in its program of mapping
aggregate resources in California. The
grant was awarded under NASAs Broad
Agency Announcement Program (www.esad.ssc.nasa.gov/baa),
which is designed to establish use of
remote-sensing products (e.g., satellite
images) by state, regional, local, and
tribal government agencies for solving
problems related to land-use, urban
growth, natural resources, and natural
hazards.
Scope of the Project
The project is being
conducted in two urbanizing areas of
southern California, Palm Springs and
Bakersfield. The aggregate resources of
both areas were first mapped in the late
1980s by the CGS. We are now re-mapping
the areas to determine how much of the
resources have been either consumed or
lost to alternative land use that
precludes mining. This determination
will be used to revise both our
estimates of available resources and our
forecasts of production and consumption.
Through
the NASA grant, the CGS is obtaining
high-resolution satellite images of both
areas with the expectation of reducing
field work and replacing aerial
photographs for re-mapping of the local
aggregate resources. The satellite
images will be used within a geographic
information system (GIS) to map how much
urbanization and other incompatible land
use have infringed upon these aggregate
resources. In turn, this mapping will
help us calculate, in tonnage and
dollars, how much aggregate has been
lost to this alternative land use.
Participants
The project involves
geologists and GIS specialists from the
CGS in partnership with technical
advisors from NASA. It will also lead to
technical staff of the CGS routinely
applying satellite data in future
studies of aggregate and other mineral
resources.
Benefits
There are benefits
from this project at two levels. First,
at the operational level, use of
satellite images by CGS staff is
expected to save our agency (and thus
taxpayers) money in operating expenses
and to improve the quality and content
of our maps and calculations of
aggregate resources. This benefit will
expand at the second, or community
level, where our maps and calculations
are used by government agencies to make
land-use decisions. The main goal of our
products is to protect aggregate
resources from being lost to
incompatible land use. By using our
calculations of how much aggregate has
been lost and our forecasts of the
expected future demand for aggregate,
local government can take steps to
protect and conserve remaining
resources. Each citizen benefits when
local aggregate resources are protected
for future use because transportation is
less, which reduces shipping cost, truck
traffic, noise, fuel consumption, and
air pollution.
We envision the expansion of this
application of satellite images to
aggregate-mapping operations by other
states as well as to conservation of
mineral resources other than aggregate.

For additional
information please contact:
Chris Higgins
Principal Investigator
chiggins@consrv.ca.gov
(916) 322-9997
To download a PDF
version of this article,
click here
What's New in the CGS NASA Project
This section will have periodic updates on progress and accomplishments of the project.
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