The Asian Age

The hunt for minerals, oil, gas: Scientists tap big data

-

Scientists searching for everything from oil and gas to copper and gold are adopting techniques used by companies such as Netflix or Amazon to sift through vast amounts of data, a study showed on Tuesday. The method has already helped to discover 10 carbon-bearing minerals and could be widely applied to exploratio­n, they wrote in the journal American Mineralogi­st. “Big data points to new minerals, new deposits,” they wrote of the findings. The technique goes beyond traditiona­l geology by amassing data about how and where minerals have formed, for instance by the cooling of lava after volcanic eruptions. The data can then be used to help find other deposits.

“Minerals occur on Earth in clusters,” said Robert Hazen, executive director of the Deep Carbon Observator­y at the Carnegie Institutio­n for Science in Washington and an author of the study.

“When you see minerals together it’s very like the way that humans interact in social networks such as Facebook,” he said. client’s previous orders, or by media streaming company Netflix, which proposes movies based on a customer’s past viewing habits. “They are using vast amounts of data and make correlatio­ns that you could never make,” he told Reuters. Lead author Shaunna Morrison, also at the Deep Carbon Observator­y and the Carnegie Institutio­n, said luck often played a big role for geologists searching for new deposits.

“We are looking at it in a much more systematic way,” she said about this project. Among the 10 rare carbon-bearing minerals discovered by the project were abellaite and parisaite(La). The minerals, whose existence was predicted before they were found, have no actual known economic applicatio­ns.

Gilpin Robinson, of the US Geological Survey (USGS) who was not involved in the study, said the USGS had started to collaborat­e with the big data project.

“The use of large data sets and analytical tools is very important in our studies of mineral and energy resources,” he wrote in an email. The DCO project will also try to collect data to examine the geological history of the Moon and Mars. — Reuters

 ??  ?? PHOTO: PIXABAY
PHOTO: PIXABAY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India