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Inversion of soil heavy metals in metal tailings area based on different spectral transformation and modeling methods

Nannan Yang, Ling Han, Ming Liu

2023Heliyon11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The exploitation of mineral resources has seriously polluted the environment around mines, notably in terms of heavy metal contamination of tailings pond soil. Hyperspectral remote sensing, as opposed to conventional on-site sampling and laboratory analysis, offers a potent tool for effective monitoring the content of soil heavy metals. Therefore, we investigated the inversion models of heavy metal content in metal tailings area based on measured hyperspectral and multispectral data. Hyperspectral and its transformation, as well as the simulated Landsat8-OLI multispectral were used for model inversion respectively. Stepwise Multiple Linear Regression (SMLR), Partial Least Squares Regression (PLSR) and Back Propagation Neuron Network (BPNN) were established to study the spectral inversion of eight heavy metals (Cu, Cd, Cr, Ni, Pb, Zn, As, and Hg). The direct inversion models were established on the basis of correlation analysis and the adjust coefficient of determination ( Adjust_R 2 ) and Root Mean Square Error ( RMSE ) were used for model evaluation. Then the best combination of spectral transformation and inversion model were explored. The model inversion results suggested that: (1) Hyperspectral transformation can generally improve the model accuracy, especially the second derivative spectral, based on which the training Adjust _ R 2 of Hg SMLR and PLSR models are as high as 0.795 and 0.802. (2) The BP neural network inversion based on the denoised hyperspectrum demonstrate that both the training and testing Adjust _ R 2 of Cd, Ni and Hg models are all greater than 0.5, indicating good applicability in practical extrapolation. (3) Both the training and testing Adjust_R 2 of Cu and Hg PLSR models based on simulated R _Landsat8-OLI multispectral are greater than 0.5, and Hg has lower RMSE and lager Adjust_R 2 with training and testing Adjust_R 2 values of 0.833 and 0.553 respectively. (4) Multispectral remote sensing detection and mapping of Hg contamination were realized by the optimal simulation model of Hg. Hence, it is feasible to simulate the multispectral with hyperspectral data for investigating heavy metal contamination.

Topics & Concepts

Hyperspectral imagingTailingsMean squared errorInversion (geology)Correlation coefficientMultispectral imageEnvironmental sciencePartial least squares regressionSoil scienceRemote sensingMathematicsGeologyStatisticsChemistryStructural basinPaleontologyPhysical chemistryRemote-Sensing Image ClassificationGeochemistry and Geologic MappingAdvanced Image Fusion Techniques
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