Litcius/Paper detail

Surface Change and Stability Analysis in Open-Pit Mines Using UAV Photogrammetric Data and Geospatial Analysis

Abdurahman Yasin Yiğit, Halil İbrahim Şenol

2025Drones9 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Significant morphological transformations resulting from open-pit mining activities always present major problems with site safety and slope stability. This study investigates an active marble quarry in Dinar, Türkiye by combining geospatial analysis and photogrammetry based on unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV). Acquired in 2024 and 2025, high-resolution images were combined with dense point clouds produced by Structure from Motion (SfM) methods. Iterative Closest Point (ICP) registration (RMSE = 2.09 cm) and Multiscale Model-to-Model Cloud Comparison (M3C2) analysis was used to quantify the surface changes. The study found a volumetric increase of 7744.04 m3 in the dump zones accompanied by an excavation loss of 8359.72 m3, so producing a net difference of almost 615.68 m3. Surface risk factors were evaluated holistically using a variety of morphometric criteria. These measures covered surface variation in several respects: their degree of homogeneity, presence of any unevenness or texture, verticality, planarity, and linearity. Surface variation > 0.20, roughness > 0.15, and verticality > 0.25 help one to identify zones of increased instability. Point cloud modeling derived from UAVs and GIS-based spatial analysis were integrated to show that morphological anomalies are spatially correlated with possible failure zones.

Topics & Concepts

PhotogrammetryGeospatial analysisOpen-pit miningChange analysisSurface (topology)GeologyRemote sensingComputer scienceComputer graphics (images)Mining engineeringEnvironmental scienceGeographyPhysical geographyMathematicsGeometry3D Surveying and Cultural HeritageRemote Sensing and LiDAR ApplicationsArchaeological Research and Protection