Overcoming from above

Chapter 1: Mapping dangerous terrain with an UAV

Overcoming from above

Author: Benjamin Federmann, June 2016 

With only 18 per cent of the country’s population living in urban centres, Papa New Guinea is one of the world’s most rural and unexplored countries. Dense with rainforest and other diverse ecological features, terrain is a constant obstacle for surveyors. Restricting access to key areas, measurement professionals must find innovative means to gather needed data.

When Benchmark Survey & Design, a survey firm in North Queensland, Australia, was contracted by the Porgera Mine Survey Team to map spill grounds around the secluded mine located at the head of the Porgera Valley in highlands at an altitude of 2,200 to 2,700 metres, the firm specialising in topographic site surveys knew it needed to find a new method of surveying. As the captured data would be used to environmentally monitor the dump sites of the spill generated by the mine, accuracy was of the utmost importance.

Mapping dangerous terrain with an UAV

In an area where landslides and earthquakes are common and with only five days available to map, Benchmark Survey & Design determined a survey by air would be the safest and quickest survey method. The firm turned to Spatial Technologies, an Australian firm with more than 20 years in GIS, to provide an UAV pilot. Flying the Aibotix Aibot X6 UAV and collecting data in various environments for the past two years, Spatial Technologies was up for the challenge.

With two sites to capture around the mine, Anjolek at 380 hectares and Anawe at 250 ha, the pilot, Anton van Wyk, had to carefully plan his route. Facing several challenges, such as much of the terrain only accessible by helicopter, use of the helicopter only available one out of the five days to map, and extreme weather with fog in the mornings and rain in the afternoon leaving only a few hours each day to survey, van Wyk’s precise plan rested upon the durability and dependability of the Aibot X6.

“The Aibot X6 provided better results than what Porgera Mine Survey Team expected, even in such rough terrain,” said Wayne Storey from Benchmark Survey & Design. “Though the mine survey team had someone prior fly this mission, the team didn’t receive the expert mapping and processing of the data the Aibot X6 delivered with its more advanced sensors.”

With 32 total flights at about 10 minutes each, Spatial Technologies collected 9,100 orthophotos at a 5 cm ground sampling distance. While Benchmark Survey & Design only need sub-metre accuracy for the project, Spatial Technologies was actually able to supply 10-20 cm accuracy with strategically placed controls in conjunction with the RTK on the Aibot X6. The entire project was processed in about 96 hours to provide visual documentation of volume changes in the spill grounds.

Explore next chapter: More than just volumes

Story: Overcoming from above
Chapter 1: Mapping dangerous terrain with an UAV
Chapter 2: More than just volumes

Reporter 75 - June 2016

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