Magnetic surveys, commonly known as mag surveys, are one of the most valuable and widely used geophysical tools in mineral exploration. They provide rapid, cost-effective insight into subsurface geology by measuring variations in the Earth’s magnetic field. These variations reflect changes in lithology, structure, alteration, and mineral content, making magnetic surveys indispensable in everything from early-stage reconnaissance to advanced drill targeting.
This article explains how magnetic surveys work, what they can identify, and how they integrate with modern exploration strategies.
Quick Links
Use the links below to explore the different sections of this article:
What is a Magnetic Survey
How Magnetic Surveys Work
What Magnetic Surveys Can Identify
Benefits of Magnetic Surveys in Exploration
Airborne vs. Ground Magnetic Surveys
Where Magnetic Surveys Fit in an Exploration Program
Common Costs of Mag Surveys
FAQs About Magnetic Surveys
What Is a Magnetic Survey?
A magnetic survey measures small fluctuations in the Earth’s magnetic field using sensitive instruments called magnetometers. These variations occur because rocks have different magnetic properties, such as magnetic susceptibility or remanent magnetization, depending on their mineral composition.
In mineral exploration, these magnetic signals help reveal the presence of mafic and ultramafic intrusions, iron-rich formations, major structures, lithological boundaries, and other geological features that frequently control mineralization.
Magnetic surveys offer one of the highest data-density, lowest-cost methods for understanding large areas quickly, making them an important part of mineral exploration programs worldwide.
How Magnetic Surveys Work
The strength of magnetic surveys lies not only in their sensitivity but also in the speed and efficiency with which data can be collected across vast areas.
1. Field Acquisition
Magnetic surveys can be performed either from the air or on the ground:
- Airborne Magnetic Surveys
Airborne surveys collect magnetic readings from drones, fixed-wing aircraft, or helicopters flying precise grid patterns. This method is extremely efficient for regional mapping, allowing explorers to gather high-quality data over hundreds or thousands of square kilometers in a short time. - Ground Magnetic Surveys
Ground crews collect data at close station spacing, often just a few meters apart. This approach provides higher resolution than airborne surveys, making it ideal for detailed target refinement or drill planning in smaller project areas.
In both cases, a base-station magnetometer is deployed nearby to record natural variations in the Earth’s magnetic field throughout the day. These readings ensure that diurnal drift can be removed from the final dataset.
2. Data Processing and Corrections
The raw data collected by magnetometers must be carefully corrected before it can be interpreted. These corrections account for natural, instrumental, and cultural influences on the magnetic signal. Corrections include:
- Diurnal variation: Natural fluctuations in the magnetic field that occur over hours.
- Latitude correction: Adjusts for changes in the Earth’s magnetic field strength across different regions.
- Cultural noise: Metal infrastructure such as fences, pipelines, or vehicles that create unwanted signals.
- Aircraft or system noise (for airborne surveys): Corrected through filtering and calibration.
After corrections, data is gridded and enhanced through derivative products such as Reduced-to-Pole (RTP), analytic signal, tilt derivative, and first vertical derivative (1VD) maps. These enhanced views help geophysicists see structure, lithological trends, and subtle anomalies more clearly.
3. Interpretation
Interpreting magnetic data requires a nuanced understanding of both geology and geophysics. Geophysicists analyze anomaly shape, gradient, amplitude, and continuity while integrating magnetic data with:
- Geological maps
- Structural mapping
- Gravity surveys
- EM or IP surveys
- Drillhole data
- 2D/3D geological models
It is this integration, not the magnetic data alone, that produces the clearest and most reliable exploration insights.
What Magnetic Surveys Can Identify
Magnetic surveys are exceptionally versatile and can reveal a wide range of geological features. Some of the highest-value applications include:
1. Mafic and Ultramafic Intrusions
These rock types often contain minerals like magnetite, which create strong magnetic signatures. This makes magnetic surveys invaluable in exploring for Ni-Cu-PGE systems or komatiite-hosted deposits, where the distribution of ultramafic units controls mineralization potential.
2. Iron Ore and Magnetite-Rich Bodies
Iron formations often produce intense magnetic anomalies due to their high magnetite content.
Mag surveys are therefore a primary exploration tool for iron ore districts and for detecting magnetite-bearing skarns or BIF units beneath cover.
3. Faults, Shear Zones, and Structural Controls
Magnetic patterns often bend, break, or offset where major faults occur.
- Minor changes in the magnetic signal can highlight subtle structures
- Larger disruptions may indicate significant fault offsets or shear zones
- Lineaments detected in mag data often correlate with mineralized corridors
This structural insight is among the most valuable outputs of magnetic surveys.
4. Lithological Boundaries and Alteration Zones
Mag surveys can distinguish between rock units with different magnetic susceptibilities:
- Sediments vs. volcanics
- Granite vs. greenstone
- Layered intrusions
- Areas of magnetite destruction caused by hydrothermal alteration
These boundaries refine geological models and help explorers focus on the most prospective units.
5. Basin Architecture and Depth to Basement
In sediment-covered terrains, mag surveys are one of the best tools for mapping:
- Depth to basement
- Basin margins
- Structural blocks
- Paleotopography
This is particularly useful for sediment-hosted deposits and lithium brine exploration.
Benefits of Magnetic Surveys in Exploration
Mag surveys provide a powerful combination of speed, coverage, and geological insight.
Fast and Cost-Effective
Airborne surveys cover vast areas quickly, often costing only a fraction of other geophysical methods, while ground surveys add detailed resolution when needed for project-scale refinement.
Sensitive to Geological Features That Matter
Magnetics directly responds to changes in magnetic minerals and rock types, making it ideal for mapping:
- Intrusions
- Faults
- Iron formations
- Mafic/ultramafic units
- Magnetic destruction from alteration
Not Limited by Conductive Overburden
Unlike EM or IP, magnetic surveys work effectively through:
- Conductive clays
- Dry sands
- Basalts
- Thick cover
This reliability makes magnetics one of the best tools in difficult terrains.
Integrates Extremely Well with Other Geophysical Data
- Main point: Mag + Gravity enhances structural clarity. These two methods complement each other, with magnetics mapping magnetism and gravity mapping density—creating a clearer geological picture.
- Main point: Mag + EM or IP helps characterize ore systems. Magnetic host rocks combined with conductive or chargeable mineralization produce distinctive exploration signatures.
This integration reduces uncertainty and drives better drilling decisions.
Airborne vs. Ground Magnetic Surveys
Both survey types offer important advantages, and many exploration programs use a combination of the two.
Airborne Magnetic Surveys (Drone or Aircraft)
- Best for regional-scale mapping
- Fast coverage over large areas
- Lower resolution but highly cost-efficient
Ground Magnetic Surveys
- Best for detailed project-scale evaluation
- High-density data for structural interpretation
- Ideal for narrowing wide anomalies to drill-ready targets
Airborne magnetics often sets the stage; ground magnetics refines the play.
Where Magnetic Surveys Fit in an Exploration Program
Mag surveys usually support exploration in several phases:
- Regional Target Generation. Airborne magnetic data outlines major structural corridors, intrusive complexes, and lithological domains. This helps teams quickly identify where to focus further work.
- Project-Scale Refinement. Once prospective zones are identified, ground mag adds detail that clarifies anomaly shape, structure, and drill positioning.
- Modeling and Structural Interpretation. Magnetic data feeds directly into 2D and 3D geological models, improving their accuracy and reliability.
- Advanced Exploration and Resource Definition. Even in late-stage programs, magnetics continues to support:
- Mineralized trend modeling
- Host-unit mapping
- Structural constraints
- Reporting requirements (NI 43-101, S-K 1300)
Common Costs of Mag Surveys
- Airborne magnetics: $8-$25 per line-km
- Ground magnetics: $80-$200 per km
- Processing and modeling: dependent on survey size and complexity
Given its interpretive value, magnetic data is widely regarded as one of the best-cost-to-insight geophysical methods in early-stage exploration.
FAQ About Magnetic Surveys
Can magnetic surveys detect gold?
Not directly, but they identify structures, intrusions, and alteration patterns that help vector toward gold mineralization.
How deep can magnetic surveys “see”?
Depending on magnetic contrast, mag surveys can detect features from shallow depths to several kilometers below surface.
Do magnetic surveys work under cover?
Yes. Magnetics is not affected by conductive overburden, making it ideal for covered terrains.
Are magnetic surveys affected by man-made metal?
Ground surveys can be influenced by cultural noise, but proper planning and QC minimize interference.
Final Thoughts
Magnetic surveys offer an unmatched combination of speed, affordability, and geological insight. They help explorers map structure, identify intrusive bodies, highlight iron-rich units, and refine drill targets with precision. When integrated with gravity, EM, IP, or drilling data, magnetic surveys become one of the most influential tools in building a complete, confident geological model.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
BRIAN GOSS
President, Rangefront Mining Services
Brian Goss brings over 20 years of experience in gold and mineral exploration. He is the founder and President of Rangefront, a premier geological services and mining consulting company that caters to a large spectrum of clients in the mining and minerals exploration industries. Brian is also a director of Lithium Corp. (OTCQB: LTUM), an exploration stage company specializing in energy storage minerals and from 2014 to 2017, he fulfilled the role of President and Director of Graphite Corp. (OTCQB: GRPH), an exploration stage that specialized in the development of graphite properties. Prior to founding Rangefront, Brian worked as a staff geologist for Centerra Gold on the REN project, as well as various exploration and development projects in the Western United States and Michigan. Brian Goss holds a Bachelor of Science Degree with a major in Geology from Wayne State University in Michigan.
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