Geological index for detecting muscovite minerals and mica-rich formations. Uses shortwave infrared bands to identify phyllosilicate minerals in geological mapping.

Used in mineral exploration.

When to use

  • Mineral exploration target identification in arid and bare-ground regions
  • Hydrothermal alteration zone mapping
  • Lithological unit discrimination
  • Iron oxide and clay mineral mapping
  • Pre-field reconnaissance for geological surveys
  • Geological Mapping
  • Mica Detection

Limitations

  • Vegetation cover masks underlying mineral signatures — works best on bare ground
  • Atmospheric water vapour absorbs in similar SWIR regions, requiring correction
  • Particle size and mineral mixtures produce non-linear spectral mixing
  • Should be combined with field validation — single-index identification is unreliable
  • Different mineral assemblages can produce similar spectral signatures
  • Requires sensors with SWIR bands — not available on all platforms

General Formula

SWIR1 2185-2225 nm
SWIR2 2235-2365 nm

Sensor-Specific Formulas

Most-used sensors — click to show code below

SensorProviderFormulaBand Mapping
MAXARSWIR8 / SWIR6SWIR1→SWIR6, SWIR2→SWIR8

Spectral Band Visualization — WorldView 3

Code Examples

Adapted for WorldView 3 bands —

muscovite_worldview-3.py

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Muscovite (Muscovite Index) and when should I use it?

Geological index for detecting muscovite minerals and mica-rich formations. Uses shortwave infrared bands to identify phyllosilicate minerals in geological mapping. Geological indices identify mineral compositions and lithological features by targeting diagnostic absorption features in shortwave infrared wavelengths. Different minerals produce unique spectral signatures that these indices isolate. Muscovite is particularly suited for geological mapping, mineral exploration, mica detection. The general formula is SWIR2 / SWIR1, which requires SWIR1 and SWIR2 spectral bands.

Which satellite sensors can I use to calculate Muscovite?

Muscovite is supported by 1 satellite sensor in our database, including WorldView 3. Each sensor uses different band designations — for example, WorldView 3 uses the formula SWIR8 / SWIR6. Select a sensor above to see its specific band mapping.

What spectral bands does Muscovite require and why?

Muscovite requires SWIR1 (2185-2225 nm), SWIR2 (2235-2365 nm). These specific wavelength regions correspond to diagnostic mineral absorption features caused by electronic transitions and vibrational overtones in crystal lattices.

How do I calculate Muscovite in Python or R?

Both Python and R code samples are provided above. In Python, use rasterio to load individual band GeoTIFF files and numpy for the arithmetic. In R, the terra package handles raster operations efficiently. The key is to load bands as floating-point arrays to avoid integer division, and to handle division-by-zero cases where the denominator equals zero. For production use, consider applying a valid data mask to exclude no-data pixels before calculation.

What minerals can Muscovite help identify?

Geological index for detecting muscovite minerals and mica-rich formations. Uses shortwave infrared bands to identify phyllosilicate minerals in geological mapping. For accurate mineral identification, this index should be used alongside other geological indices and validated with field samples or known geology maps. Spectral unmixing or supervised classification using multiple indices typically yields more reliable results than any single index alone.

Muscovite vs other geology indices

IndexNameHow it differs
AKPAlunite/Kaolinite/Pyrophylite IndexAlternative geology index — different band combination
ALTAlteration IndexAlternative geology index — different band combination
AMPAmphibole IndexAlternative geology index — different band combination
ClayClay IndexAlternative geology index — different band combination

Related Geology Indices

References

ASTER geological applications

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