IN13A-1816
Canada in 3D – Toward a Sustainable 3D Model for Canadian Geology from Diverse Data Sources
Monday, 14 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Mark Pilkington1, Boyan Brodaric2, David B Snyder1, Marc R St-Onge3, Hazen Russell4 and Canada in 3D Team, (1)Geological Survey Canada, Ottawa, ON, Canada, (2)Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa, ON, Canada, (3)Geological Survey of Canada, Natural Resources Canada, Ottawa, ON, Canada, (4)Natural Resources Canada, Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa, ON, Canada
Abstract:
Many big science issues span large areas and require data from multiple heterogeneous sources, for example climate change, resource management, and hazard mitigation. Solutions to these issues can significantly benefit from access to a consistent and integrated geological model that would serve as a framework. However, such a model is absent for most large countries including Canada, due to the size of the landmass and the fragmentation of the source data into institutional and disciplinary silos. To overcome these barriers, the “Canada in 3D” (C3D) pilot project was recently launched by the Geological Survey of Canada. C3D is designed to be evergreen, multi-resolution, and inter-disciplinary: (a) it is to be updated regularly upon acquisition of new data; (b) portions vary in resolution and will initially consist of four layers (surficial, sedimentary, crystalline, and mantle) with intermediary patches of higher-resolution fill; and (c) a variety of independently managed data sources are providing inputs, such as geophysical, 3D and 2D geological models, drill logs, and others. Notably, scalability concerns dictate a decentralized and interoperable approach, such that only key control objects, denoting anchors for the modeling process, are imported into the C3D database while retaining provenance links to original sources. The resultant model is managed in the database, contains full modeling provenance as well as links to detailed information on rock units, and is to be visualized in desktop and online environments. It is anticipated that C3D will become the authoritative state of knowledge for the geology of Canada at a national scale.