Watershed Sciences, Inc. (WSI) collected airborne Thermal Infrared (TIR) imagery and Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) data for the Department of Geology and Mineral Industries (DOGAMI) in Malheur, Harney, and Lake Counties during March and April 2012. This is the final delivery encompassing the four remaining study areas of the DOGAMI TIR and LiDAR survey. The requested acreage for Christmas Valley (13,041 acres), Oregon Military (9,701 acres), Paulina Marsh (56,287 acres), and Baker Pass (44,846 acres) study areas were expanded to include a 100m buffer to ensure complete coverage around survey area boundaries. This expansion results in a total of 13,809 acres, 10,344 acres, 57,768 acres, and 46,194 acres of delivered TIR and LiDAR data, respectively (Figure 1). The TIR imagery provides an accurate data set for detecting and identifying surface expression of geothermal activity. LiDAR data was co-acquired with the TIR imagery and provides highly detailed topographic data for recognizing landforms associated with detected thermal features.
This data set is an LAZ (compressed LAS) format file containing LIDAR point cloud data.