Introkrigingplan
Introkrigingplan
Learning Objectives
• Classify estimates according to their purpose: interim estimation, final decisions, visual‐
ization, and probabilistic prediction.
• Know best practice in choosing a fit‐for‐purpose kriging plan.
• Understand stationarity, kriging performance measures, and other concerns when choos‐
ing a kriging search plan.
1 Introduction
This lesson relates primarily to mining where estimation is still widely practiced for resource and
reserve estimation. Kriging is the primary technique for the estimation of grades. Kriging is a linear
unbiased estimator that minimizes the estimation variance using a site‐specific variogram model of
spatial variability accounting for anisotropy and other spatial features (Journel & Huijbregts, 1978).
The number of data and locations of data used to inform the estimate compose the kriging search
plan. The kriging search plan is typically restricted due to concerns about computational time, sta‐
tionarity, conditional bias, and histogram reproduction. These restrictions and concerns are the
subject of this lesson.
There is no doubt that the prerequisites to kriging are more important than the details of the
kriging plan. These prerequisites include ensuring data quality, compositing, managing outliers,
subdividing the data into reasonable subsets (domains), establishing an appropriate coordinate sys‐
tem for estimation, choosing the correct block size for estimation, and managing large scale trends
and contacts between estimation domains. Nevertheless, details of the kriging plan are important
provided these prerequisites have been met in a reasonable fashion.
The choice of a kriging search plan is dictated by the purpose of the estimate; there is no uni‐
versal best kriging plan. Best practice in choosing a kriging search plan depends on the estimate
purpose. This lesson addresses the selection of a kriging search plan for four types of estimates,
and discusses concerns of stationarity, kriging measures, and other common practices.
Interim Estimates
Interim estimates are estimates awaiting more data. Early in the life cycle of a mineral deposit there
are relatively few data available for estimation. At the time of mining, many more data are available
in the form of blast holes and drill holes. This disparity in available data is termed the informa‐
tion effect (Rossi & Deutsch, 2013). One goal of interim estimates is to provide close estimates of
ore tonnage, ore grade and waste tonnage within reasonably large production volumes (sometimes
called mining panels). A too‐large search will result in over smoothing of the grades and inaccurate
Final Estimates
Final estimates are an interesting time in a mining context; the classification of material as ore or
waste (grade control) will have a direct and final economic impact on the mine. The emphasis is on
the minimization of conditional bias, minimization of mean squared error and minimization of Type
I and Type II errors (Isaaks, 2005). Final estimates are constructed with the goal of making the best
possible estimate according to our mean squared error criterion. Final estimates are made with all
data that will be available; no additional data is expected prior to use of the estimate.
Interim estimates in an underground mining context may be considered as near‐final estimates
depending on the flexibility of the mining method. If there is little future flexibility, then concerns
of conditional bias and Type I/II errors are important and estimates could be considered as final.
3 Best Practice
As discussed earlier, best practice for all estimate types is to only apply estimation within a decided
stationary domain. All prerequisites including composite length selection, block size selection, and
stationary domain selection must be considered prior to estimation. The decision of stationarity
has typically been made long before the application of kriging; this decision is made as soon as data
are grouped together for analysis.
smooth, but the histogram of estimates can be controlled. The search should be restricted by lim‐
iting the maximum number of data used to compute the kriging estimate. A known histogram of
values at the scale of interest (such as the selective mining unit size) is targeted. This histogram
may be calibrated from production data, if any are available, and by volume variance relations. The
impact of restricting the number of search data is sketched in the following figure.
There are additional considerations when restricting the search for ordinary kriging. The number
of data used from each drill hole may be restricted. This is common when making estimates in a 3D
domain with vertical drilling and a relatively short composite length; much more data is collected
in the vertical direction compared to the horizontal plane. A maximum per drill hole avoids using
data from only a single drill hole when making an estimate with very few data. The search range
may also be restricted; the range of the variogram is a common choice for the search range, but in
practice restricting the number of data used in an estimate is a more reliable method of restricting
the search.
The consequence of restricting the number of data used in the kriging estimate is conditional
bias. High grade areas are overestimated because local high grade values are given more weight.
Low grade areas are correspondingly underestimated because of additional weight given to low
grade values. There will be no global bias and there should be no bias in ore tonnes and ore grade
at the targeted cutoff. Conditional bias is not a problem for interim estimates as they will be updated
before final decisions are made; however, care should be taken not to use this type of estimate for
final decisions.
a copper porphyry deposit. Using additional search data results in only a marginal improvement
past a certain amount of data, but does not result in a worse estimate. Specific concerns about
stationarity and performance measures are addressed later in this lesson.
The specific number of search data chosen when making a final estimate is a function of the
computational time required for the estimate. Choosing 40 search data in a 3D estimation context,
or 24 in a 2D context, is often a reasonable number to balance the computational time and desire
for the best estimate. The number of data used weakly depends on the support of the data. More
data of small support could be considered.
The search range should be set at the variogram range or even larger to include the required
number of data. Often, production data are reasonably closely spaced and the effective search
range that will get the required number of data is reasonably small. Limiting the kriging search
range to an arbitrary value that excludes data from the estimate is not best practice. The search
radius should consider the variogram anisotropy.
local uncertainty characterization or within simulation. Ordinary kriging is more often applied for in‐
dicator kriging. Simple kriging is required to ensure covariance reproduction; however, stationarity
concerns are often considered more important and there are no strong theoretical requirements as
with the multivariate Gaussian distribution. Concerns such as over‐smoothing for interim estimates
are not applicable in a probabilistic estimation context where the parameters of probability distri‐
butions are being estimated. Limiting the number of search data results in suboptimal estimates of
the probability distributions.
4 Considerations
As kriging has been widely applied since the 1960s, a large number of specific considerations have
been discussed by geostatistical practitioners. Some of these considerations, including stationar‐
ity, kriging performance measures, and multipass kriging are discussed here as they relate to best
practices for estimation.
What About…?
There are some other considerations. In general, except for interim estimates, the practitioner
should err on the side of using more data in the kriging. The kriging equations will sort out the
optimal weight for the data; data far from the unsampled location or screened by closer data will
not receive any significant weight.
The use of multiple search passes is aimed at the important problem of classification and at
restricting estimation to use nearby data in areas of more data. This practice introduces artifacts
where one search strategy ceases to be satisfied and another is considered. Choosing a fairly large
search and restricting the maximum number of data accounts for varying data density. The esti‐
mates may be better classified by data spacing calibrated to simulation‐based uncertainty measures.
There may be a need to carefully clip a kriged model to avoid estimating too far from the data,
below the deepest drill holes or at the margins. There may be a need to account for soft bound‐
5 References
Deutsch, J., Szymanski, J., & Deutsch, C. (2014). Checks and measures of performance for kriging
estimates. Journal of the Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 114(3), 223–
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Isaaks, E. (2005). The kriging oxymoron: A conditionally unbiased and accurate predictor (2nd
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363–374). Springer Netherlands.
Journel, A. G. (1983). Nonparametric estimation of spatial distributions. Journal of the Interna‐
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Journel, A. G., & Huijbregts, Ch. J. (1978). Mining geostatistics (p. 600). book, Blackburn Press.
Krige, D. (1997). A practical analysis of the effects of spatial structure and of data available and
accessed, on conditional biases in ordinary kriging. Geostatistics Wollongong, 96, 799–810.
Parker, H. (1979). The volume variance relationship: A useful tool for mine planning. Engineering
and Mining Journal, 180, 106–126.
Rossi, M. E., & Deutsch, C. V. (2013). Mineral resource estimation. Springer Science & Business
Media.
Vann, J., Jackson, S., & Bertoli, O. (2003). Quantitative kriging neighbourhood analysis for the
mining geologist–a description of the method with worked case examples. In 5th interna‐
tional mining geology conference (Vol. 8, pp. 215–223). Bedigo: AUSIMM.
Verly, G. (1984). The block distribution given a point multivariate normal distribution. In G. Verly,
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Citation
Deutsch, C. V., & Deutsch, J. L. (2015). Introduction to Choosing a Kriging Plan. In J. L. Deutsch (Ed.),
Geostatistics Lessons. Retrieved from http://geostatisticslessons.com/lessons/introkrigingplan