A feasibility study for an airborne geophysical survey of the Republic of Liberia indicates that airborne magnetometer and airborne scintillation detector surveys would be useful 1) in providing support for the current geologic mapping program, 2) as a guide in locating concentrations of economic minerals, and 3) delimiting the extent of known mineral deposits. Preliminary study of earlier airborne magnetometer surveys covering several iron ore localities shows that future geophysical surveys should be flown at a slightly closer flight-line spacing, and that the iron ore localities are characterized by anomalies interpreted as being produced by rocks having a strong anomalous remanent magnetization. In areas of the United States and Canada underlain by crystalline rock types similar to those found in Liberia, airborne geophysical surveys have been successful in locating additional buried economic mineral deposits, in extending known economic mineral deposits, and in contributing useful information to geologic mapping programs, especially in areas overlain by thick glacial deposits or by weathered rock.
Some problems regarding the availability of accurate base maps for Liberia, combined with the inherent complex relationships that exist between a rock's geological properties and its magnetization, are briefly reviewed. The importance of obtaining a meaningful geologic interpretation of the geophysical data and coordinating the geophysical survey with the geological mapping program is stressed. Specifications and tolerances for the proposed airborne magnetometer and scintillometer survey of the Republic of Liberia are outlined.