“…Operational, industrial scanning systems are often a combination of high-resolution digital (RGB) cameras, a spectrometer capturing VNIR and SWIR spectral ranges, and a laser profilometer. The systems include either discontinuous step-and-measure data acquisition (e.g., GeoLogr by Hyperspectral imaging or the HyLogger by CSIRO), allowing for variable integration times, or a continuous, imaging data acquisition per interval (e.g., Corescan, Terraocore, GeologicAi, Plotlogic, DMT ANCORELOG) (examples here include [108][109][110][111][112][113][114].Examples of where hyperspectral core scanning has been deployed and results are published include, but not limited to, analyses of samples and downhole intervals from Cu porphyry deposits to facilitate ore sorting [115,116], porphyry deposits alteration mineral characterization [114,117,118], coal quality studies [111], Au-Cu-Zn VMS mineralization associated with volcanogenic massive sulfide (VMS) deposits [116,[119][120][121], unconformity related Uranium deposits [122], analysis of basement rocks [123], characterization of REE-bearing minerals [124], and lithology discrimination in iron ore deposits [125]. Areas of weathered bedrock [126,128] are highlighted by yellow-coloured hashed lines and highlight which drill cores were sunk into barren ground (D, E, F, G).…”