Researcher profile

Javier E. Santos

Javier E. Santos contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

In-context learning enables continental-scale subsurface temperature prediction from sparse local observations

Continental-scale knowledge of subsurface temperature is limited by the cost and sparsity of borehole measurements, but such information is essential for geothermal resource assessment and for understanding heat transport in the shallow crust. The thermal field reflects the interaction between lithology, crustal structure, radiogenic heat production, and advective fluid flow, sometimes producing sharp anomalies that are smoothed by conventional interpolation or difficult to capture with physical models. Here we introduce In-Context Earth, a transformer-based model that uses sparse local borehole observations as geological context to predict continuous temperature-at-depth fields with calibrated uncertainty. In the contiguous United States, the model achieves a mean absolute error of 4.7 °C, outperforming the physics-informed Stanford Thermal Model, a model based on AlphaEarth embeddings, the multimodal Transparent Earth model, and universal kriging, while resolving sharper thermal gradients in geothermal provinces. Its uncertainty estimates are well calibrated, with a Kolmogorov-Smirnov statistic of 2.5%. Without finetuning, the model adapts to Alberta, Australia, and the United Kingdom (UK) using only 20 local observations at inference time, maintaining high accuracy in geologically distinct test regions with a mean absolute error of 2.2 °C in Alberta, 6.2 °C in Australia, and 5.4 °C in the UK. Interpretability analyses show that the model learns internal representations of subsurface properties it never observes during training, including seismic velocities, geochemistry, and crustal structure, and uses these representations in physically consistent ways. More broadly, this work shows that in-context learning can use sparse borehole observations for continental-scale subsurface characterization, without requiring dense measurements or region-specific retraining.

preprint2021arXiv

MudrockNet: Semantic Segmentation of Mudrock SEM Images through Deep Learning

Segmentation and analysis of individual pores and grains of mudrocks from scanning electron microscope images is non-trivial because of noise, imaging artifacts, variation in pixel grayscale values across images, and overlaps in grayscale values among different physical features such as silt grains, clay grains, and pores in an image, which make their identification difficult. Moreover, because grains and pores often have overlapping grayscale values, direct application of threshold-based segmentation techniques is not sufficient. Recent advances in the field of computer vision have made it easier and faster to segment images and identify multiple occurrences of such features in an image, provided that ground-truth data for training the algorithm is available. Here, we propose a deep learning SEM image segmentation model, MudrockNet based on Google&#39;s DeepLab-v3+ architecture implemented with the TensorFlow library. The ground-truth data was obtained from an image-processing workflow applied to scanning electron microscope images of uncemented muds from the Kumano Basin offshore Japan at depths < 1.1 km. The trained deep learning model obtained a pixel-accuracy about 90%, and predictions for the test data obtained a mean intersection over union (IoU) of 0.6591 for silt grains and 0.6642 for pores. We also compared our model with the random forest classifier using trainable Weka segmentation in ImageJ, and it was observed that MudrockNet gave better predictions for both silt grains and pores. The size, concentration, and spatial arrangement of the silt and clay grains can affect the petrophysical properties of a mudrock, and an automated method to accurately identify the different grains and pores in mudrocks can help improve reservoir and seal characterization for petroleum exploration and anthropogenic waste sequestration.