Understanding how human settlements and economic activities are distributed
with reference to the geographical location of streams and rivers is of
fundamental relevance for several issues, such as flood risk management,
drought management related to increased water demands by human population,
fluvial ecosystem services, water pollution and water exploitation. Besides
the spatial distribution, the evolution in time of the human presence
constitutes an additional key question. This work aims at understanding and
analysing the spatial and temporal evolution of human settlements and
associated economic activity, derived from nighttime lights, in the Eastern
Alpine region. Nightlights, available at a fine spatial resolution and for a
22-year period, constitute an excellent data base, which allows one to
explore in details human signatures. In this experiment, nightlights are
associated to five distinct distance-from-river classes. Our results clearly
point out an overall enhancement of human presence across the considered
distance classes during the last 22 years, though presenting some differences
among the study regions. In particular, the river network delineation, by
considering different groups of river pixels based on the Strahler order, is
found to play a central role in the identification of nightlight
spatio-temporal trends
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