1,474 research outputs found

    Earth resources: A continuing bibliography with indexes (issue 51)

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    This bibliography lists 382 reports, articles and other documents introduced into the NASA scientific and technical information system between July 1 and September 30, 1986. Emphasis is placed on the use of remote sensing and geophysical instrumentation in spacecraft and aircraft to survey and inventory natural resources and urban areas. Subject matter is grouped according to agriculture and forestry, environmental changes and cultural resources, geodesy and cartography, geology and mineral resources, hydrology and water management, data processing and distribution systems, instrumentation and sensors, and economic analysis

    Water resources, chapter 2, part B

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    Various applications and projected applications of active microwave instruments for studying water resources. Most applications involve use of an imaging system operating primarily at wavelengths of less than 30 cm (i.e., K-, X-, and L-bands). Discussion is also included concerning longer wavelength nonimaging systems for use in sounding polar glaciers and icecaps (e.g., Greenland and the Antarctic). The section is divided into six topics: (1) stream runoff, drainage basin analysis, and floods, (2) lake detection and fluctuating levels, (3) coastal processes and wetlands, (4) seasonally and permanently frozen (permafrost) ground, (5) solid water resources (snow, ice, and glaciers), and (6) water pollution

    A Landsat-based analysis of tropical forest dynamics in the Central Ecuadorian Amazon : Patterns and causes of deforestation and reforestation

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    Tropical deforestation constitutes a major threat to the Amazon rainforest. Monitoring forest dynamics is therefore necessary for sustainable management of forest resources in this region. However, cloudiness results in scarce good quality satellite observations, and is therefore a major challenge for monitoring deforestation and for detecting subtle processes such as reforestation. Furthermore, varying human pressure highlights the importance of understanding the underlying forces behind these processes at multiple scales but also from an interand transdisciplinary perspective. Against this background, this study analyzes and recommends different methodologies for accomplishing these goals, exemplifying their use with Landsat timeseries and socioeconomic data. The study cases were located in the Central Ecuadorian Amazon (CEA), an area characterized by different deforestation and reforestation processes and socioeconomic and landscape settings. Three objectives guided this research. First, processing and timeseries analysis algorithms for forest dynamics monitoring in areas with limited Landsat data were evaluated, using an innovative approach based in genetic algorithms. Second, a methodology based in image compositing, multisensor data fusion and postclassification change detection is proposed to address the limitations observed in forest dynamics monitoring with timeseries analysis algorithms. Third, the evaluation of the underlying driving forces of deforestation and reforestation in the CEA are conducted using a novel modelling technique called geographically weight ridge regression for improving processing and analysis of socioeconomic data. The methodology for forest dynamics monitoring demonstrates that despite abundant data gaps in the Landsat archive for the CEA, historical patterns of deforestation and reforestation can still be reported biennially with overall accuracies above 70%. Furthermore, the improved methodology for analyzing underlying driving forces of forest dynamics identified local drivers and specific socioeconomic settings that improved the explanations for the high deforestation and reforestation rates in the CEA. The results indicate that the proposed methodologies are an alternative for monitoring and analyzing forest dynamics, particularly in areas where data scarcity and landscape complexity require approaches that are more specialized.Landsat-basierte Analyse der Dynamik tropischer Wälder im Zentral-Ecuadorianischen Amazonasgebiet: Muster und Ursachen von Abholzung und Wiederaufforstung Die tropische Entwaldung stellt eine große Bedrohung für den AmazonasRegenwald dar. Daher ist die Überwachung von Walddynamiken eine notwendige Maßnahme, um eine nachhaltige Bewirtschaftung der Waldressourcen in dieser Region zu gewährleisten. Jedoch verschlechtert Bewölkung die Qualität der Satellitenaufnahmen und stellt die hauptsächliche Herausforderung für die Überwachung der Entwaldung sowie die Detektierung einhergehender Prozesse, wie der Wiederaufforstung, dar. Darüber hinaus zeigt der unterschiedliche menschliche Nutzungsdruck, wie wichtig es ist, die zugrundeliegenden Kräfte hinter diesen Prozessen auf mehreren Ebenen, aber auch interund transdisziplinär, zu verstehen. Variierender anthropogener Einfluss unterstreicht die Notwendigkeit, unterschwellige Prozesse (oder "Driver") auf multiplen Skalen aus interund transdisziplinärer Sicht zu verstehen. Darauf basierend analysiert und empfiehlt die vorliegende Studie unterschiedliche Methoden, welche unter Verwendung von LandsatZeitreihen und sozioökonomischen Daten zur Erreichung dieser Ziele beitragen. Die Untersuchungsgebiete befinden sich im ZentralEcuadorianischen Amazonasgebiet (CEA). Einem Gebiet, das einerseits durch differenzierte Entwaldungsund Aufforstungsprozesse, andererseits durch seine sozioökonomischen und landschaftlichen Gegebenheiten geprägt ist. Das Forschungsprojekt hat drei Zielvorgaben. Erstens werden auf genetischen Algorithmen basierten Verfahren zur Verarbeitung der Zeitreihenanalyse für die Überwachung der Walddynamik in Gebieten, für die nur begrenzte LandsatDaten vorhanden waren, bewertet. Zweitens soll eine Methode in Anlehnung an Satellitenbildkompositen, Datenfusion von mehreren Satellitenbildern und Veränderungsdetektion gefunden werden, die Einschränkungen der Walddynamik durch Entwaldung mithilfe von ZeitreihenAlgorithmen thematisiert. Drittens werden die Ursachen der Entwaldung/Abholzung im CEA anhand der geographischen gewichteten RidgeRegression, die zur einen verbesserten Analyse der sozioökonomischen Information beiträgt, bewertet. Die Methodik für das WalddynamikMonitoring zeigt, dass trotz umfangreicher Datenlücken im LandsatArchiv für das CEA alle zwei Jahre die historischen Entwaldungsund Wiederaufforstungsmuster mit einer Genauigkeit von über 70% gemeldet werden können. Eine verbesserte Analysemethode trägt außerdem dazu bei, die für die Walddynamik verantwortlichen treibenden Kräfte zu identifizieren, sowie lokale Treiber und spezifische sozioökonomische Rahmenbedingungen auszumachen, die eine bessere Erklärung für die hohen Entwaldungsund Wiederaufforstungsraten im CEA aufzeigen. Die erzielten Ergebnisse machen deutlich, dass die vorgeschlagenen Methoden eine Alternative zum Monitoring und zur Analyse der Walddynamik darstellen; Insbesondere in Gebieten, in denen Datenknappheit und Landschaftskomplexität spezialisierte Ansätze erforderlich machen

    Earth resources: A continuing bibliography with indexes (issue 52)

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    This bibliography lists 454 reports, articles, and other documents introduced into the NASA scientific and technical information system between October 1 and December 31, 1986. Emphasis is placed on the use of remote sensing and geophysical instrumentation in spacecraft and aircraft to survey and inventory natural resources and urban areas. Subject matter is grouped according to agriculture and forestry, environmental changes and cultural resources, geodesy and cartography, geology and mineral resources, hydrology and water management, data processing and distribution systems, instrumentation and sensors, and economic analysis

    Remote Sensing and River Basin Management: An Expository Review with Special Reference to Southwest Nigeria

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    This chapter is part of the focus on the development in river basin management, and its specific objective is to provide an expository review of drainage basin morphometry and the relevance of remote sensing technology, especially for locations in developing countries, where sophisticated remote sensing technology are either expensive or challenged by limited professionals. The chapter is divided into six subsections, treating issues on remote sensing, drainage density and presenting specific case study, among others. The study reveals that remote sensing technology is efficient for providing decision support system for both gauged and ungauged river basins, and that freely available remote sensing data can efficiently fill the data gaps in many developing countries. It however warned on the need to consider variations in sensors capacity and mission as important attributes that can generate different spatial radiometric issues which may negatively affect the quality of the results. It concluded that researchers on drainage basin analysis in developing countries will benefit immensely from the freely available remote sensing data in the region

    Remote sensing applications to resource problems in South Dakota

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    There are no author-identified significant results in this report
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