17 research outputs found

    GEOMORPHOLOGICAL MAPPING WITH TERRESTRIAL LASER SCANNING AND UAV-BASED IMAGING

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    High-resolution digital elevation models (DEMs) are useful for the detailed mapping of geomorphological features. Nowadays various sensors and platforms are available to collect 3D data. The presented study compares terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) and low-cost unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV)-based imaging in terms of their usability for capturing small-scale surface structures. In October 2014 and June 2015 measurements with both systems were carried out in an episodically water-filled karst depression under pasture farming in the region of Hohenlohe (Southwest Germany). The overall aims were to establish high-resolution DEMs and monitor changes of the relief caused by dissolution and compare the advantages and drawbacks of both systems for such studies. Due to the short time between the campaigns the clear detection of temporal changes was hardly possible. However, the multi-temporal campaigns allowed an extensive investigation of the usability of both sensors under different environmental conditions. In addition to the remote sensing measurements, the coordinates of several positions in the study area were measured with a RTK-DGPS system as independent reference data sets in both campaigns. The TLS- and UAV-derived DEM heights at these positions were validated against the DGPS-derived heights. The accuracy of the TLS-derived values is supported by low mean differences between TLS and DGPS measurements while the UAV-derived models show a weaker performance. In the future years additional simultaneous measurements with both approaches under more similar vegetation conditions are necessary to detect surface movements. Moreover, by investigating the subsurface the interaction of above and below ground processes might be detected

    Solos do passado: origem e identificação

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    Solos resultam da interação de fatores e processos operantes nas diferentes paisagens da superfície terrestre. Ao longo do tempo geológico, essas paisagens se modificam, bem como os perfis de solo a elas associados. Decorrentes de processos eólicos, hídricos, tectônicos, climáticos ou mesmo da atividade antrópica, essas mudanças remodelam a paisagem de forma gradual ou catastrófica e, geralmente, irreversível, destruindo os solos associados. Entretanto, determinadas situações permitem que os solos sejam originalmente preservados em áreas específicas dessa paisagem pretérita, incorporando-se a sequências sedimentares ou vulcânicas, gerando os denominados paleossolos. Estes fornecem informações e evidências valiosas em estudos de reconstituições paleoambientais, principalmente quando o registro fossilífero é raro ou inexistente, na caracterização de antigas atmosferas e paleoclimas, de correlações estratigráficas, como indicativo de antigas superfícies de relevo, de certas concentrações minerais, de paleoprocessos pedogenéticos, processos sedimentares, como indicativo de deriva continental, na geoarqueologia. No Brasil, pesquisas envolvendo paleossolos são ainda relativamente raras e recentes, cujo marco inicial data da década de 1970, ao passo que nos Estados Unidos e na Europa pesquisas em que os paleossolos constituem o cerne da investigação ou possuem papel de destaque estão bastante avançadas e disseminadas. Esta revisão trata dos conceitos básicos da paleopedologia, objetivando despertar o interesse, no meio científico pedológico, para esse tema ainda pouco explorado no País

    The Discourses of Marketing and Development: Towards "Critical Transformative Marketing Research"

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    In order to understand the connection between development, marketing and transformative consumer research (TCR), with its attendant interest in promoting human well-being, this article begins by charting the links between US ‘exceptionalism’, ‘Manifest Destiny’ and modernisation theory, demonstrating the confluence of US perspectives and experiences in articulations and understandings of the contributions of marketing practice and consumer research to society. Our narrative subsequently engages with the rise of social marketing (1960s-) and finally TCR (2006-). We move beyond calls for an appreciation of paradigm plurality to encourage TCR scholars to adopt a multiple paradigmatic approach as part of a three-pronged strategy that encompasses an initial ‘provisional moral agnosticism’. As part of this stance, we argue that scholars should value the insights provided by multiple paradigms, turning each paradigmatic lens sequentially on to the issue of the relationship between marketing, development and consumer well-being. After having scrutinised these issues using multiple perspectives, scholars can then decide whether to pursue TCR-led activism. The final strategy that we identify is termed ‘critical intolerance’
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