2 research outputs found

    Local-scale mapping of tree species in a lower mountain area using Sentinel-1 and -2 multitemporal images, vegetation indices, and topographic information

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    IntroductionMapping tree species is an important activity that provides the information necessary for sustainable forest management. Remote sensing is a effective tool that offers data at different spatial and spectral resolutions over large areas. Free and open acces Sentinel satellite imagery and Google Earth Engine, which is a powerful cloud computing platform, can be used together to map tree species.MethodsIn this study we mapped tree species at a local scale using recent Sentinel-1 (S-1) and Sentinel-2 (S-2) time-series imagery, various vegetation indices (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index - NDVI, Enhanced Vegetation Index - EVI, Green Leaf Index - GLI, and Green Normalized Difference Vegetation Index - GNDVI) and topographic features (elevation, aspect and slope). Five sets of data were used, in different combinations, together with the Random Forest classifier in order to determine seven tree species (spruce, beech, larch, fir, pine, mixed, and other broadleaves [BLs]) in the studied area.Results and discussionDataset 1 was a combination of S-2 images (bands 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 8a, 11 and 12), for which an overall accuracy of 76.74% was obtained. Dataset 2 comprised S-2 images and vegetation indices, leading to an overall accuracy of 78.24%. Dataset 3 included S-2 images and topographic features, which lead to an overall accuracy of 89.51%. Dataset 4 included S-2 images, vegetation indices, and topographic features, that have determined an overall accuracy of 89.36%. Dataset 5 was composed of S-2 images, S-1 images (VV and VH polarization), vegetation indices, and topographic features that lead to an overall accuracy of 89.68%. Among the five sets of data, Dataset 3 produced the most significant increase in accuracy, of 12.77%, compared to Dataset 1. Including the vegetation indices with the S-2 images (Dataset 2) gave an accuracy increase of only 1.50%. By combining the S-1 and S-2 images, vegetation indices and topographic features (Dataset 5) there was an accuracy increase of only 0.17%, compared with the S-2 images plus topographic features combination (Dataset 3). However, the input brought by the S-1 images was apparent in the increase in classification accuracy for the mixed and other BL species that were mostly found in hilly locations. Our findings confirm the potential of S-2 images, used together with other variables, for classifying tree species at the local scale

    THE ROLE OF TOPOGRAPHY AND PHOTOGRAMMETRY IN CONNECTING ARCHAEOLOGICAL VESTIGES. DOCUMENTING THE THERMAE OF LEGIO XIII GEMINA FROM APULUM

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    The archaeological research, especially the preventive type, is usually determined by interventions and investments in a specific archaeological area, having also a powerful destructive character. The role of the topography in this research, together with the legal compulsory character, is very important; the modern measuring techniques have a special contribution in the contextualisation of the archaeological discoveries, especially for those from a documented archaeological area, due to the fact that it can be a revealing factor by bringing vestiges together and achieving a “composite” material, that can be useful to draw important conclusions related to the ”monolithic” ensemble of structures and buildings belonging to the same period. At the same time, the modern techniques for the collection, storage and analysis of the topographic-archaeological data may be significantly important for the sustainable development of a region, by preserving and highlighting the cultural heritage.</p
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