Vegetation and Terrain Effects on Digital Classification of LANDSAT Imagery


Book Description

LANDSAT scenes from the northern Chihuahuan Desert, south-central New Mexico and western Texas, taken in March and August 1975, were analyzed using conventional supervised digital image analysis techniques. The study objective was to evaluate th digitally classified LANDSAT image against known ground condition and determine those vegetative and terrain factors that could aid the manual interpretation of the classified image. The interpretation of the image and correct classification of most areas were greatly assisted by knowledge of plant community-landform relations, the species phenological and physiognomic characteristics, and the reflectance-cover relations for the soil and vegetation conditions in each scene. (Author).







Digital Remote Sensing


Book Description







Aeolian Geomorphology


Book Description

This book, first published in 1986, stems from the 1986 Binghamton Geomorphology Symposium. The topic was chosen because of the advances in the study of aeolian processes and landforms, particularly in the area of desertification, and the papers collected here clearly indicate that their study is not constrained by discipline boundaries but are of interest to geologists, physical geographers, soil scientists, meteorologists and engineers.