Geostatistics is essential for environmental scientists. Weather and climate vary from place to place, soil varies at every scale at which it is examined, and even man-made attributes Π²Πβ such as the distribution of pollution Π²Πβ vary. The techniques used in geostatistics are ideally suited to the n
Geostatistics for environmental scientists
β Scribed by Richard Webster, Margaret A. Oliver
- Publisher
- Wiley
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 332
- Series
- Statistics in Practice
- Edition
- 2
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
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Geostatistics is essential for environmental scientists. Weather and climate vary from place to place, soil varies at every scale at which it is examined, and even man-made attributes β such as the distribution of pollution β vary. The techniques used in geostatistics are ideally suited to the needs
Geostatistics is essential for environmental scientists. Weather and climate vary from place to place, soil varies at every scale at which it is examined, and even man-made attributes β such as the distribution of pollution β vary. The techniques used in geostatistics are ideally suited to the needs
<p><p>Once applied only to problems of mining-reserves assessment or petroleum-reservoir characterization, geostatistics is now being used in an increasingly large number of disciplines in environmental sciences. On the one hand, it enables the analysis and handling, in a rigorous probabilistic fram
<p>Engineers and earth scientists are increasingly interested in quantitative methods for the analysis, interpretation, and modeling of data that imperfectly describe natural processes or attributes measured at geographical locations. Inference from imperfect knowledge is the realm of classical stat
This volume contains forty-one selected full-text contributions from the Fourth European Conference on Geostatistics for Environmental Applications, geoENV IV, held in Barcelona, Spain, November 2002. The objective of the editors was to compile a set of papers from which the reader could perceive ho