With the successful launch of the first Earth Resources Technology Satellite (ERTS-1 or Landsat-1) on 23 July 1972, scientists and engineers gained a valuable new source of space-based observations for studying hydrologic systems and processes. Previously hampered by a lack of detailed spatial infor
The application of remote sensing to environmental archaeology
โ Scribed by Daniel Donoghue; Ian Shennan
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1988
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 866 KB
- Volume
- 3
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0883-6353
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
An area in the Fenlands of Eastern England was used to assess the spectral, spatial, and seasonal requirements of airborne multispectral data for identifying wetland archaeological features by detecting crop and soil marks. Ordination of data from a scanner with 11 spectral channels was achieved using the Sheffield method, which calculates the wavebands that produce a 3 band composite image with optimum contrast using band variances and interband correlations. The spatial detail requirements for multispectral data were investigated by applying an edge enhancing filter to single waveband images. The loss of feature clarity with increased levels of spatial smoothing is visually apparent. Seasonal variation in crop mark visibility was quantified by woss tabulating feature visibility in fields known to contain features with time period and sensor type.
If remote sensing is to be used for repeated operational archaeological survey then the quality and quantity of information which can be gained from the data must be evaluated. This study attempts to define some of the necessary operational requirements for the use of multispectral data for archaeology.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The process of translating user requirements into technological specifications using mathematical models is described using the example of mission requirements for designing the next generation environmental satellites. The analysis provides an end-to-end traceability from the user mission figures o
Several 1-meter commercial remote sensing satellites are expected to be in orbit by 1999, producing digital images of the surface of the earth for sale on the market. There are several such satellites presently in orbit, launched by six nations, but none has resolution less than 2 meters. In the pas
Regarding remote sensing images analysis viewed as a pattern recognition problem, one has to take into account numeric and symbolic knowledge about searched classes and objects. Firstly we briefly describe an expert system approach for image classification according to expert knowledge about best si