These Lidar-derived topography maps were produced
as a collaborative effort between the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)
Coastal and Marine Geology Program, Florida Integrated Science Center
(FISC) St. Petersburg, the National Park
Service
(NPS) Inventory and Monitoring Program, Northeast Coastal and
Barrier Network,
and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA),
Wallops Flight Facility. One objective of this research is to create
techniques to survey coral reefs, barrier islands, and various
nearshore coastal environments for the purposes of geomorphic change
studies, habitat mapping, ecological monitoring, change detection, and
event assessment. As part of this project, data from an innovative
instrument under development at the NASA
Wallops Flight Facility, the NASA
Experimental Airborne Advanced Research Lidar (EAARL)
are being used. This sensor has the potential to make significant
contributions in this realm for measuring subaerial and submarine
topography wthin cross-environment surveys. High spectral resolution,
water-column correction, and low costs were found to be key factors in
providing accurate and affordable imagery to coastal resource managers.
In-depth Resources
Report of the U.S. Geological Survey
Lidar
Workshop Sponsored by the Land Remote Sensing Program and held in St. Petersburg, FL,
November 2002 by Michael Crane, Tonya
Clayton, Ellen Raabe, Jason Stoker, Larry Handley, Gerald Bawden, Karen
Morgan, Vivian Queija, OF 2004-1456, U.S.Geological Survey, 72 pages - Adobe PDF file.
|