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Publications

Below is a list of the most recent EROS peer-reviewed scientific papers, reports, fact sheets, and other publications. You can search all our publication holdings by type, topic, year, and order.

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Filter Total Items: 2442

Land use and land cover change in the North Central Appalachians ecoregion

The North Central Appalachians ecoregion, spanning northern Pennsylvania and southern New York, has a long history of land use and land cover change. Turn-of-the-century logging dramatically altered the natural landscape of the ecoregion, but subsequent regeneration returned the ecoregion to a forest dominated condition. To understand contemporary land use and land cover changes, the U.S. Geologic
Authors
D.E. Napton, Terry L. Sohl, Roger F. Auch, Thomas R. Loveland

Magma supply dynamics at Westdahl volcano, Alaska, modeled from satellite radar interferometry

A group of satellite radar interferograms that span the time period from 1991 to 2000 shows that Westdahl volcano, Alaska, deflated during its 1991-1992 eruption and is reinflating at a rate that could produce another eruption within the next several years. The rates of inflation and deflation are approximated by exponential decay functions having time constants of about 6 years and a few days, re
Authors
Z. Lu, Timothy Masterlark, D. Dzurisin, Russ Rykhus, C. Wicks

Global forest cover mapping for the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization forest resources assessment 2000 program

Many countries periodically produce national reports on the status and changes of forest resources, using statistical surveys and spatial mapping of remotely sensed data. At the global level, the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations has conducted a Forest Resources Assessment (FRA) program every 10 yr since 1980, producing statistics and analysis that give a global synopsi
Authors
Z. Zhu, E. Waller

Land use and land cover change in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem: 1975-1995

Shifts in the demographic and economic character of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE) are driving patterns of land cover and land use change in the region. Such changes may have important consequences for ecosystem functioning. The objective of this paper is to quantify the trajectories and rates of change in land cover and use across the GYE for the period 1975-1995 using satellite imagery.
Authors
A.W. Parmenter, A. Hansen, R.E. Kennedy, W. Cohen, U. Langner, R. Lawrence, B. Maxwell, Alisa Gallant, R. Aspinall

Source model for the Mw 6.7, 23 October 2002, Nenana Mountain earthquake (Alaska) from InSAR

The 23 October 2002 Nenana Mountain Earthquake (Mw ∼ 6.7) occurred on the Denali Fault (Alaska), to the west of the Mw ∼ 7.9 Denali Earthquake that ruptured the same fault 11 days later. We used 6 interferograms, constructed using radar images from the Canadian Radarsat-1 and European ERS-2 satellites, to determine the coseismic surface deformation and a source model. Data were acquired on ascendi
Authors
Tim J. Wright, Z. Lu, Charles Wicks

The 1997 eruption of Okmok Volcano, Alaska: A synthesis of remotely sensed imagery

Okmok Volcano, in the eastern Aleutian Islands, erupted in February and March of 1997 producing a 6-km-long lava flow and low-level ash plumes. This caldera is one of the most active in the Aleutian Arc, and is now the focus of international multidisciplinary studies. A synthesis of remotely sensed data (AirSAR, derived DEMs, Landsat MSS and ETM+ data, AVHRR, ERS, JERS, Radarsat) has given a seque
Authors
M.R. Patrick, J. Dehn, K.R. Papp, Z. Lu, K. Dean, L. Moxey, P. Izbekov, R. Guritz

A stepwise regression tree for nonlinear approximation: applications to estimating subpixel land cover

A stepwise regression tree (SRT) algorithm was developed for approximating complex nonlinear relationships. Based on the regression tree of Breiman et al . (BRT) and a stepwise linear regression (SLR) method, this algorithm represents an improvement over SLR in that it can approximate nonlinear relationships and over BRT in that it gives more realistic predictions. The applicability of this method
Authors
C. Huang, J.R.G. Townshend

IKONOS geometric characterization

The IKONOS spacecraft acquired images on July 3, 17, and 25, and August 13, 2001 of Brookings SD, a small city in east central South Dakota, and on May 22, June 30, and July 30, 2000, of the rural area around the EROS Data Center. South Dakota State University (SDSU) evaluated the Brookings scenes and the USGS EROS Data Center (EDC) evaluated the other scenes. The images evaluated by SDSU utilized
Authors
Dennis Helder, Michael Coan, Kevin Patrick, Peter Gaska

The collaborative historical African rainfall model: description and evaluation

In Africa the variability of rainfall in space and time is high, and the general availability of historical gauge data is low. This makes many food security and hydrologic preparedness activities difficult. In order to help overcome this limitation, we have created the Collaborative Historical African Rainfall Model (CHARM). CHARM combines three sources of information: climatologically aided inte
Authors
Christopher C. Funk, Joel C. Michaelsen, James P. Verdin, Guleid A. Artan, Gregory Husak, Gabriel B. Senay, Hussein Gadain, Tamuka Magadazire

Processing large remote sensing image data sets on Beowulf clusters

High-performance computing is often concerned with the speed at which floating- point calculations can be performed. The architectures of many parallel computers and/or their network topologies are based on these investigations. Often, benchmarks resulting from these investigations are compiled with little regard to how a large dataset would move about in these systems. This part of the Beowulf st
Authors
Daniel R. Steinwand, Brian Maddox, Tim Beckmann, Gail Schmidt

Atlantic coastal pine barrens

No abstract available.
Authors
Terry L. Sohl

Extending Beowulf Clusters

Beowulf clusters can provide a cost-effective way to compute numerical models and process large amounts of remote sensing image data. Usually a Beowulf cluster is designed to accomplish a specific set of processing goals, and processing is very efficient when the problem remains inside the constraints of the original design. There are cases, however, when one might wish to compute a problem that i
Authors
Daniel R. Steinwand, Brian Maddox, Tim Beckmann, George Hamer