Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

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.

After selecting any set of these criteria, click "Apply Filter" to view the search results.

Filter Total Items: 2442

El Niño and its impact on fire weather conditions in Alaska

Examining the relationship of El Niño to weather patterns in Alaska shows wide climate variances that depend on the teleconnection between the tropics and the northern latitudes. However, the weather patterns exhibited in Alaska during and just after moderate to strong El Niño episodes are generally consistent: above normal temperature and precipitation along the Alaskan coast, and above normal te
Authors
Jason C. Hess, Carven A. Scott, Gary L. Hufford, Michael D. Fleming

InSAR analysis of natural recharge to define structure of a ground-water basin, San Bernardino, California

Using interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) analysis of ERS-1 and ERS-2 images, we detect several centimeters of uplift during the first half of 1993 in two areas of the San Bernardino ground-water basin of southern California. This uplift correlates with unusually high runoff from the surrounding mountains and increased ground-water levels in nearby wells. The deformation of the land s
Authors
Z. Lu, W.R. Danskin

A multivariate analysis of biophysical parameters of tallgrass prairie among land management practices and years

Six treatments of eastern Kansas tallgrass prairie - native prairie, hayed, mowed, grazed, burned and untreated - were studied to examine the biophysical effects of land management practices on grasslands. On each treatment, measurements of plant biomass, leaf area index, plant cover, leaf moisture and soil moisture were collected. In addition, measurements were taken of the Normalized Difference
Authors
J. A. Griffith, K. P. Price, E. A. Martinko

Paleoclimate and Amerindians: Evidence from stable isotopes and atmospheric circulation

Two Amerindian demographic shifts are attributed to climate change in the northwest plains of North America: at ???11,000 calendar years before present (yr BP), Amerindian culture apparently split into foothills-mountains vs. plains biomes; and from 8,000-5,000 yr BP, scarce archaeological sites on the open plains suggest emigration during xeric "Altithermal" conditions. We reconstructed paleoclim
Authors
M.B. Lovvorn, G.C. Frison, L.L. Tieszen

Enhanced algorithm performance for land cover classification from remotely sensed data using bagging and boosting

Two ensemble methods, bagging and boosting, were investigated for improving algorithm performance. Our results confirmed the theoretical explanation [1] that bagging improves unstable, but not stable, learning algorithms. While boosting enhanced accuracy of a weak learner, its behavior is subject to the characteristics of each learning algorithm.
Authors
J.C.-W. Chan, C. Huang, R. DeFries

Remote sensing education and Internet/World Wide Web technology

Remote sensing education is increasingly in demand across academic and professional disciplines. Meanwhile, Internet technology and the World Wide Web (WWW) are being more frequently employed as teaching tools in remote sensing and other disciplines. The current wealth of information on the Internet and World Wide Web must be distilled, nonetheless, to be useful in remote sensing education. An ext
Authors
J. A. Griffith, S.L. Egbert

Desertification and a shift of forest species in the West African Sahel

Original field data show that forest species richness and tree density in the West African Sahel declined in the last half of the 20th century. Average forest species richness of areas of 4 km2 in Northwest Senegal fell from 64 ?? 2 species ca 1945 to 43 ?? 2 species in 1993, a decrease significant at p < 0.001. Densities of trees of height ???3 m declined from 10 ?? 0.3 trees ha-1 in 1954 to 7.8
Authors
Patrick Gonzalez

A comparison of U.S. geological survey seamless elevation models with shuttle radar topography mission data

Elevation models produced from Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) data will be the most comprehensive, consistently processed, highest resolution topographic dataset ever produced for the Earth's land surface. Many applications that currently use elevation data will benefit from the increased availability of data with higher accuracy, quality, and resolution, especially in poorly mapped areas
Authors
D. Gesch, J. Williams, W. Miller

Toward a national fuels mapping strategy: Lessons from selected mapping programs

The establishment of a robust national fuels mapping program must be based on pertinent lessons from relevant national mapping programs. Many large-area mapping programs are under way in numerous Federal agencies. Each of these programs follows unique strategies to achieve mapping goals and objectives. Implementation approaches range from highly centralized programs that use tightly integrated sta
Authors
Thomas R. Loveland

A parallel-processing approach to computing for the geographic sciences; applications and systems enhancements

The overarching goal of this project is to build a spatially distributed infrastructure for information science research by forming a team of information science researchers and providing them with similar hardware and software tools to perform collaborative research. Four geographically distributed Centers of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) are developing their own clusters of low-cost, persona
Authors
Michael Crane, Dan Steinwand, Tim Beckmann, Greg Krpan, Shu-Guang Liu, Erin Nichols, Jim Haga, Brian Maddox, Chris Bilderback, Mark Feller, George Homer

Tampa Bay Integrated Science Pilot Study: Baseline mapping, land surface dynamics and predictive modeling, and hazards vulnerability studies

Tampa Bay and its environs have experienced phenomenal urban growth and significant changes in land cover and land-use practices over the past 50 years. This trend is expected to continue, with the impact of human activity broadening geographically and intensifying throughout the region.One of the immediate impacts of urban growth is the creation of additional impervious surfaces, which in turn, g
Authors
Michael Crane, Kimberly Yates, Robert Clark, Dean Gesch, Kurt Hess, John Koehmstedt, Dennis Milbert, Bruce Parker, Dan Sechrist, Janet Tilley, Robert Wilson

Tampa Bay Integrated Science Pilot Study: wetland characterization

Coastal wetlands in Tampa Bay consist of mangrove forest and tidal salt marsh. Wetlands buffer storm surges, provide fish and wildlife habitat, and enhance water quality through the removal of water-borne nutrients and contaminants. Substantial areas of both mangrove and salt marsh have been lost to agricultural, residential and industrial development in this urban estuary. Wetlands restoration ha
Authors
Carole C. McIvor, Ellen Raabe, Kimberly Yates, Bill Carter, Mike Crane, Mario Fernandez, Brandt Henningsen, Sara Kruse, Rich Oches, Ed Proffitt, Randy Runnels, Ramesh Shrestha, Tom Smith, Steve Travis