Within days of the launch, Landsat 1 acquired an image of an astounding 81,000-acre (327.8 square kilometers) fire burning in isolated, central Alaska. For the first time ever, scientists and resource management officials were able to see the full extent of damage from a fire in a single image while it was still burning.
USGS EROS User Services
Science and Products
USGS EROS Archive - Landsat Collection 2 Level-3 Fractional Snow Covered Area (fSCA) Science Product
USGS EROS Archive - Landsat Collection 2 Level-3 Dynamic Surface Water Extent (DSWE) Science Product
USGS EROS Archive - Landsat Collection 2 Level-3 Burned Area (BA) Science Product
USGS EROS Archive - LCMAP- CCDC v1.0 Products (Hawaii)
eVIIRS Global LST Data Dictionary
Landsat 7 Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus Systematically Corrected (1999 - May 2003) Data Dictionary
LCMAP Change Stories
USGS EROS Archive - LCMAP- Continuous Change Detection Classification v1.2 (CCDC) Products (U.S.)
USGS EROS Archive - Landsat Archives - Landsat 4-9 Collection 2 Level-2 Albers Scenes
LCMAP Did You Know?
Goddard’s LiDAR, Hyperspectral, and Thermal Imager (G-LiHT) Data Dictionary
Heat Capacity Mapping Mission Digital Source Data Dictionary
Within days of the launch, Landsat 1 acquired an image of an astounding 81,000-acre (327.8 square kilometers) fire burning in isolated, central Alaska. For the first time ever, scientists and resource management officials were able to see the full extent of damage from a fire in a single image while it was still burning.
Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas, slid into Landsat 1's view on July 25, 1972. In this false-color image, shades of red indicate vegetated land and grays and whites are urban or rocky surfaces. The composite image is shown using the near-infrared, red and green bands (bands 7, 5, 4) at a 60 meter resolution.
Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas, slid into Landsat 1's view on July 25, 1972. In this false-color image, shades of red indicate vegetated land and grays and whites are urban or rocky surfaces. The composite image is shown using the near-infrared, red and green bands (bands 7, 5, 4) at a 60 meter resolution.
The very first image in the Landsat archive is the MSS image above, showing the Dallas - Fort Worth area of Texas on July 25, 1972. The resolution is 60 meters per pixel in this false-color image, where shades of red indicate vegetated land and grays and whites are urban or rocky surfaces.
The very first image in the Landsat archive is the MSS image above, showing the Dallas - Fort Worth area of Texas on July 25, 1972. The resolution is 60 meters per pixel in this false-color image, where shades of red indicate vegetated land and grays and whites are urban or rocky surfaces.
Science and Products
USGS EROS Archive - Landsat Collection 2 Level-3 Fractional Snow Covered Area (fSCA) Science Product
USGS EROS Archive - Landsat Collection 2 Level-3 Dynamic Surface Water Extent (DSWE) Science Product
USGS EROS Archive - Landsat Collection 2 Level-3 Burned Area (BA) Science Product
USGS EROS Archive - LCMAP- CCDC v1.0 Products (Hawaii)
eVIIRS Global LST Data Dictionary
Landsat 7 Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus Systematically Corrected (1999 - May 2003) Data Dictionary
LCMAP Change Stories
USGS EROS Archive - LCMAP- Continuous Change Detection Classification v1.2 (CCDC) Products (U.S.)
USGS EROS Archive - Landsat Archives - Landsat 4-9 Collection 2 Level-2 Albers Scenes
LCMAP Did You Know?
Goddard’s LiDAR, Hyperspectral, and Thermal Imager (G-LiHT) Data Dictionary
Heat Capacity Mapping Mission Digital Source Data Dictionary
Within days of the launch, Landsat 1 acquired an image of an astounding 81,000-acre (327.8 square kilometers) fire burning in isolated, central Alaska. For the first time ever, scientists and resource management officials were able to see the full extent of damage from a fire in a single image while it was still burning.
Within days of the launch, Landsat 1 acquired an image of an astounding 81,000-acre (327.8 square kilometers) fire burning in isolated, central Alaska. For the first time ever, scientists and resource management officials were able to see the full extent of damage from a fire in a single image while it was still burning.
Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas, slid into Landsat 1's view on July 25, 1972. In this false-color image, shades of red indicate vegetated land and grays and whites are urban or rocky surfaces. The composite image is shown using the near-infrared, red and green bands (bands 7, 5, 4) at a 60 meter resolution.
Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas, slid into Landsat 1's view on July 25, 1972. In this false-color image, shades of red indicate vegetated land and grays and whites are urban or rocky surfaces. The composite image is shown using the near-infrared, red and green bands (bands 7, 5, 4) at a 60 meter resolution.
The very first image in the Landsat archive is the MSS image above, showing the Dallas - Fort Worth area of Texas on July 25, 1972. The resolution is 60 meters per pixel in this false-color image, where shades of red indicate vegetated land and grays and whites are urban or rocky surfaces.
The very first image in the Landsat archive is the MSS image above, showing the Dallas - Fort Worth area of Texas on July 25, 1972. The resolution is 60 meters per pixel in this false-color image, where shades of red indicate vegetated land and grays and whites are urban or rocky surfaces.