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Posts Tagged ‘Fugro EarthData’

International Year of the Forests

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011

I once heard, ‘In order to have a healthy planet, we need to have healthy forests’. Deforestation has been a global issue for decades. In the 1800’s and 1900’s Europe, Russia, North Africa, and the Middle East had a vast amount of deforestation, but within the past decade theses regions have stabilized and re-growth is now beginning to occur. Today the majority of deforestation has and continues to occur in the taiga and tropical regions where the vast amount of our world’s forest lives. To raise awareness on sustainable management, development, and conservation of all types of forests, the United Nations declared 2011 the International Year of the Forests.

So what needs to be done to help assess and manage our global forests and what tools do we need to get started?

Firstly, we need to have accurate, up-to-date maps of our forests. Forested areas cover roughly 30% of the world’s surface, that’s about 40 million km². The forested areas are not spread evenly throughout the world, nor is it located within the same climatic regions. With a high percentage begin spread among taiga regions (North America and Russia) and tropical regions (South America and Southeast Asia) that have a large difference in climate and environment. Mapping these regions can be extremely difficult due to rugged terrain, extreme climate and weather conditions, consistent cloud cover, and triple canopy forest. As we all know, Fugro’s GeoSAR (Dual Band IFSAR mapping system) is known for resolving these mapping challenges as well as being best suited for large are mapping.

GeoSAR’s unique technology supports the collection, analysis, assessment, and management of forests and carbon estimation on a country-wide basis. With it’s foliage penetrating technology (P-band), GeoSAR is unique in it’s ability to derive detailed accurate terrain data in the thickest forests and densest jungles. The difference between the X-band and P-band data provides important information that is used to develop value-added data sets such as land use/land cover and biomass estimates. Combined with ground truth data and satellite monitoring, this information is found to be extremely valuable for the assessment and management of our global forest.

GeoSAR not only provides the technology necessary for accurately mapping these difficult environments but also can provide value- added products found necessary for forest assessment and management when combined with satellite imagery that provide essential monitoring capabilities. Below you will find an example of biomass estimation collected over a tropical region generated from GeoSAR data. Do your part in spreading the awareness for the International Year of the Forests, and please remember ‘In order to have a healthy plant, we need to have healthy forest’. Please feel free to leave a comment or request further information!

Biomass Estimation. The difference between GeoSAR's X-band and P-band data is used to calculate biomass estimations. Higher levels are shown with brighter colors.

GeoSAR Graces the Cover of PE&RS

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

GeoSAR will be gracing the cover of PE&RS this month which will be distributed at the ESRI International User Conference July 12th- 16th in San Diego, CA. Be sure to pick up your copy, view the cover, and read the feature article “Topographic Mapping Using IFSAR Data in a 3D Desktop GIS Environment” written by: L.G. (Jake) Jenkins and Larry Lund.

blog

The cover image represents a Digital Elevation Model generated from GeoSAR’s P-band radar overlaid with X and P-band orthorectified images, all in the ChromaDepth® color scheme. The orthorectified images were filtered to increase homogeneity, reduce speckling and remove artifacts. Waterways were flattened and rendered monotonic. The final images were composed into the scene using ESRI®’s ArcGIS software using a custom color pallet that allows the cooler colors to recede and warmer colors to advance on the eye when viewed using the ChromaDepth® 3-D glasses.

GeoSAR’s X and P-band orthorectified images are arranged split screen to highlight features such as terrain, agricultural fields and mangroves. P-band is located in the upper left as the X-band is located in the lower right. P-band highlights features associated with human settlements such as agricultural fields, irrigation channels, roadways and buildings, even those that may be hidden below the vegetation, whereas the mangroves appear brighter in the X-band imagery because they scatter more of the radar energy back.

GeoSAR is the world’s only dual-band, single-pass airborne interferometric SAR system. Penetrating clouds and foliage, GeoSAR simultaneously maps surface features (using x-band) and near bare-earth elevation (using P-band), making it particularly well suited for equatorial mapping.

GEOSAR FOR BIOMASS MAPPING SOLUTION IN AMAZON FOREST

Friday, June 4th, 2010

GeoSAR continues to make headlines! Fugro Earthdata recently announced that the Blue Moon Fund decided to utilize GeoSAR’s biomass mapping solution in the Amazon Rainforest. GeoSAR’s unique duel band frequencies (X-band and P-band) provide the perfect solution for estimating tropical rainforest biomass. The X-band reflects of the tree tops were the P-band penetrates through the foliage reflecting the near bare Earth, thus producing landscape-level estimates of carbon content in lowland tropical forests. Project deliverables include digital, high-resolution above-ground biomass estimates for the project area, and a map of total carbon storage for evaluation of REDD related baseline. The work will be funded through a grant extended by the Blue Moon Fund and executed through the fund’s partnerships with Wake Forest University (WFU) and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). Please stay tuned for more GeoSAR updates!

From Snow to Sand: The Benefits of Dual-Band IFSAR

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

The conference trail grows longer! At last post, we had just returned from the Alaska Surveying and Mapping Conference in Anchorage where GeoSAR Project Manager Steven Shaffer presented the applications of dual-band IFSAR in arctic and sub-arctic environments. Snow penetration/mapping was part of that discussion. This week we are switching gears—rather dramatically—to the Map Middle East Conference in Dubai where last week GeoSAR Client Program Manager Caroline Tyra presented a paper on the ability of radar to penetrate sand for subsurface mapping.

The overall concept isn’t exactly new. Ground penetrating radar (GPR) technology, which utilizes radar bands in the UHF/VHF frequencies from hand-held or vehicular-based equipment, is a well established technique. It’s the use of remote sensing platforms for subsurface mapping that is gaining ground (no pun intended!). Using satellite and airborne methods, it is possible to provide wide-area coverage of subsurface hydrology and structures for use in mineral exploration and development, infrastructure design, and archeological research.

So where is the science? In the early 1980s, the hyper-arid Bir Safsaf region in southwestern Egypt was mapped using Shutte Radar SIR-A and SIR-B to detect geologic structures covered by layers of sand. Discoveries from that research included fossil river systems. More recent studies have shown the ability of very low-frequency radar, such as P-band, to penetrate depths of 15 meters or more depending on soil composition, radar incidence angles, and soil moisture.

Fugro EarthData has confirmed these P-band findings using GeoSAR during a mission over the Mojave Desert near Edwards Air Force Base. Among other things, the results revealed a mostly submerged geological formation. Subsurface mapping is an area we’ll continue to research given its many implications related to water networks, national security, and heritage management. It’s also one more way that we can help clients maximize the value of their GeoSAR data—by unlocking what we call, “the Power of P”.

Want to continue the conversation? Leave a comment or send us an email at info@geosar.com.

On the Tradeshow Trail: DC to Anchorage to DC

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

We’ve been doing a lot of “show-and-tell” the past couple of weeks, attending the ESRI Federal User Conference in Washington, DC, and the Alaska Surveying & Mapping Conference in Anchorage, Alaska. At the ESRI Federal User Conference, Fugro EarthData’s Larry Lund gave a paper on PurVIEW, and its ability to streamline the topographic mapping process for GeoSAR data. For anyone who wasn’t at the conference, but is interested in the subject, send us an email (info@earthdata.com) and we’ll be sure to get you the information you need.

Last week, we traveled to Anchorage, Alaska, where we met up with some of our local staff and exhibited at the Alaska Surveying and Mapping Conference. It’s a place we’ve been coming back to often as Stakeholders have been working long and hard over the past couple of years to address the state’s pressing needs for accurate and up-to-date topographic mapping. Given the size, geographic location, and challenging terrain, airborne IFSAR has been deemed the ideal solution for generating accurate and detailed digital elevation data.

But elevation isn’t the only application for Alaska Stakeholders. This point was illustrated in a well-received talk by Fugro EarthData’s Steven Shaffer. In his presentation, “Airborne IFSAR Mapping in Alaska: Solutions for a Statewide DEM and Beyond,” Steve explored many additional use cases for dual-band IFSAR in particular, including those related to forestry, soil studies, and snow/ice mapping. If you weren’t able to attend the conference but are interested in learning more about what we presented, let us know and we’ll make sure to answer your information needs.

This week, it’s back to Washington, DC, International Conference on Commercial Remote Sensing! We hope to see you there.

PurVIEW Expands the GeoSAR User Experience

Monday, February 8th, 2010

In our last post, we wrote about the release of the updated FugroViewer software. This week, the software news continues. As you may have seen in our recent news release, Fugro EarthData and ESRI Canada announced a strategic partnership and global distribution agreement related to ESRI’s PurVIEW mapping software. Why are we talking about it in this blog? Because the implications of this relationship to GeoSAR users is pretty big.

Over the past year, Fugro EarthData and ESRI Canada have worked to modify the PurVIEW software to accommodate use of dual-band IFSAR data. That means users now have a tool that enables them to photogrammetrically capture accurate 3D geospatial information from GeoSAR data (roads, hydrography, cultural features, etc.) directly into their GIS database, as an ArcGIS extension. In a nutshell, it takes “radargrammetry” to a whole new level; no translations, no missing attributes, all native ESRI formats.

We’ve written before about the importance of technology transfer–putting the full power of the data and its potential into the hands of GeoSAR users. PurVIEW exemplifies our commitment to this notion. Within days of the original announcement, we received numerous requests from GeoSAR customers interested in learning more. The demos are lining up!

If you are among those interested, send us an email: info@geosar.com. You can also learn more about PurVIEW at ESRI Canada’s website. We’ll also be on hand at the ESRI Federal User Conference later this month, so look for us there.

Remote Sensing and Climate Change Part II: Making REDD Work

Friday, December 18th, 2009

As heads of state and other government leaders enter the final rounds of the COP-15 climate change talks, many key issues remain unresolved. The target rate of emissions reductions by wealthy nations, the amount of aid to poor nations, and monitoring compliance are at the crux of the slow-moving negotiations.

It’s the monitoring piece where geospatial comes into play. As addressed in our last entry about the REDD initiative, several remote sensing methodologies can contribute to large-area forest carbon measurement and monitoring, each with unique benefits. This week we are taking a closer look, reviewing the top-three technologies and briefly exploring their strengths and weaknesses:

Optical imaging: Offering low-cost, repeat coverage acquisition over large project areas, satellite-based hyperspectral and multispectral imagery has shown some potential for biomass estimation. Systems with sophisticated scheduling enable around 70 percent cloud-free coverage in equatorial regions, thereby reducing weather obstacles. And while satellite is proving a good source for monitoring REDD sites in Brazil, it alone isn’t a good source for carbon measurement. For that, you need tree height data and optical imagery provides only canopy-level information.

LiDAR mapping: Foresters have long used LiDAR systems to measure forest canopy and vertical structures. As an active sensor, airborne LiDAR data can be acquired night or day, providing very dense and accurate datasets. The downside to this approach is the high cost of acquisition and processing over large areas. Satellite-based LiDAR systems may help control these costs with wide area coverage and automated processing capabilities. The Geoscience Laser Altimeter System (GLAS) on NASA’s Ice, Cloud, and Land Elevation Satellite (ICESat) is one such example. Some studies show promising results, though clouds are an issue, and so is a general lack of ground height data. So, again, LiDAR may be a technology best suited for monitoring practices.

IFSAR mapping: Low frequency, long bandwidth IFSAR is an all-weather technology that provides high foliage penetration for near bare-earth elevation data, even in dense forests. When combined with higher frequency, short bandwidth IFSAR (which provides elevations of top surfaces), it is possible to detect the heights of individual trees within a forest. That’s the beauty of GeoSAR; it offers both views of the forest simultaneously and can also be used to identify forest type. This data, combined with biomass information on individual tree species, enables efficient and accurate forest carbon content estimations.

But GeoSAR isn’t a silver bullet. Given the relative high cost of airborne acquisitions in comparison to satellite sensors, IFSAR isn’t an ideal monitoring solution. It’s role is to provide accurate baseline information from which REDD programs can be evaluated.

Fugro EarthData published an article about using dual-band IFSAR for carbon accounting in the July issue of PE&RS. It’s a good source of information about remote sensing and climate change monitoring. And, if you want to catch the latest on COP-15, here’s a live web cast of the proceedings.

Next week: COP-15 wrap-up and its implications for remote sensing. Check back then!

Remote Sensing and Climate Change: Introducing a Three-Part Series

Friday, November 20th, 2009

COP-15

Next month, leaders from 193 countries will meet in Copenhagen to participate in the United Nations Climate Change Conference of Parties (COP-15). There’s a lot of attention on this year’s meeting as participants work to craft an ambitious global climate agreement that will begin in 2012 when the first commitment period under the Kyoto Protocol expires. Whether there is enough support to bring about a binding agreement at COP-15 is doubtful, however. Recent statements from the United States and elsewhere indicate there are still too many questions yet to be resolved. Even so, many see the conference as an ideal place to tackle the issues of “burden sharing” and related concerns so that an agreement can be signed in 2010, if not 2009.

So what has this got to do with a geospatial blog? Quite a lot, actually. A quick visit to the “Methods & Science” section of the UN Conference on Climate Change website shows several areas where remote sensing technologies will play an important role in the developing carbon market. Most notable is REDD, short for “reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation in developing countries”. We’ve written about REDD before on this blog, and we’ll be paying more attention to it in the coming weeks as we begin a three-part series on climate change leading up to COP-15.

Topics in our series will include geospatial capabilities for carbon monitoring, with an emphasis on radar; legislation that will impact climate change policy both in the United States and abroad; and the push for REDD approval.

We hope you’ll log on and contribute to the discussion, which will be facilitated by GeoSAR Client Program Manager, Caroline Tyra, our resident expert in all things carbon. If there is a climate change topic not mentioned here, that you’d like us to address, let us know and we’ll be sure to tackle it.

Welcome to "The Location Age"

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

Geospatial isn't just for map geeks anymore. We've got personal navigation devices that dictate driving directions, smart phone apps that are as useful as they are fun, and GPS-equipped dog collars so Fido never gets lost again. Whether conscious of the change or not, consumers in the industrialized countries are now fully entrenched in "The Location Age".

But it's not the same story all over the world. In fact, many developing countries are struggling to update their most basic map inventories. How can this be? Providing answers to this question was a main goal of the recent National Mapping Organizations Industry Forum organized by GIS Development in South Africa. Serving as a prelude to the much larger Map Africa 2009 conference, forum participants were asked to share the vision and objectives of their organization, the challenges they face in realizing this vision, and their thoughts on the role of geospatial technology and the industry in achieving these goals.

Participants cited numerous obstacles to implementing effective programs. Voiced almost unanimously, however, was the misperception among policy makers that geospatial data is a luxury rather than a necessity. This notion is further complicated by a bewildering disconnect about the value of survey and mapping data to infrastructure development. This, despite the billions of investment dollars currently flowing into the region for infrastructure improvements…

These statements are dismal for sure, but many also noted a growing awareness of geographic information slowly penetrating up to higher levels in government. It also appears that some of the new data, software, and training resources available internationally are starting to reach local users. Public outreach will help strengthen this trend, as will sustained partnerships by private companies willing to help with the education effort through technology exchange. Decades-old perceptions don't change overnight, but Fugro, for one, is dedicated to the mission.

It's true: geospatial isn't just for map geeks anymore.

Disaster Strikes

Friday, September 4th, 2009

While preparing a blog entry on our recent travel to Bali for the South East Asian Survey Congress, we were saddened to learn of the 7.0 earthquake that rocked the nearby island of Java. Compounding the damage caused by the quake itself are results of the massive landslide it triggered. News reports state that more than 8,000 homes, schools, businesses, and mosques have been damaged in the landslide. Dozens of people have been killed with the toll rising as recovery efforts carry on.

So many of the themes discussed in Bali pertain to just these situations—the role of geospatial data for disaster management; concerns over remote sensing access, usage, and dissemination; the need to extract knowledge from geospatial data. But these discussions are best left for another day. Today, we offer our deepest sympathy to those who have lost so much. Our thoughts are with you.