The Landsat Program - News
NASA's GeoCover 2000 Landsat Product Promotes Geo-commerce Globally
- Feb. 21 • In 2000, NASA sponsored the creation
of an orthorectified Landsat 7 mosaic of all of
Earth's landmasses (with the exception of Antarctica) as
part of the GeoCover 2000 project. This mosaic has gone
on to spur a flurry of geo-commerce as companies from
around the world create enhanced versions of this mosaic
using the GeoCover Landsat data. Let's
take a look how...
-
- USGS provided NASA with 8500 Landsat 7 ETM+ georectified scenes (processed
to L1G) that were collected
between 1999 and 2002 in order to create
the GeoCover mosaic. NASA then contracted EarthSat (now
part of MDA Federal) to orthorectify the Landsat data and
create a pan-sharpened (14.25 m spatial resolution) false-color
(ETM+ bands 7, 4, 2) seamless mosaic. NASA then made both
the orthorectified Landsat scenes and the pan-sharpened mosaic free to
the public. Since that time, both domestic and international
companies have taken advantage of this free data to create
proprietary pseudo-true color mosaic products.
-
- Examples
- After creating the NASA GeoCover mosaic, EarthSat created a circa-2000
Landsat mosaic called NaturalVue™. NaturalVue™ uses the five
lower spectral bands of Landsat 7 plus the panchromatic-band
to create imagery that approximates natural color (with
a proprietary algorithm). This data set was originally
used as the Google Earth™ base
map.
In spring 2006, Google Earth™ announced its switch to
TruEarth® for the Google Earth™ base map. TruEarth® is
a TerraMetrics® product also made from the same orthorectified
Landsat 7 data, but produced by TerraMetrics® using
its proprietary natural-color processing.
-
- The GeoCover 2000 mosaic was also converted to
a pseudo-natural color data set called TerraColor by a
San Diego-based geospatial company called Earthstar Geographics
LLC. This product is used as the mid-resolution aerial
imagery for MSN® Virtual Earth™.
-
- And in February 2007, ComputaMaps, a South African geospatial data
solutions company, announced the release of it's BrightEarth™ product,
another orthorectified Landsat 7 mosaic created by transforming the original
NASA GeoCover mosaic with a proprietary algorithm.
-
- (Update added May 3, 2007)
- In May of 2007, an Australian company called GeoSage released "Spectral
Transformer B742B321" a data processing tool that produces
simulated natural-color imagery from the NASA GeoCover
data pan-sharpened 7, 4, 2, data set. (End update)
-
- Why these mosaic products should NOT be considered data
- All of these mosaic products, including the original NASA GeoCover
mosaic, should only be considered as imagery, NOT as data.
Creation of all of these mosaics involved data resampling,
data blending, and color balancing so, the pixel values
or "digital
numbers" that
remain no longer have fidelity as reflective measurements
made by the satellite.
- For more information, see:
+ Landsat
Data Base Map for Google Earth™
+ Landsat
Data Part of MSN® Virtual Earth™
+ "ComputaMaps
releases BrightEarth, a global natural color mosaic" Directions
Magazine Feb. 9, 2007 (external
link). PDF
version.
+ "HighView
| Spectral Transformer B742B321" (external
link) PDF
version.
Other news.
News & Features