Global Land Survey 2005
Jan. 2008 PE&RS Journal cover featuring an
accompanying image to the Global Land Survey 2005 article inside.
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Jan. 9, 2008 • NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey
(USGS) continue to enable better land-cover change research
with the creation of the Global Land Survey 2005 (GLS2005). The
GLS2005 data set is a collection of 9500 orthorectified leaf-on
medium-resolution satellite images collected between 2004 and 2007
and covering the Earth's land masses. GLS2005 uses mainly Landsat
5 and gap-filled Landsat
7 data with EO-1 ALI and Terra ASTER data filling in any data holes.
GLS2005 is the latest global Landsat data set. Previous datasets
include GLS1975, GLS1990, and GLS2000 (previously known as GeoCover™ data
sets). The image scenes that make up GLS2005 will be made available
as they are produced from the USGS GloVis and
Earth Explorer websites.
GLS2005 analysis will include the generation of both land-cover
and land-cover change data products. These products will feed into
a multitude of environmental monitoring programs such as the North
American Carbon Project, the Forest Resources Assessment program,
the Monsoon Asia Integrated Regional Study, the Northern Eurasia
Earth Science Partnership Initiative and more.
For more information, visit:
+ The USGS Landsat website
+ The GLS2005 website (external link)
+ Gutman, G., R. Byrnes, J. Masek, S. Covington, S, C. Justice, S.
Franks, and R. Headley (2008). Towards monitoring land cover and land-use
changes at a global scale: The Global Land Survey 2005. Photogrammetric
Engineering & Remote Sensing, January 2008, vol. 74, no. 1, pp.:6–10.
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Other news.