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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

Ground-based remote sensing methods of archaeological information recovery with special reference to churches in the East Midlands

Brooke, C. J. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
52

Modelling landslide potential in the Venezuelan Andes

Gomez Zabaleta, Heriberto R. January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
53

Object-based Image Analysis for the Delineation of Canopy Gaps and Individual Tree Crowns using Multi-source Data: A Case Study in Haliburton Forest, Ontario

Saliola, Assunta 04 July 2014 (has links)
This thesis assessed object-based image analysis techniques using multi-source remote sensing data in order to automatically delineate canopy gaps and individual tree crowns (ITCs). Image segmentation is much more complex when conducted on data covering deciduous, un-even aged forests like those in Central Ontario. To delineate canopy gaps high spatial resolution multispectral ADS40 aerial imagery and a LiDAR CHM were assessed both separately and jointly. To delineate ITCs two commonly used segmentation approaches were assessed – region growing and watershed segmentation. Ground based measurements and manually delineated data were used as reference to evaluate results. Using multi-source data to delineate canopy gaps produced an average overall accuracy of 99.35%, whereas using the imagery and CHM individually resulted in average overall accuracies of 81.41% and 82.45%, respectively. For the delineation of ITCs, the watershed and region growing segmentations resulted in average overall accuracies of 67.5% and 65.5%, respectively.
54

APPLICATION OF RADAR AND INFRARED IMAGERY TO A QUANTITATIVE GEOMORPHOLOGICAL INVESTIGATION OF THE MILL CREEK DRAINAGE BASIN, SOUTH-CENTRAL OKLAHOMA

Cannon, Philip Jan, Cannon, Philip Jan January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
55

Spectral bands necessary to describe the directional reflective properties of beach sands

Doctor, Katarina Zsoldos 20 January 2017 (has links)
<p> A common method to identify or model the dominant directional reflective properties of a surface is the bidirectional reflectance distribution function (BRDF). BRDF describes the angular behavior by which light interacts with surfaces. Remote sensing technology has advanced to the stage where hyperspectral sensors, with hundreds of separate wavelength bands, are fairly common. This necessitates examining BRDF in the hyperspectral regime, which implies examining the directional reflective properties of hundreds of narrowly spaced wavelength bands. </p><p> In this dissertation I hypothesize that beach sand BRDF is wavelength dependent. Principal component analysis (PCA) and correlation matrix analysis of in situ measurements were used to test whether the spectral variability in the visible, near-infrared and shortwave directional reflectance factor of beach sands with and without freshwater surface films are wavelength dependent. The hyperspectral BRDF of beach sands exhibit weak spectral variability, the majority of which can be described with three to four broad spectral bands. These occur in the absence of a water layer on top of the sand in three wavelength ranges of 350-450 nm, 700-1350 nm, and 1450-2400 nm. When observing sheet flow on sand, a thin layer of water enhances reflectance in the specular direction at all wavelengths, and that spectral variability may be described using four spectral band regions of 350-450 nm, 500-950 nm, 950-1350 nm, and 1450-2400 nm. Spectral variations are more evident in sand surfaces of greater visual roughness than in smooth surfaces, regardless of sheetflow.</p>
56

Rocket and lidar studies of waves and turbulence in the arctic middle atmosphere

Triplett, Colin Charles 19 August 2016 (has links)
<p> This dissertation presents new studies of waves and turbulence in the Arctic middle atmosphere. The study has a primary focus on wintertime conditions when the large-scale circulation of the middle atmosphere is disrupted by the breaking of planetary waves associated with sudden stratospheric warming (SSW) events. We used ongoing Rayleigh lidar measurements of density and temperature to conduct a multi-year study of gravity waves in the upper stratosphere-lower mesosphere (USLM) over Poker Flat Research Range (PFRR) at Chatanika, Alaska. We analyzed the night-to-night gravity wave activity in terms of the wind structure and the ageostrophy. We find that the weak winds during disturbed conditions block the vertical propagation of gravity waves into the mesosphere. The gravity wave activity is correlated with the altitudes where the winds are weakest. During periods of weak winds we find little correlation with ageostrophy. However, during periods of stronger winds we find the USLM gravity wave activity is correlated with the ageostrophy in the upper troposphere indicating that ageostrophy in this region is a source of the gravity waves. Inter-annually we find the wintertime gravity wave activity is correlated with the level of disturbance of the middle atmosphere, being reduced in those winters with a higher level of disturbance and weaker winds. We used rocket-borne ion gauges to measure turbulence in the wintertime middle atmosphere while documenting the larger meteorological context from Rayleigh lidar and satellites. This investigation of turbulence was called the Mesosphere-Lower Thermosphere Turbulence Experiment (MTeX). During MTeX we found a highly disturbed atmosphere associated with an SSW where winds were weak and gravity wave activity was low. We found low levels of turbulence in the upper mesosphere. The turbulence was primarily found in regions of convective instability in the topside of mesospheric inversion layers (MILs). The strongest and most persist turbulence was found in a MIL that is associated with the breaking of a monochromatic gravity wave. These MTeX observations indicate that turbulence is generated by gravity wave breaking as opposed to gravity wave saturation. These MTeX findings of low levels of turbulence are consistent with recent model studies of vertical transport during SSWs and support the view that eddy transport is not a dominant transport mechanism during SSWs.</p>
57

The Spectral Signature of Cloud Spatial Structure in Shortwave Radiation

Song, Shi 02 November 2016 (has links)
<p> In this thesis, we aim to systematically understand the relationship between cloud spatial structure and its radiation imprints, i.e., three-dimensional (3D) cloud effects, with the ultimate goal of deriving accurate radiative energy budget estimates from space, aircraft, or ground-based observations under spatially inhomogeneous conditions. By studying the full spectral information in the measured and modeled shortwave radiation fields of heterogeneous cloud scenes sampled during aircraft field experiments, we find evidence that cloud spatial structure reveals itself through spectral signatures in the associated irradiance and radiance fields in the near-ultraviolet and visible spectral range.</p><p> The spectral signature of 3D cloud effects in irradiances is apparent as a domain- wide, consistent correlation between the magnitude and spectral dependence of net horizontal photon transport. The physical mechanism of this phenomenon is molecular scattering in conjunction with cloud heterogeneity. A simple parameterization with a single parameter &epsiv; is developed, which holds for individual pixels and the domain as a whole. We then investigate the impact of scene parameters on the discovered correlation and find that it is upheld for a wide range of scene conditions, although the value of &epsiv; varies from scene to scene.</p><p> The spectral signature of 3D cloud effects in radiances manifests itself as a distinct relationship between the magnitude and spectral dependence of reflectance, which cannot be reproduced in the one-dimensional (1D) radiative transfer framework. Using the spectral signature in radiances and irradiances, it is possible to infer information on net horizontal photon transport from spectral radiance perturbations on the basis of pixel populations in sub-domains of a cloud scene.</p><p> We show that two different biases need to be considered when attempting radiative closure between measured and modeled irradiance fields below inhomogeneous cloud fields: the remote sensing bias (affecting cloud radiances and thus retrieved properties of the inhomogeneous scene) and the irradiance bias (ignoring 3D effects in the calculation of irradiance fields from imagery-based cloud retrievals). The newly established relationships between spatial and spectral structure lay the foundation for first-order corrections for these 3D biases within a 1D framework, once the correlations are explored on a more statistical basis.</p>
58

Genetic and environmental components of thermal tolerance in the least killifish, Heterandria formosa

Unknown Date (has links)
Populations of the least killifish, Heterandria formosa are found in a wide variety of habitats, including habitats that differ widely in average temperature and in range of seasonal temperatures. To determine whether this ability to exist in thermally different sites is owing to phenotypic plasticity or to population differentiation I raised fish from a spring site and a pond site under common laboratory conditions. Fish were raised at one of two temperatures during gestation and at one of two temperatures from birth to sexual maturity. Gestation temperature, rearing temperature, population of origin, and gender had complex, interacting effects on critical thermal maximum and minimum at sexual maturity, on offspring survival, and on time to maturity. In particular, the populations were strongly differentiated for offspring survival and time to maturity, although the magnitude of the differences depended on the environment. Females performed better than males when genders differed. / H. formosa also exhibit superfetation, the presence of embryos in different developmental stages in the ovary at one time. There have been few comparative studies of interspecific variation in superfetation, and there have been no surveys of population variation in reproductive traits within a superfetating species. In this study I followed seasonal changes in reproductive parameters of four populations of H. formosa for all or part of 4 years. / The four populations differed in breeding phenology, level of superfetation, total volume of embryos carried, and brood size. This variation does not correspond to either general habitat similarities among the populations (ponds versus rivers), or to habitat stability. I also discovered that first, females must hold back some same-stage embryos while advancing others and second, that size of females, as measured by standard length, clearly influences the total number of embryos, brood size, and number of embryos carried in each stage. Yet despite this relationship between body size and embryo capacity, brood size is not constrained by space available for late-stage embryos. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 51-02, Section: B, page: 0549. / Major Professor: Joseph Travis. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1989.
59

Estimation of DBH Using Tree Variables Derived from Aerial LiDAR for Ford Forest, Baraga, Michigan

Demiraslan, Tugay 16 February 2019 (has links)
<p> This study implemented LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) remote sensing technology and applied ITD (Individual Tree Detection) methods as an approach to estimate some essential tree variables, such as DBH (Diameter at Breast Height), height, volume, and biomass for Ford Forest Research Center in Upper Peninsula, Michigan. There were 34 deciduous (1 bigtooth aspen, 9 red oaks, 20 sugar maples, 2 white birches, and 2 yellow birches) and 17 coniferous (2 eastern hemlocks, 11 red pines, and 4 white pines) subject tree species. There were two different available LiDAR datasets from the same area that were collected in 2011 and 2017. Height measurements were done at 96% and 97% accuracy for hardwood and softwood tree species, respectively. </p><p> Several other tree variables derived from LiDAR point cloud were used to estimate DBH by using regression analysis for both 2017 and 2011 datasets. Estimation equations were tested on the other dataset. The best-fitted formula was 2017&rsquo;s, with 0.55 adjusted R&sup2; and less than 0.0001 p-values on 2017 LiDAR data while 0.42 adjusted R&sup2; and less than 0.0001 p-values on 2011&rsquo;s dataset. Some additional analysis that includes calculating PRMSE (Predicted Root Mean Square Error), BIAS (Mean Error), and MAD (Mean Absolute Difference) have been applied. The equation that was generated by using data from 2017 has &ndash;0.57 BIAS for Hardwood and 1.13 BIAS for softwood. That result indicates that the equation has &ndash;0.57 centimeters (cm) estimation error for hardwood and 1.13 cm for softwood on DBH estimations. </p><p>
60

Predicting soil moisture and wheat vegetative growth from ERTS-1 imagery

Krupp, John Wayne January 2011 (has links)
Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries

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