Remote Sensing (Nov 2014)

Detecting Landscape Changes in High Latitude Environments Using Landsat Trend Analysis: 1. Visualization

  • Robert H. Fraser,
  • Ian Olthof,
  • Steven V. Kokelj,
  • Trevor C. Lantz,
  • Denis Lacelle,
  • Alexander Brooker,
  • Stephen Wolfe,
  • Steve Schwarz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs61111533
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 11
pp. 11533 – 11557

Abstract

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Satellite remote sensing is a promising technology for monitoring natural and anthropogenic changes occurring in remote, northern environments. It offers the potential to scale-up ground-based, local environmental monitoring efforts to document disturbance types, and characterize their extents and frequencies at regional scales. Here we present a simple, but effective means of visually assessing landscape disturbances in northern environments using trend analysis of Landsat satellite image stacks. Linear trends of the Tasseled Cap brightness, greenness, and wetness indices, when composited into an RGB image, effectively distinguish diverse landscape changes based on additive color logic. Using a variety of reference datasets within Northwest Territories, Canada, we show that the trend composites are effective for identifying wildfire regeneration, tundra greening, fluvial dynamics, thermokarst processes including lake surface area changes and retrogressive thaw slumps, and the footprint of resource development operations and municipal development. Interpretation of the trend composites is aided by a color wheel legend and contextual information related to the size, shape, and location of change features. A companion paper in this issue (Olthof and Fraser) focuses on quantitative methods for classifying these changes.

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