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CARETS: A Prototype Regional Environmental Information System. Volume 3: Toward a National Land Use Information SystemIt is recommended that a national land use information system be established by an agency of the Federal Government. This recommendation comes at a time of increasing demand for scientific information in support of environmentally relevant land use planning and management at all levels of government. It is also a time when new airborne and spaceborne remote sensors, tested in cooperation with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the Earth Resources Observation Systems (EROS) Program of the Department of the Interior, make possible the gathering of land use information rapidly and on an unprecedented scale. Furthermore, information handling technology is developing toward a capability to receive, store, and disseminate the huge quantities of data that would be involved.

The recommendation for the national land use information system is based upon careful analysis of the results of remote sensing experiments funded by NASA, EROS, and the Geography Program of the Geological Survey, with specific examples drawn from the demonstration project known as the Central Atlantic Regional Ecological Test Site (CARETS). CARETS is cast in the framework of a regional land use information system, channeling the flow bf information generated in response to users' declaration of their needs, through stages dealing with remote sensing data gathering systems, data processing and land mensuration, calibration in-terms of environmental impact, and evaluation with feedback from users.

The proposed system would develop and implement a unified approach to the description and interpretation of the changing uses of the nation's land resources, building upon the base of interagency and intergovernmental cooperation already achieved in the experimental work to date. The land use data base that is being derived from high-altitude aerial color infrared photography would be the initial component of the recommended system. High-altitude photographic coverage would immediately be extended to as much of the nation as possible as technological developments and economic considerations permit. The system would later expand to include multiple-sensor, multiple-platform data sources. Six system characteristics are recommended: (1) High capacity storage of data available for quick retrieval, inexpensive processing, and update, (2) provision of accuracy appropriate to the scale of survey or to the level of detail dictated by different types of management and decision requirements; (3) permanent, publicly accessible sensor records for historical interpretation; (4) compatibility of the recording, storage, and retrieval system with all types of inputs, from ground observer to satellite; (5) products of diverse formats and scales, responsive to user feedback; (6) and standardization of formats, scales, and storage inputs to permit nationwide comparability.
Document ID
19770003654
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Authors
Edward A Ackerman
(United States Geological Survey Reston, Virginia, United States)
Robert H Alexander
(United States Geological Survey Reston, Virginia, United States)
Date Acquired
September 3, 2013
Publication Date
September 30, 1975
Subject Category
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing
Report/Patent Number
NASA-CR-148985
E77-10015
Accession Number
77N10597
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NASA ORDER S-70243-AG
PROJECT: CARETS
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
Land use mapping
Land use information system
Remote sensing
Central Atlantic region
Norfolk, Virginia SMSA
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