Titre de série : |
Geological survey circular, 671 |
Titre : |
A land-use classification system for use with remote-se, sor data |
Type de document : |
texte imprimé |
Auteurs : |
Anderson, J. R. ; Hardy, E. E. ; Roach, J. T. |
Mention d'édition : |
United States Department of the Interior |
Editeur : |
United states department of the interior |
Année de publication : |
1972 |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : |
CI-04956 |
Note générale : |
The framework of a national land-use classification system is proposed for testing and review. The classification has been developed to meet the needs of Federal and state agencies for an up-to-date overview of land use trought the country on a basis that is uniform in date, scale, and categorization at the more generalized first and second levels and that with be recptive to data from instrumented satellite and hig-altitude aircraft platforms. The classification system utilizes the best features of existing widely used classification systems to the extent that they are amenable to use with remote-sensing, and it is open-ended so that regional, state, and local agencies may develop more detailed land-use classification systems, at third and fourth levels, to meet their particular needs and at the same time remain compatible with each other and with the national system. |
Langues : |
Anglais (eng) |
Mots-clés : |
Utilisation du sol Photographie aérienne Végétation Topographie Ressource naturelle Agriculture |
Index. décimale : |
526.9 Topométrie. Levés et arpentage, Photogrammétrie |
Résumé : |
The framework of a national land-use classification system is proposed for testing and review. The classification has been developed to meet the needs of Federal and state agencies for an up-to-date overview of land use trought the country on a basis that is uniform in date, scale, and categorization at the more generalized first and second levels and that with be recptive to data from instrumented satellite and hig-altitude aircraft platforms. The classification system utilizes the best features of existing widely used classification systems to the extent that they are amenable to use with remote-sensing, and it is open-ended so that regional, state, and local agencies may develop more detailed land-use classification systems, at third and fourth levels, to meet their particular needs and at the same time remain compatible with each other and with the national system. |
Note de contenu : |
The framework of a national land-use classification system is proposed for testing and review. The classification has been developed to meet the needs of Federal and state agencies for an up-to-date overview of land use trought the country on a basis that is uniform in date, scale, and categorization at the more generalized first and second levels and that with be recptive to data from instrumented satellite and hig-altitude aircraft platforms. The classification system utilizes the best features of existing widely used classification systems to the extent that they are amenable to use with remote-sensing, and it is open-ended so that regional, state, and local agencies may develop more detailed land-use classification systems, at third and fourth levels, to meet their particular needs and at the same time remain compatible with each other and with the national system. |
Geological survey circular, 671. A land-use classification system for use with remote-se, sor data [texte imprimé] / Anderson, J. R. ; Hardy, E. E. ; Roach, J. T. . - United States Department of the Interior . - United states department of the interior, 1972. ISSN : CI-04956 The framework of a national land-use classification system is proposed for testing and review. The classification has been developed to meet the needs of Federal and state agencies for an up-to-date overview of land use trought the country on a basis that is uniform in date, scale, and categorization at the more generalized first and second levels and that with be recptive to data from instrumented satellite and hig-altitude aircraft platforms. The classification system utilizes the best features of existing widely used classification systems to the extent that they are amenable to use with remote-sensing, and it is open-ended so that regional, state, and local agencies may develop more detailed land-use classification systems, at third and fourth levels, to meet their particular needs and at the same time remain compatible with each other and with the national system. Langues : Anglais ( eng)
Mots-clés : |
Utilisation du sol Photographie aérienne Végétation Topographie Ressource naturelle Agriculture |
Index. décimale : |
526.9 Topométrie. Levés et arpentage, Photogrammétrie |
Résumé : |
The framework of a national land-use classification system is proposed for testing and review. The classification has been developed to meet the needs of Federal and state agencies for an up-to-date overview of land use trought the country on a basis that is uniform in date, scale, and categorization at the more generalized first and second levels and that with be recptive to data from instrumented satellite and hig-altitude aircraft platforms. The classification system utilizes the best features of existing widely used classification systems to the extent that they are amenable to use with remote-sensing, and it is open-ended so that regional, state, and local agencies may develop more detailed land-use classification systems, at third and fourth levels, to meet their particular needs and at the same time remain compatible with each other and with the national system. |
Note de contenu : |
The framework of a national land-use classification system is proposed for testing and review. The classification has been developed to meet the needs of Federal and state agencies for an up-to-date overview of land use trought the country on a basis that is uniform in date, scale, and categorization at the more generalized first and second levels and that with be recptive to data from instrumented satellite and hig-altitude aircraft platforms. The classification system utilizes the best features of existing widely used classification systems to the extent that they are amenable to use with remote-sensing, and it is open-ended so that regional, state, and local agencies may develop more detailed land-use classification systems, at third and fourth levels, to meet their particular needs and at the same time remain compatible with each other and with the national system. |
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