Impervious surface has long been accepted as a key environmental indicator linking development to its impacts on water. Many have suggested that there is a direct correlation between degree of imperviousness and both quantity and quality of water. Quantifying the amount of impervious surface, however, remains difficult and tedious especially in urban areas. Lately more efforts have been focused on the application of remote sensing and GIS technologies in assessing the amount of impervious surface and many have reported promising results at various pixel levels. This paper discusses an attempt at estimating the amount of impervious surface at subdivision level using remote sensing images and GIS techniques. Using Landsat ETM+ images and GIS ...
A substantial body of literature has accumulated on the topic of using remotely sensed data to map i...
A substantial body of literature has accumulated on the topic of using remotely sensed data to map i...
Impervious surface areas are artificial structures covered by materials such as asphalt, stone, bric...
Impervious surfaces (IS) such as asphalt, concrete and rooftops prevent percolation of water into th...
Research has shown that the amount of impervious surface in a watershed is a reliable indicator of t...
Estimation of impervious area is a pre-requisite for hydro-ecological research. Previous studies ide...
An impervious surface is any surface that prevents water from infiltrating the ground. As impervious...
Urbanization and population growth led to an increasing demand of land resources worldwide. This glo...
Due to their low infiltration rates, impervious surfaces generate large amounts of runoff. This runo...
Urban areas are bound to huge changes to accommodate infrastructure, living- and workspaces. The mon...
Imperviousness for the Baltimore MSA from the NLCD 2001 impervious dataset. Impervious surfaces ref...
In recent years, impervious surfaces have emerged not only as an indicator of the degree of urbaniza...
The amount and intensity of runoff on catchment scale are strongly determined by the presence of imp...
Impervious cover proportion is recognised as an important parameter in hydrologic modelling. Recent ...
Urbanization refers to the process in which an increasing proportion of a population lives in cities...
A substantial body of literature has accumulated on the topic of using remotely sensed data to map i...
A substantial body of literature has accumulated on the topic of using remotely sensed data to map i...
Impervious surface areas are artificial structures covered by materials such as asphalt, stone, bric...
Impervious surfaces (IS) such as asphalt, concrete and rooftops prevent percolation of water into th...
Research has shown that the amount of impervious surface in a watershed is a reliable indicator of t...
Estimation of impervious area is a pre-requisite for hydro-ecological research. Previous studies ide...
An impervious surface is any surface that prevents water from infiltrating the ground. As impervious...
Urbanization and population growth led to an increasing demand of land resources worldwide. This glo...
Due to their low infiltration rates, impervious surfaces generate large amounts of runoff. This runo...
Urban areas are bound to huge changes to accommodate infrastructure, living- and workspaces. The mon...
Imperviousness for the Baltimore MSA from the NLCD 2001 impervious dataset. Impervious surfaces ref...
In recent years, impervious surfaces have emerged not only as an indicator of the degree of urbaniza...
The amount and intensity of runoff on catchment scale are strongly determined by the presence of imp...
Impervious cover proportion is recognised as an important parameter in hydrologic modelling. Recent ...
Urbanization refers to the process in which an increasing proportion of a population lives in cities...
A substantial body of literature has accumulated on the topic of using remotely sensed data to map i...
A substantial body of literature has accumulated on the topic of using remotely sensed data to map i...
Impervious surface areas are artificial structures covered by materials such as asphalt, stone, bric...