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Producing Alaska interim land cover maps from Landsat digital and ancillary data

August 1, 1987

In 1985, the U.S. Geological Survey initiated a research program to produce 1:250,000-scale land cover maps of Alaska using digital Landsat multispectral scanner data and ancillary data and to evaluate the potential of establishing a statewide land cover mapping program using this approach. The geometrically corrected and resampled Landsat pixel data are registered to a Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) projection, along with arc-second digital elevation model data used as an aid in the final computer classification. Areas summaries of the land cover classes are extracted by merging the Landsat digital classification files with the U.S. Bureau of Land Management's Public Land Survey digital file. Registration of the digital land cover data is verified and control points are identified so that a laser plotter can products screened film separate for printing the classification data at map scale directly from the digital file.


The final land cover classification is retained both as a color map at 1:250,000 scale registered to the U.S. Geological Survey base map, with area summaries by township and range on the reverse, and as a digital file where it may be used as a category in a geographic information system.

Publication Year 1987
Title Producing Alaska interim land cover maps from Landsat digital and ancillary data
Authors Katherine Fitzpatrick-Lins, Eileen Flanagan Doughty, Mark Shasby, Thomas R. Loveland, Susan Benjamin
Publication Type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Conference Paper
Series Title Pecora XI Symposium
Index ID 70113270
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center