Abstract

Abstract. Modern satellite networks with rapid image acquisition cycles allow for near-real-time imaging of areas impacted by natural hazards such as mass wasting, flooding, and volcanic eruptions. Publicly accessible multi-spectral datasets (e.g., Landsat, Sentinel-2) are particularly helpful in analyzing the spatial extent of disturbances, however, the datasets are large and require intensive processing on high-powered computers by trained analysts. HazMapper is an open-access hazard mapping application developed in Google Earth Engine that allows users to derive map and GIS-based products from Sentinel or Landsat datasets without the time- and cost-intensive resources required for traditional analysis. The first iteration of HazMapper relies on a vegetation-based metric, the relative difference in the normalized difference vegetation index (rdNDVI), to identify areas on the landscape where vegetation was removed following a natural disaster. Because of the vegetation-based metric, the tool is typically not suitable for use in desert or polar regions. HazMapper is not a semi-automated routine but makes rapid and repeatable analysis and visualization feasible for both recent and historical natural disasters. Case studies are included for the identification of landslides and debris flows, wildfires, pyroclastic flows, and lava flow inundation. HazMapper is intended for use by both scientists and non-scientists, such as emergency managers and public safety decision-makers.

Highlights

  • Natural disasters such as landslides, wildfires, and volcanic eruptions are a primary mechanism of landscape change (Korup et al, 2010; Santi et al, 2013) while simultaneously causing fatalities into the 21st century (Froude and Petley, 2018; Petley, 2012; Auker et al, 2013; Holzer and Savage, 2013; Ashley and Ashley, 2008)

  • HazMapper (Hazard Mapper) is an open-access application developed in Google Earth Engine for the rapid characterization of natural disasters tailored to both the scientific and the emergency management communities (Fig. 1)

  • HazMapper is a free and open-access application developed in Google Earth Engine

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Summary

Introduction

Natural disasters such as landslides, wildfires, and volcanic eruptions are a primary mechanism of landscape change (Korup et al, 2010; Santi et al, 2013) while simultaneously causing fatalities into the 21st century (Froude and Petley, 2018; Petley, 2012; Auker et al, 2013; Holzer and Savage, 2013; Ashley and Ashley, 2008) As such, both Earth scientists and emergency managers have a keen interest in understanding natural disaster occurrences and their spatial extent. Field-verified inventories of spatially extensive events may take many months to years before their completion In this case, remote sensing methods may be able to temporally

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