Abstract

Abstract In inaccessible and highly heterogeneous areas where aerial photography and accurate up-to-date topographic maps are unavailable and where suitable features for ground-based navigation by triangulation are absent, accurately locating ground truth sites and then integrating the field data with digital imagery is often extremely difficult. The advent of the satellite global positioning system (GPS) offers a solution to this problem. Over a 6 month period a battery powered, solar recharged, backpack mounted GPS was used to collect the precise location data essential to the ground truth component of a Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) landcover classification of the Ituri rain forest of northeastern Zaire. Three-dimensional locations were readily obtained in forest openings > 0·125 ha where the angle to the horizon did not exceed 50° and canopy closure was less than 30 per cent. GPS location data are presently being used to reference a TM scene geographically and to assign pixels to appropriate landcover ...

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