Abstract

Siliguri corridor, the ‘Chicken Neck Corridor of India’, is one of the largest Municipal areas in West Bengal and is of great geo-strategic importance as it lies at the crossroads between India, Nepal, Bhutan and Bangladesh connecting the north-eastern part of India with mainland India. This study uses the LANDSAT 7 ETM+ and LANDSAT 9 TIR OLI imageries from USGS Earth Explorer to determine Land Surface Temperature (LST) changes, Normalized Differential Vegetation Index (NDVI) changes; Normalized Differential Built-up Index (NDBI) changes; Land use and Land cover (LULC) changes; Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect; Urban Hot Spots (UHS) and Urban Thermal Field Variance Index (UTFVI) phenomenon. With booming trade and increasing urbanisation, Siliguri city (Municipal Corporation) has seen rise in the mean LST by 2.92 °C resulting in increased UHI intensity and UTFVI phenomena between 2000 and 2022. The average LST in UHI and UHS has risen by approx. 3 °C causing more areas to come under bad, worse and worst thermal comfort level categories of the ecological evaluation index. An attempt is made to determine the reason for such changes in this micro climate through multi-dimensional perspectives and to exhibit the land use transformations that took place between the aforesaid time periods.

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