Day: November 19, 2009
GeoTec 2010 Call for Presentations Extended
April 12-15, 2010 | Toronto, Ontario
Call for Presentations – Deadline Extended: Submissions due December 7, 2009
GeoTec Event 2010 is the No. 1 gathering place for top-level geospatial technology professionals from the private and public sectors looking for insights, ideas and innovations to help boost best practices and profitability. As Canada’s largest geomatics conference, the GeoTec Event attracts professionals from around the world. The conference is designed to provide a broad vendor-neutral overview of geospatial-technology tools and applications.
There’s still time and speaking slots available. We’re currently seeking qualified speakers to deliver timely, high-quality presentations (papers, sessions, panel discussions) that will fit into the following concurrent tracks:
- Data
- Emerging Technologies
- Executive Decision Support
- Interoperability
Format
All sessions must speak directly to the issues associated with application solutions, best practices or profitability (e.g., how to boost revenue, how to cut expenses, etc.). All session proposals must be educational and noncommercial in nature.
Abstract Submission
Please click here for further information and to access the Abstract Submission Form.
E-mail questions to Kathleen Hastings at khastings@geoplace.com.
Research Challenges to Understanding, Predicting, and Restoring Landscape Changes Identified
Nine research challenges and four research initiatives that are poised to advance the study of how Earth’s landscapes change were unveiled today in a new report by the National Research Council. These challenges and initiatives could open the path to resolving environmental issues, from coastal erosion to landslides, by helping predict how processes such as wind, ice, water, tectonics, and living organisms drive changes in the Earth’s surface.
The development of new analytic and computing technologies and the heightened demand for scientific guidance in decision making concerning future landscape transformation and restoration have propelled research in Earth surface processes over the past two decades. However, significant questions remain unanswered, which are addressed in these challenges and initiatives.
What does our planet’s past tell us about its future? The surface of the Earth records its own evolution, which scientists can examine through evidence in ice cores, sediments, and landforms. Accelerating the ability for researchers to tap into that record could help determine how the surface environment alters through time and how it may change in the future.
How do geopatterns on Earth’s surface arise and what do they tell us about processes? From repeated patterns on sand dunes to similar shapes of barrier islands, myriad land patterns at all scales can be seen on the planet’s surface. Scientists have found that these geopatterns often emerge spontaneously, evolve over time, and are resilient, as unstable patterns do not last for long periods. Geopatterns provide a template for understanding many Earth surface processes, which could help scientists predict how the surface will respond to natural and human-induced changes.
How do landscapes influence and record climate and the movement of large pieces of the Earth’s crust? One of the advances in the earth sciences is the recognition of interactions between climate and the movement of Earth’s tectonic plates. For example, in mountain ranges developed from converging tectonic plates, prevailing winds may force clouds, rain, and glaciers to remain on one side of the range, which could increase erosion. Such concentrated erosion draws more rock upward from within the Earth, increasing the height of the range and further affecting local climate patterns. Scientists are searching to quantify the interactions and feedbacks among landscapes, tectonics, climate, and life. For instance, how much could climate change increase rainfall, which in turn would increase the frequency of erosion from landslides?
How does the biogeochemical reactor of the Earth’s surface respond to and shape landscapes on local to global scales? The chemical erosion and weathering of bedrock and soil are among the least understood of the geological processes. They are often major factors in how landscapes change because of their effects on climate, groundwater and river chemistry, strength of rocks, erosion, and availability of nutrients in soils. Gaining insight into the nutrient cycle essential to both living organisms and climate, for example, will allow scientists to address the effects of human-induced changes to land and groundwater.
What are the transport laws that govern the evolution of the Earth’s surface? Quantitative approaches are needed to define how and at what rates a process like erosion can shape the landscape. Significant progress has been made in developing and applying mathematical formulas known as “transport laws” to gauge the rate at which soil is transferred or a river can cut through bedrock. Nonetheless, scientists still need to establish the transport laws for processes such as landsliding, transport and deposit of mud, and glacial and chemical erosion.
How do ecosystems and landscapes co-evolve? Living organisms strongly influence the form and pace of surface erosion, and they control the nutrient cycle with simultaneous effects on climate, hydrology, erosion, and topography. Coordinated efforts to identify connections among life forms, surface processes, and landscapes are under way at various field observatories. However, greater knowledge is needed to develop predictive models and perform experiments that explore the causes, effects, rates, and magnitudes of life-landscape interactions.
What controls landscape resilience to change? Some areas of Earth’s surface are more vulnerable than others to change. For example, polar and glacial regions are nearing or are in a state of flux predicted to continue with global warming. Scientists need to better understand how rapid and abrupt changes occur and the factors and processes that make landscapes resilient to these changes.
How will Earth’s surface evolve in the new era? The term “Anthropocene” has been suggested to describe a new era in which humans have become dominant. Understanding, predicting, and adjusting to changing landscapes increasingly altered by humans constitute pressing challenges, and science is far from developing a general theory of coupled human-natural systems.
How can science contribute to a sustainable Earth surface? With increasing scientific knowledge of the causes and long-term effects of human-induced changes to land, a consensus has emerged that at least some of these disrupted landscapes can and should be restored or redesigned. Researchers, practitioners, policymakers, and the public have recently begun to examine the success and limitations of past restoration efforts. Earth surface scientists can contribute to these efforts and provide guidance in future decisions regarding natural and managed landscapes.
In addition, the report proposes four research initiatives, derived from the nine challenges, to provide promising pathways for scientific guidance on issues related to planning, mitigation, and response to changes in the Earth’s surface now and in the future. The four research areas would delve into understanding interacting landscapes and climate, the co-evolution of ecosystems and landscapes, quantitative reconstruction of landscape dynamics across time scales, and the future of landscapes in the Anthropocene.
Copies of Landscapes on the Edge are available from the National Academies Press; tel. 202-334-3313 or 1-800-624-6242 or on the Internet at http://www.nap.edu. Reporters may obtain a copy from the Office of News and Public Information (contacts listed above).
[Source: National Academies press release]
Complexity and Spatial Networks: In Search of Simplicity
“This book offers a panoramic view of recent advances in spatial complexity, in order to enhance our understanding of complex spatial networks by simplicity in terms of both the basic driving forces of systemic impacts and the modelling of such systems. Simple models mapping out the evolution of complex networks are undoubtedly a key issue in spatial economic research. In exploring this untrodden ground, this volume pursues new interdisciplinary pathways for theoretical, methodological and empirical analysis in the complex interconnected space-economy. It highlights ‘evolutionary’ directions and ‘unifying’ perspectives in this fascinating research field.”
Evaluating Soil Risks Associated with Severe Wildfire and Ground-based Logging
…from the Western Wildland Environment Threat Assessment Center, US Forest Service…
“A logic-based analysis of forested soil polygons on the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest was designed and implemented with the Ecosystem Management Decision Support System (2, 3) to evaluate risks to soil properties and productivity associated with moderate to severe wildfire and unmitigated use of ground-based logging equipment. Soil and related data are from standard National Cooperative Soil Surveys. The logic-based model developed for this study captures the knowledge of two senior soil scientists (Miller and Meurisse collaborators in this study) with a collective experience of over 70 years in soils field work and research. Adequate GIS data to support such analysis are not always available, so we also developed a companion model for interactive use on field-going PCs. The interactive model allows users to assess individual soil units in the field.”
Bird Migration Model: Agent Analyst/Tracking Analyst Integration
This video capture to demonstrates the integration of Agent Analyst and Tracking Analyst within ArcGIS Desktop. The model shown–a simulation of bird migration patterns of two species–was developed to learn and demonstrate concepts of Agent Based Modeling within GIS using the Agent Analyst toolkit developed by Argonne National Laboratory.
Map of the Day: Development of an Erosion-Reduction Management Strategy for Watersheds and Reservoirs in Algeria
…from the ESRI Map Book, Volume 24…
“In Algeria, water is a key component of economic development, and its scarcity necessitates dams for storage and distribution for irrigation and human consumption. The Agence Nationale des Barrages et Transferts (ANBT) plans to build new dams to bring the total to 70 by 2010. However, soil erosion has contributed to a 20 percent reduction in reservoir capacities since their construction.
“In 2003, the ANBT invited Tecsult Inc., a major Canadian engineering firm, to conduct a comprehensive study that would locate the degraded areas of watersheds of twenty-one dams (five existing and sixteen in the detailed planned stage) and to develop watershed management plans to reduce hillside erosion and decrease reservoir siltation (accumulation of silt). The total study area covered more than 23,800 square kilometers (9,190 square miles), and the allowed study time was eighteen months.
“Each watershed was characterized for three types of erosion (sheet erosion, gully erosion, and landslides), and the resulting maps were combined in order to create a consolidated erosion risk map. Using this map and twelve land management measures, a watershed management plan was developed for each dam. Each watershed has also a map locating four kinds of special erosion control actions that aimed to reduce the stream sediment loads before they reach the reservoir. Finally, the budget required for implementing the watershed management plan with the special erosion control actions was estimated for each watershed. It was estimated that the twenty-one management schemes elaborated during this study will yield a total estimated gain of water in their reservoir equivalent to the consumption of water for more than 9 million people in one year.
“Courtesy of Agence Nationale des Barrages et Transferts (ANBT).”