Metadata Details

Human Ecology from Space: Introduction to Remote Sensing in the Social Sciences
Contributed by Eduardo S. Brondizio
version Fall 2002 
status Final 
rights_restrictions unknown 
rights_description unknown 
rights_cost no 
resource_type Lecture Materials 
metametadata_contributor_role Creator 
metametadata_contributor_entity David Fearon, fear@umail.ucsb.edu 
metametadata_contributor_date 2003-09-10 
location
Link
learning_time 1:00:00 
keywords Anthropology and Archaeology, remote sensing, settlement pattern, land use, resource management, population studies, human settlements, population patterns, geographic patterns, georeferencing, geocoding, fieldwork 
format text/html 
end_user_role Teacher 
description This course combines a historical review on the use of remote sensing in the social sciences (particularly anthropology), the study of its applications to social science inquires and applied work (e.g., settlement pattern, land use and resource management, population studies, archeological analysis, etc.), and a formal introduction to remote sensing principles, data, and processing techniques based on lectures and hands on laboratory sessions. (dissertation and thesis related projects are especially encouraged). 
CSISS_interest_area spatial data analysis,land use model,spatial diffusion 
CSISS_discipline Anthropology and Archaeology,Demography,Geography 
contributor_role_1 Author 
contributor_entity_1 Eduardo S. Brondizio 
contributor_date_1 2002-09-01 
aggregation_level
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