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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 |
1 |
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