ISSS608 2016-17 T3 Assign CHUA GIM HONG
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VAST Challenge 2017 - Mystery of Rose-crested Blue Pipit bird at Boonsong Lekagul Nature Preserve
Individual Assignment - Mini-Challenge 3
Prepared by Chua Gim Hong
MAD (Mad About Data) Community - DataViz Clan
Contents
Background
Mistford is a mid-size city located to the southwest of a large nature preserve. The city has a small industrial area with four light-manufacturing endeavors. Mitch Vogel is a post-doc student studying ornithology at Mistford College and has been discovering signs that the number of nesting pairs of the Rose-Crested Blue Pipit, a popular local bird due to its attractive plumage and pleasant songs, is decreasing! The decrease is sufficiently significant that the Pangera Ornithology Conservation Society is sponsoring Mitch to undertake additional studies to identify the possible reasons. Mitch is gaining access to several datasets that may help him in his work, and he has asked you (and your colleagues) as experts in visual analytics to help him analyze these datasets.
For full details, please visit VAST Challenge 2017: Overview.
Objective
There were signs that the number of nesting pairs of the Rose-Crested Blue Pipit is decreasing. Mitch Vogel faced difficulty trying to assess the extent of the possible problem contributed to the downfall of the poor Rose-crested Blue Pipit bird because:
a. While he was able to get around some of the nature preserve to study the bird, he was not able to cover the entire preserve with a car or on foot but because of the terrain and the vegetation.
b. Drones and air vehicles would scare the birds.
For more details on Mini-Challenge 3, please visit VAST Challenge 2017: Mini-Challenge 3.
Dataset
The multi-spectral dataset files from the National Space Service show the same piece of the Lekagul Preserve as imaged by a satellite multispectral sensor that measures in six different bands (B1 – B6) over a few years in the following format:
• TIF files which are 8-bit, 6-band files with 651 rows and columns. Bands 1-6 are ordered by wavelength (shortest to longest wavelengths) B1=blue, B2=green, B3=red, B4=near-infrared, B5= short-wave infrared (SWIR) 1 and B6= short-wave infrared (SWIR) 2.
• ASCII files which are in comma-delimited format where each record is the pixel value for each band at that X, Y location.
Note: X, Y origin is the upper left corner of the image. The X, Y locations are relative to the image itself and not a geo-coordinate on Earth. So, X=0, Y=0 refers to the pixel in the upper left corner of the image. Similarly, the bottom right pixel is X=650, Y=650.
The sensor is a sensitive scientific instrument and the resulting images are optimized for measurement and are not simply “pictures”.
Question 1
Boonsong Lake resides within the preserve and has a length of about 3000 feet (see the Boonsong Lake image file). The image of Boonsong Lake is oriented north-south and is an RGB image (not six channels as in the supplied satellite data). Please limit your answer to 3 images and 500 words.
Using the Boonsong Lake image as your guide, analyze and report on the scale and orientation of the supplied satellite images.
The RGB image of Boonsong Lake read into JMP Pro Graph Builder, with each grid line along X and Y axes set to be 1 pixel size. There are 30 grid squares or pixels along the vertical distance of 3,000 feet (see red arrow in Figure 1). Therefore, the scale of the supplied satellite images is 30 pixels : 3,000 feet or 1 pixel : 100 feet.
Figure 1: RGB image of Boonsong Lake in JMP Pro Graph Builder
One of the TIF satellite images (image11_2016_09_06.tif) was opened in QGIS to locate Boonsong Lake. It confirmed that the scale of the TIF satellite images was 30 pixels : 3,000 feet or 1 pixel : 100 feet (see Figure 2). Since the orientation of the RGB image of Boonsong Lake was given as north-south, the TIF satellite images were also oriented north-south.
Figure 2: PNG image of Boonsong Lake exported from “image11_2016_09_06.tif” file in QGIS
How much area is covered by a pixel in these images?
The area covered by a pixel is 100 feet by 100 feet or 10,000 square feet.
Question 2
Identify features you can discern in the Preserve area as captured in the imagery. Focus on image features that you are reasonably confident that you can identify (e.g., a town full of houses may be identified with a high confidence level). Please limit your answer to 6 images and 500 words.
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Question 3
There are most likely many features in the images that you cannot identify without additional information about the geography, human activity, and so on. Mitch is interested in changes that are occurring that may provide him with clues to the problems with the Pipit bird. Identify features that change over time in these images, using all channels of the images. Changes may be obvious or subtle, but try not to be distracted by easily explained phenomena like cloud cover. Please limit your answer to 6 images and 750 words.
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Deductions
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Conclusion
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References
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