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New 3-D Map Will Help Monitor Climate Change In Alaska

NSF/NGA

 

In Kotzebue a year ago, President Barack Obama called for a publicly available, high-resolution elevation map of Alaska, a map that will help Alaskans monitor the effects of climate change. Now, it’s here.

There are many satellites that orbit the Earth. Typical satellites — like NASA’s Landsat — capture really large images, more than 100 miles across. For this project, the images are much smaller.

Paul Morin, director of the Polar Geospatial Center, says these satellites function like human eyes to help make the 3-D images.

“You can tell when things are close and far away because you have two eyes and they’re separated,” Morin said. “That’s pretty much the same principle, and instead of having two satellites, you have one satellite and it takes two pictures.”

Once there are two good images, those pictures are fed through a super computer. Software is used to find the same objects in both images. From that, the elevation is calculated.

Credit NSF/NGA
Wolverine Glacier is on the Kenai Peninsula.

“It can be used to look at the gain and loss of ice on a glacier,” he said. “It can be used to calculate the extent of watersheds for a lake or for a river.”

Topography on this scale is so detailed it can measure individual trees.

“We have such resolution in this data that people can go in, look at an elevation data set from two years ago and compare it with a data set from today,” Morin said. “And you can see individual trees being cut down.”

Collecting the imagery for this project has taken three years. Now that Alaska is completed, up next is the entire Arctic. Those maps are expected to be finished by the end of 2017.

Zoë Sobel reported for KUCB from 2016 until 2019. She returned to KUCB after a year living in Nepal and Malaysia as a Luce Scholar. She then returned to KUCB as a ProPublica reporter August of 2020 through August of 2021.
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