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GIS Week: Geospatial Forum (Lecture) with Dr. Emil Cherrington – NASA SERVIR

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Connecting Space to Village: My Geospatial Journey with the SERVIR Program Speaker: Dr. Emil Cherrington, Thematic Lead, Ecosystem & Carbon Management, SERVIR Science Coordination Office at NASA; Research Scientist at the University of Alabama in Huntsville’s Earth System Science Center. Hosted by the Geospatial Graduate Student Organization and part of GIS Week at NC State. Summary:…

Geospatial Forum with Dr. Zhe Zhu (Univ. of Connecticut)

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The discipline of land change science has been evolving rapidly in the past decades. Remote sensing has played a major role in one of the most critical components of land change science, which includes observation, monitoring, and characterization of land change. In this forum presentation, Dr. Zhu will first introduce a new remote sensing perspective…

Geospatial Forum with Dr. Leila Hashemi-Beni (NC A&T State Univ.)

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The increasing volume and diversity of sources of geospatial data have created both opportunities and challenges for environmental management studies. Combining and extracting the information contained in these rich multisource data enable novel views and the development of a comprehensive and detailed knowledge basis of the environmental dynamics of both rapidly changing events (e.g. floods)…

Geospatial Forum with Dr. Brian Miller (USGS)

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Managing natural resources is fraught with uncertainty around how complex ecosystems will respond to management actions and a changing climate. A range of scientific tools can help grapple with different aspects of this challenge, but they are often used independently. This forum presentation describes a series of projects that have leveraged the complementary strengths of…

Geospatial Forum with Dr. Antonia Sebastian (UNC-Chapel Hill)

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Insured flood loss in Texas has risen rapidly since 1978, totaling nearly $16.4 billion USD by the end of 2021. These losses have been predominantly concentrated in coastal and urban areas where changes in extreme precipitation coupled with rapid population growth at the coastal margin and in upland areas have dramatically altered the hydrologic response…

Geospatial Forum with Dr. Peter Ojiambo (NC State)

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Cucurbit downy mildew exhibits significant long distance dispersal within the continental United States. The disease is characterized by annual extinction and recolonization cycles that make it an excellent model system to understand and quantify epidemic expansion in both time and space. Using disease records collected as part of a cucurbit downy mildew monitoring system, the…