Vegetation Images Show Drought in Western US (369x491 Animation)

Overview

Service
NASA SVS Image Server
URL

http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/wms

Layer Name

3110_20956

Layer Abstract

Satellite data can gauge the health of plants, which is a good indicator of drought. The Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) measures how dense and green plant leaves are. NDVI images are useful as a measure of drought when compared to 'normal' plant health. Scientists calculate average NDVI values for an area to find out what is normal at a particular time of year. This animation uses satellite imagery to show changes in vegetation between 1999 and 2003. In 2002, drought had settled across the Midwest. Large dark brown sections of eastern Colorado show where vegetation was less lush and healthy than normal. This version of the visualization is a wide view showing the western United States. The data were measured by the vegetation instrument on Europe's SPOT-4 satellite, and were provided by DigitalGlobe/SPOT under agreement with the U.S. Department of Agriculture Foreign Agricultural Service (USDA/FAS).

Additional Credit:
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Server Abstract

Web Map Server maintained by the Scientific Visualization Studio at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

Keywords

Climatology EARTH SCIENCE Atmosphere Atmospheric Phenomena Drought EARTH SCIENCE Biosphere Vegetation Vegetation Index

Access Constraints

none

Fees

none

Legend

-

WGS84 Extent

lon min: -126, lat min: 28.8, lon max: -98.9, lat max: 50.9

Coordinate Reference Systems

CRS:33516

Tags

  • Satellite
  • measure
  • plants
  • Normalized
  • vegetation

Status