Chapter 11 - Zero to a trillion: Advancing Earth surface process studies with open access to high-resolution topography

TitleChapter 11 - Zero to a trillion: Advancing Earth surface process studies with open access to high-resolution topography
Publication TypeBook Chapter
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsCrosby CJ, J. Arrowsmith R, Nandigam V
EditorTarolli P, Mudd SM
Book TitleRemote Sensing of Geomorphology
Series TitleDevelopments in Earth Surface Processes
Volume23
Pagination317 - 338
PublisherElsevier
ISBN0928-2025
Keywordscyberinfrastructure, Geoinformatics, Geomorphology, Surface processes, topography
Abstract

High-resolution topography (HRT) is a powerful observational tool for studying the Earth's surface, vegetation, and urban landscapes, with broad scientific, engineering, and education-based applications. Submeter resolution imaging is possible when collected with laser and photogrammetric techniques using the ground, air, and space-based platforms. Open access to these data and a cyberinfrastructure platform that enables users to discover, manage, share, and process then increases the impact of investments in data collection and catalyzes scientific discovery. Furthermore, open and online access to data enables broad interdisciplinary use of HRT across academia and in communities such as education, public agencies, and the commercial sector. OpenTopography, supported by the US National Science Foundation, aims to democratize access to Earth science-oriented, HRT data and processing tools. We utilize cyberinfrastructure, including large-scale data management, high-performance computing, and service-oriented architectures to provide efficient web-based visualization and access to large, HRT datasets. OT colocates data with processing tools to enable users to quickly access custom data and derived products for their application, with the ultimate goal of making these powerful data easier to use. OT's rapidly growing data holdings currently include 283 lidar and photogrammetric, point cloud datasets (>1.2 trillion points) covering 236,364km2. As a testament to OT's success, more than 86,000 users have processed over 5 trillion lidar points. This use has resulted in more than 290 peer-reviewed publications across numerous academic domains including Earth science, geography, computer science, and ecology.

URLhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/B9780444641779000114
DOI10.1016/B978-0-444-64177-9.00011-4
Refereed DesignationRefereed