Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1658
Title: EXPLORINGLANDUSEANDLANDCOVERCHANGEINTHE MININGAREASOFWAEASTDISTRICT, GHANAUSING SATELLITEIMAGERY
Authors: Basomm, P. L.
Guan, Q.
Cheng, D.
Keywords: Landuse/Landcover
NDVI
Vegetation
Remotesensing
GIS
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: De Gruyter Open
Series/Report no.: Vol. 1;
Abstract: Satelliteimageryhasbeenwidelyusedtomonitortheextentofenvironmentalchangeinbothmineand postmineareas.ThisstudyusesRemotesensingandGeographicalInformationSystemtechniquesfortheassessment of land use/land cover dynamics of mine related areas in Wa East District of Ghana. Landsat satellite imageriesofthreedifferenttimeperiods,i.e.,1991,2000and 2014wereusedtoquantifythelanduse/coverchangesin thearea.SupervisedClassificationusingMaximumLikelihoodTechniqueinERDASwasutilized.Theimageswere categorized into five different classes: Open Savannah, ClosedSavannah, BareAreas,Settlement andWater.Imagedifferencingmethodofchangedetectionwasusedto investigate the changes. Normalized Differential VegetativeIndexvalueswereusedtocorrelatethestateofhealthy vegetation.Theimagedifferencingshowedapositivecorrelation to the changes in the Land use and Land cover classes. NDVI values reduced from 0.48 to 0.11. The land use change matrix also showed conversion of savannah areas into bare ground and settlement. Open and close savannah reduced from 50.80% to 36.5% and 27.80% to 22.67% respectively whiles bare land and settlement increased. Overall accuracy of classified 2014 image and kappa statistics was 83.20% and 0.761 respectively. The studyrevealedthedecliningnatureofthevegetationand thesignificanceofusingsatelliteimagery.AhigherresolutionsatelliteImageryishoweverneededtosatisfactorily delineatemineareasfromotherbareareasinsuchSavannahzones.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1658
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Natural Resource and Environment



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