An Automated Approach for Mapping Persistent Ice and Snow Cover over High Latitude Regions

We developed an automated approach for mapping persistent ice and snow cover (glaciers and perennial snowfields) from Landsat TM and ETM+ data across a variety of topography, glacier types, and climatic conditions at high latitudes (above ~65°N). Our approach exploits all available Landsat scenes ac...

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Main Authors: David J. Selkowitz, Richard R. Forster
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2015-12-01
Series:Remote Sensing
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/8/1/16
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spelling doaj-7cd7da240ea14c3ebff760e4130c9c652020-11-25T01:14:58ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922015-12-01811610.3390/rs8010016rs8010016An Automated Approach for Mapping Persistent Ice and Snow Cover over High Latitude RegionsDavid J. Selkowitz0Richard R. Forster1U.S. Geological Survey, Alaska Science Center, 4210 University Drive, Anchorage, AK 99508, USADepartment of Geography, University of Utah, 260 S. Central Campus Dr., Room 270, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USAWe developed an automated approach for mapping persistent ice and snow cover (glaciers and perennial snowfields) from Landsat TM and ETM+ data across a variety of topography, glacier types, and climatic conditions at high latitudes (above ~65°N). Our approach exploits all available Landsat scenes acquired during the late summer (1 August–15 September) over a multi-year period and employs an automated cloud masking algorithm optimized for snow and ice covered mountainous environments. Pixels from individual Landsat scenes were classified as snow/ice covered or snow/ice free based on the Normalized Difference Snow Index (NDSI), and pixels consistently identified as snow/ice covered over a five-year period were classified as persistent ice and snow cover. The same NDSI and ratio of snow/ice-covered days to total days thresholds applied consistently across eight study regions resulted in persistent ice and snow cover maps that agreed closely in most areas with glacier area mapped for the Randolph Glacier Inventory (RGI), with a mean accuracy (agreement with the RGI) of 0.96, a mean precision (user’s accuracy of the snow/ice cover class) of 0.92, a mean recall (producer’s accuracy of the snow/ice cover class) of 0.86, and a mean F-score (a measure that considers both precision and recall) of 0.88. We also compared results from our approach to glacier area mapped from high spatial resolution imagery at four study regions and found similar results. Accuracy was lowest in regions with substantial areas of debris-covered glacier ice, suggesting that manual editing would still be required in these regions to achieve reasonable results. The similarity of our results to those from the RGI as well as glacier area mapped from high spatial resolution imagery suggests it should be possible to apply this approach across large regions to produce updated 30-m resolution maps of persistent ice and snow cover. In the short term, automated PISC maps can be used to rapidly identify areas where substantial changes in glacier area have occurred since the most recent conventional glacier inventories, highlighting areas where updated inventories are most urgently needed. From a longer term perspective, the automated production of PISC maps represents an important step toward fully automated glacier extent monitoring using Landsat or similar sensors.http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/8/1/16remote sensing of glacierssnow and iceLandsatarctic
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David J. Selkowitz
Richard R. Forster
spellingShingle David J. Selkowitz
Richard R. Forster
An Automated Approach for Mapping Persistent Ice and Snow Cover over High Latitude Regions
Remote Sensing
remote sensing of glaciers
snow and ice
Landsat
arctic
author_facet David J. Selkowitz
Richard R. Forster
author_sort David J. Selkowitz
title An Automated Approach for Mapping Persistent Ice and Snow Cover over High Latitude Regions
title_short An Automated Approach for Mapping Persistent Ice and Snow Cover over High Latitude Regions
title_full An Automated Approach for Mapping Persistent Ice and Snow Cover over High Latitude Regions
title_fullStr An Automated Approach for Mapping Persistent Ice and Snow Cover over High Latitude Regions
title_full_unstemmed An Automated Approach for Mapping Persistent Ice and Snow Cover over High Latitude Regions
title_sort automated approach for mapping persistent ice and snow cover over high latitude regions
publisher MDPI AG
series Remote Sensing
issn 2072-4292
publishDate 2015-12-01
description We developed an automated approach for mapping persistent ice and snow cover (glaciers and perennial snowfields) from Landsat TM and ETM+ data across a variety of topography, glacier types, and climatic conditions at high latitudes (above ~65°N). Our approach exploits all available Landsat scenes acquired during the late summer (1 August–15 September) over a multi-year period and employs an automated cloud masking algorithm optimized for snow and ice covered mountainous environments. Pixels from individual Landsat scenes were classified as snow/ice covered or snow/ice free based on the Normalized Difference Snow Index (NDSI), and pixels consistently identified as snow/ice covered over a five-year period were classified as persistent ice and snow cover. The same NDSI and ratio of snow/ice-covered days to total days thresholds applied consistently across eight study regions resulted in persistent ice and snow cover maps that agreed closely in most areas with glacier area mapped for the Randolph Glacier Inventory (RGI), with a mean accuracy (agreement with the RGI) of 0.96, a mean precision (user’s accuracy of the snow/ice cover class) of 0.92, a mean recall (producer’s accuracy of the snow/ice cover class) of 0.86, and a mean F-score (a measure that considers both precision and recall) of 0.88. We also compared results from our approach to glacier area mapped from high spatial resolution imagery at four study regions and found similar results. Accuracy was lowest in regions with substantial areas of debris-covered glacier ice, suggesting that manual editing would still be required in these regions to achieve reasonable results. The similarity of our results to those from the RGI as well as glacier area mapped from high spatial resolution imagery suggests it should be possible to apply this approach across large regions to produce updated 30-m resolution maps of persistent ice and snow cover. In the short term, automated PISC maps can be used to rapidly identify areas where substantial changes in glacier area have occurred since the most recent conventional glacier inventories, highlighting areas where updated inventories are most urgently needed. From a longer term perspective, the automated production of PISC maps represents an important step toward fully automated glacier extent monitoring using Landsat or similar sensors.
topic remote sensing of glaciers
snow and ice
Landsat
arctic
url http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/8/1/16
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