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Environment

To keep up the Earth’s environment while balancing human needs requires better decision making with more advanced information. Gathering accurate and timely information has been one of the most challenges facing both government and private organizations that must make these decisions. The Global Positioning System (GPS) helps to address that need.

Data collection systems provide decision makers with descriptively information and accurate positional data about items that are spread across many kilometers of terrain. By connecting position information with other types of data, it is possible to analyze many environmental problems from a new perspective. Position data collected through GPS can be imported into geographic information system (GIS) software, allowing spacial aspect to be examined with other information to create a far more complete understanding of a particular situation than might be possible through conventional means.

Aerial studies of some of the world’s most impenetrable wilds are conducted with the aid of GPS technology to assess an area’s wildlife, terrain, and human infrastructure. By tagging imagery with GPS coordinates it is probable to evaluate conservation efforts and assist in strategy planning.

Some nations gather and use mapping information to manage their regulatory programs such as the control of royalties from mining operations, delineation of borders, and the management of logging in their woods.

GPS technology supports efforts to know and forecast changes in the environment. By integrating GPS measurements into operational methods used by meteorologists, the atmosphere’s water content can be determined, improving the accuracy of weather forecasts. In addition, the growth of GPS tidal tracking sites, and improvement in estimating the vertical component of a site’s position from GPS measurements, present a unique chance to directly observe the effects of ocean tides.

GPS receivers mounted on buoys track the movement and spread of oil spills. Helicopters use GPS to map the circumference of forest fires and allow efficient use of fire fighting resources.

The traveling patterns of endangered species, such as the mountain gorillas of Rwanda, are tracked and mapped using GPS, helping to preserve and enhance declining populations.

In earthquake prone areas such as the Pacific Rim, GPS is playing an increasingly spectacular role in helping scientists to anticipate earthquakes. Using the precise position information provided by GPS, scientists can study how strain builds up slowly over time in an effort to characterize, and in the future perhaps anticipate, earthquakes.

Another benefit to using GPS is timeliness with which critical products can be generated. Because GPS data are in a digital form available always and in all parts of the world, they can be captured and examined very quickly. This means that it is possible for analysis to be completed in hours or days rather than weeks or months, thus ensuring that the final product is timelier. With the fast pace of change in the world today, these savings in time can be critical.

The modernization of GPS will more improve the support of GPS technology to the study and management of the world’s environment. The United States is committed to implementing two additional civilian signals that will provide environmental and conservation applications with increased precision, availability, and reliability. Tropical rain forest ecology, for example, will benefit from the increased availability of GPS within heavy foliage areas and the reduction of spatial error in fine-scale vegetation mapping.

 

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