in this regard.
CONCLUSIONS
The twin objectives of the first phase of the project have been
achieved. The technique of manual interpretation of Landsat imagery
as a tool for regional resource survey has been evaluated. It has
also been shown that such interpretation can provide substantive
information on geomorphology so as to form a framework for integrated
resource mapping.
Detailed and accurate thematic maps of the pilot area have been
completed. These maps have been compiled after intensive field checking,
a level which will not be possible to maintain in an extended mapping
program. The intention is to combine these individual theme maps into
a single data plane, in which the photomorphic units are subdivided
to create integrated terrain units. This map should contain enough
information to allow evaluation of the resource potential of the units.
These maps will be used in the next phase for ground truth control
purposes (i.e. training set selection, signature generation) in the
automatic processing of Landsat data. This work will be carried out
shortly on the M-DAS facility installed at the Remote Sensing Centre,
Cairo.
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Skipwith, P.1973i The Red Sea and Coastal Plain of the Kingdom of
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Technical record TR-1973-1- D.G.M.R. Jeddah.
Soil Survey Staff. Soil Conservation Service, U.S. Department of
Agriculture 1975- Soil Taxonomy. Agricultural Handbook No. 436.
U.S. Government Print Office, Washington D.C.
USGS. 19771 Specifications for hand use, land cover and associated
major Geog Prog. Open file report 77-555- U.S. Dept. Int. Geol. Surv.
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