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4. THE GLOBAL LAND INFORMATION SYSTEM
The Global Land Information System (GLIS) is an online
data directory, guide, and inventory system developed
by the USGS to respond to the land data information
and access needs of the U.S. global change research
community. GLIS can best be characterized as a
metadata system containing descriptive information
about data sets and the associated functions that allow
scientists to assess the potential utility of data sets,
determine their availability, and place online requests for
related data products.
The data set information in GLIS is maintained in three
levels of detail -- the directory, guide, and inventory.
The GLIS directory contains summary descriptions of
entire data sets. Users can query the directory by using
any combination of keywords (discipline, location,
geophysical parameter), acquisition date, data source
(spacecraft, sensor), geographic coverage, project, and
investigator. The GLIS guides contain detailed
descriptions of entire data sets, including such
information as sensor specifications, extent of coverage,
processing history, data quality, and product availability.
The GLIS inventories contain detailed information about
individual data set entities such as a Landsat scene.
GLIS contains inventories of U.S. and foreign holdings
of Landsat MSS and TM data, as well as the Center's
holdings of National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) Advanced Very High Resolution
Radiometer (AVHRR) sensor data. GLIS supports
temporal-, spatial-, and parameter-oriented queries of
inventories, and the spatial query options include point,
bounding rectangle, polygon, and geographic name
searches.
In addition to providing the text-based directory, guide,
and inventory query functions, GLIS also offers several
graphical aids to users. Among these are capabilities
for map-based geographic query specification and
coverage plotting, and online digital image browse
services for selected data sets. The map-based tools
allow users to specify the area they wish to search by
interactively "drawing" this rectangular or polygonal area
on a map, or alternately by requesting to view the
geographic coverage of their query results. The image
browse services are primarily intended to allow users to
visually judge overall image quality, determine the
extent of cloud cover, and verify geographic coverage.
GLIS currently contains more than 60,000 AVHRR
browse images and soon will have the first set of
Landsat MSS browse images being generated by the
TMACS systems. These graphical aids are available to
users through an X-windows-based, 32-bit graphics
workstation interface called X-GLIS.
Although GLIS provides information about and access
to a variety of regional, continental, and global land
science data sets, these query and selection aids have
proven particularly useful to those who are interested in
selecting and ordering data from large satellite data
inventories. For example, through GLIS a user can
execute a query of the 600,000-scene Landsat MSS or
the 60,000-pass AVHRR inventories, see the
geographic coverage of individual scenes or passes
plotted on a map, and request to view individual browse
images for final selection and ordering.
5. GLIS USER ACCESS AND ASSISTANCE
Users who want to perform graphic-based queries can
use an X-terminal or X-terminal emulator package on a
PC.
From INTERNET: $TELNET xglis.cr.usgs.gov
Users who want to perform text-based queries can use
an alphanumeric terminal or a terminal emulator
package on a PC.
From INTERNET: $TELNET glis.cr.usgs.gov
or STELNET 152.61.192.54
Direct Dial: Set modem to 8 bits, no parity,
1 stop bit Dial: (605) 594-6888
For information concerning system access and how to
obtain a copy of the graphical interface software,
contact GLIS User Assistance through one of the
following:
Telephone: 1-800-252-GLIS (1-800-252-4547)
or commercial: (605) 594-6099
E-mail: GLIS@GLIS.CR.USGS.GOV
Mail: U.S. Geological Survey
EROS Data Center
GLIS User Assistance
Sioux Falls, SD 57198 USA
6. SATELLITE DATA DISTRIBUTION
Despite the dramatic improvements in digital data
storage and transfer capacities that have been achieved
over the past 20 years, data volume continues to be
one of the most challenging aspects of satellite data
distribution. Many of the same technological advances
that have enhanced a data provider's ability to deliver
large digital data products effectively and efficiently
have also enhanced the producer's ability to generate
such products. Factors such as greater spatial
resolution and more spectral channels combined with
powerful state-of-the-art computer systems and
expanded communications band-widths, have all
contributed to the generation of larger and larger
satellite data sets.
One example of this challenge now facing the Center
stems from its participation in NASA's EOS program. In
preparation for its role as an EOS data archive,
processing, and distribution facility, the Center is
participating in early prelaunch activities to enhance the
availability and utility of existing Earth science data.
One such activity is the Global Land 1-km AVHRR Data
Set project. This project is being conducted under the
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