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FOREST COVER AND LAND USE MAPPING OF A REGION OF BARAK
VALLEY OF ASSAM, INDIA USING IRS LISS-II IMAGERY.
Ghosh, Jayanta K,
Lecturer, Regional Engineering College, Silchar 788 O10, INDIA.
H. Lamar, and N. Roel,
Students, R.E.C. Silchar 788 010, INDIA.
ABSTRACT
The Barak Valley of Assam alongwith the hills around
are endowed with rich and diverse vegetation resources.
Deforestation and raw materials extraction for indust-
rial purposes are heavily altering the forested land-
SCape.
The present study deals with mapping of forest
Cover and land use in the region covered by imagery
15-50 (B2 segmept) having scene centre 24
55'22"East Longitude of Indian Remote
Latitude and 92
47'20" North
Sensing CIS Satellite Linear Imaging Self-scanning
The study was undertaken by
placing the imageries (bands2,3,4 and F.C.C) on light
Sensor (LISS
table using a hand magnifying lens.
II sensor.
The elements of
visual interpretation elements like tone, texture
The map thus delineated shows
the spatial distribution of bio-climatic vegetation
concentration and the land use patterns.
etc. are used as keys.
KEY WORDS : IRS-imagery, visual interpretation,
mapping, land use, forest cover.
INTRODUCTION
Mapping and monitoring of land cover
is one of the foremost requirement for
planning, management and conservation
of land and forest. Remote Sensing pla-
ys à vital role in mapping the existing
resource information at particular period
of time. Detailed forest cover type and
land use mapping have been successfully
done in various parts of country and ab-
road using aerial photointerpretation te-
chniques rares Forest Survey of India
and National Remote Sensing Agency,India)
Mapping of forest cover and land use have
also been done using satellite imageries
viz. LANDSAT Multispectral Scanner (MSS)
False Colour Composite (FCCs') (Gupta,D.
M. et al, 1983), Thematic Mapper FCCs'
(Ghosh, R et al, 1990). Lots of work is
also reported relating to land cover cla-
ssification using LANDSAT Thematic Mapper
data through digital classification tech-
niques (Mikihiro, et al, 1986). However,
in the present study authors have attemp-
ted to map land cover including forest
using Indian Remote Sensing (IRS) satell-
ite Linear Imaging Self-scanning (LISS)II
data using visual interpretation techni-
ques.
STUDY AREA
The study area lies approximately be-
tween 24 30,to, 25 15" North Latitude and
92°30’ to 93°15 East Longitude covering an
area of about 25,000 square kilometers
The location of the area is most pronoun-
435
ced by presence of the Barak River, which
traverses through the middle of the scene.
Physiographically, the Barak River Valley,
having very gentle slope of average height
20 metersabove mean sea level lies in the
middle of the scene surrounded by success-
ive ranges of hills on three sides. The
heights of above hills varies upto 1500
meters and endowed with rich forest cover
mainly bamboo. The hill ranges mainly
comprise relatively compact and resistant
older rock units exposed in the anti-cli-
nal crests, whereas the valleys are compo-
sed of younger and softer formation expo-
sed in the synclinal trough. The geology
consists of alternate Surma and Tipam se-
ries of rocks with bedding plane along the
North-South direction. The Barak Valley
is usually characterised by exposures of
younger rock formation of alluvium folded
into narrow box like anclines separated
by wide flat synclines. The other rocks
present in the scene are (i) Dihing and
Dupitila series, (ii) Barail series, (iii)
Jaintia and Dishang series. There are
numbers of tributaries on both sides of
the river Barak. The individual rivers
and streams are of anastomatic pattern and
the overall drainage pattern of the scene
is dendritic pattern.
MATERIAL USED
For the present study, Indian Remote
Sensing (IRS) satellite Linear Imaging
Self-scanning sensor (LISS)II imageries
(scene number 15-50, B2 segment) of scale