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The Pennsylvania Landsat mosaic was generated using the
ten scenes listed in Table 1 and illustrated in Figure 3.
These scenes were selected using the following guidelines:
(1) summertime imagery acquired between May and September;
(2) cloud-free data, or a maximum cloud cover less than or
equal to 10%; (3) no apparent defoliation or other forest
disturbance; (4) most recently acquired data which met
guidelines 1 through 3 above; and (5) near anniversary
coverage (i.e., all scenes from the same month of year if
possible).
The creation of the Pennsylvania mosaic and associated
data base layers was complicated somewhat by the fact that
the state lies within two UTM zones. This meant that all
data layers within the data base had to be subdivided,
registered to the appropriate UTM zone, and stored as two
separate entities. The 78° meridian, which approximately
bisects the State, serves to delineate UTM Zone 17 in the
western half of the State from UTM Zone 18 in the eastern
half of the State (Figure 2).
To facilitate the image-to-map mosaicking process and
associated geodetic accuracy assessment, each UTM zone was
subdivided into four quadrants that were roughly equivalent
to the following U.S.G.S. 1:250,000 scale maps:
UTM Zone 17
QUAD 1 - Cleveland, OH
QUAD 2 - Canton, OH
QUAD 3 - Warren, PA
QUAD 4 - Pittsburgh, PA
UTM Zone 18
QUAD 5 - Williamsport, PA
QUAD 6 - Harrisburg, PA
QUAD 7 - Scranton, PA
QUAD 8 - Newark, NJ
The image-to-map registrations conducted by JPL personnel
were done on a quadrant by quadrant basis, and the
appropriate quadrants within each UTM zone were merged
together to form the two halves of the Pennsylvania mosaic.
In order to evaluate the geodetic accuracy of the completed
mosaic, Goddard personnel selected a number of ground
control points in each of the eight quadrants using
1:24,000 scale U.S.G.S. topographic maps. The UTM
coordinates for each ground control point were identified.
The exact locations of these points on the mosaic image
were determined using a series of display functions on the
ESL/Interactive Digital Image Manipulation System (IDIMS)
facility at Goddard (ESL, 1980). These locations were
then used in an IDIMS utility function (ALLCOORD) to
determine the ground control point residual values for
each point in both the line direction (i.e., north/south
offset) and the sample direction (i.e., east/west offset).
Table 2 summarizes the number of control points identified
in each quadrant, the average line and sample residuals,
and the "worst case" line and sample offsets for that
quadrant. In interpreting the results, note that a
residual value of 0.0 in both the line or sample direction
would be indicative of a perfect image-to-map registration.
A review of Table 2 indicates that in most cases the sample
(east/west) offset is greater than the line (north/south)