Akinyemi, F.O.
were used to depict information on land use/land covers, etc, and constituted information base on which
impacts were assessed. The choice of 10km x 10km size of subscenes enabled the efficient application of
image classification techniques. The analysis of landcover type from SPOT imagery is more suited to this
sample size. (Griffiths and Wooding, 1989). A total of forty-one (41) subscenes were extracted and
interpreted. Production of the segment map conformed to the Geographic Information System (GIS) format
through of the Dasymetric Mapping Principle. The scale of presentation is 1:50,000
For the identification of impacts, cross profiles of the terrain over which the transmission lines may pass was
drawn in order to have visual bases for the proposed alignment. This led to the creation of an impact
magnitude map.
4 INTERPRETATION OF IMAGERIES AND OTHER RELEVANT INFORMATION
The objective of imagery interpretation is to establish landcover classes. This provides the basis for assigning
the indemnity class to which any categorized cover type belongs. Although traditional landscapes do not yield
themselves to precise classification of the component landcovers, categories of land cover/land use were
combined into complexes of mapping units. Attention was concentrated on those cover types which are of
major ecological and social interest, e.g. built-up area (settlements); forest complexes which includes gallery
forest, forest reserves, traditional groves, woodlands, settlements under tree cover typical of the Igbo (eastern
Nigeria) culture; cultivated patches, burnt surfaces, eroded sandy surfaces and water bodies. From the overall
interpretation 15 categories of land use/landcover were established whose mapping codes are explained in the
legend below (Table 1).
TABLE 1: COMMON LEGEND FOR THE LAND COVER/ LAND USE CLASS
CODE DISCRIPTION
S Mainly built-up compact or open
SB Dispersed settlements and surrounding country of woodland/ shrub with scattered farm
plots, iron stone pans
BS Predominantly short bush , with scattered farm plots and open bare spaces
MS Mixture of economic trees, shrubby thickets and few isolated homesteads
SMB Complex combination of cultivated areas, bare soils/ burnt-up areas, with some rural
dispersed settlements
M Predominantly forest/bush; with scattered traditional farm plots, combination of tree
crops and annual crops, farm huts.
FM Mainly forest cover, with agro-forest species
FMB Complex combination of trees, cultivated areas, burnt-up areas and bare space.
FMS Complex combination of agro-forestry, cultural areas, dispersed settlement.
B Mainly bare soils, burnt-up surfaces, eroded or marginally cultivated gravelly soils/
porous soils under grazing or very marginal cultivation
Very shallow depression /flat surface, under dense tree/shrub cover
Built-up for some kind of industrial use
Eroded steep slopes in Enugu landscape
Water body
<|€|m|8lo
Valley, gallery forests / flood plain shrub
Natural colour composite imagery of SPOT X5 data was made with the result that green on the map represents
the very active (green) vegetation. The more homogenous the green, the denser the active vegetation cover it
represents. At the extreme end of the vegetal cover type is the category of bare soil or very scanty vegetal
surfaces. Such areas appear in red. Other non-vegetal surfaces such as bare soils and settlements also appear
in the range of red, purple and violet. Built-up and other infrastructural features could be separated on the
basis of their geometric shapes (see Figure 2).
30
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXIII, Part B7. Amsterdam 2000.