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| Disturbances like hurricanes and fires reshape the landscape and play vital roles in Earth’s systems, therefore, understanding what drives these kinds of disturbances is important for projecting what changes may be ahead. Photo Credit: Malachi Brooks |
If it feels like headlines reporting 100 or 1,000-year floods and mega fires seem more frequent these days, it’s not your imagination.
A project led by researchers from UConn’s Global Environmental Remote Sensing (GERS) Lab has yielded surprising insights into land disturbances and disasters in the United States since the late 1980s, including a shift in what drives those disturbances, and how they are increasing with frightening intensity and frequency. Their findings are published in Nature Geoscience.
The research is the result of a decade-long project to perform a CONterminous United States (CONUS)-wide disturbance agent classification and mapping project, explains GERS Director and Associate Professor in the Department of Natural Resources and the Environment in the College of Agriculture, Health and Natural Resources (CAHNR) Zhe Zhu. The ambitious project involved the careful analysis of Landsat satellite data spanning more than 40 years.
Disturbances like hurricanes and fires reshape the landscape and play vital roles in Earth’s systems; therefore, understanding what drives these kinds of disturbances is important for projecting what changes may be ahead.


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