PARKS FROM SPACE: ALTERNATIVE VIEWS OF AMERICA’S PARKLANDS USING REMOTE SENSING IMAGERY AND ASTRONAUT PHOTOGRAPHS
Views of parks from Space present the parklands at scales typically not seen in National Park Geology courses. These views are used to introduce the regional geology of a particular park or set of parks and to provide an effective regional backdrop after details of a parks geologic setting have been discussed. Questions addressing views are also incorporated into park-specific homework exercises. Regional-scale landforms related to deformation and mountain-building, volcanism, deposition, and erosion are easily observed, interpreted, and contrasted. Associated geologic processes and their modern and ancient large-scale products are beautifully documented. Integrating these views with more typical air and ground photos provides a continuum of scales to observe and study Park geology. Many views are visually stunning as well as educational and, with their aesthetic appeal, serve to enhance student curiosity and interest in Park geology.
Space Shuttle and International Space Station crews supply photographs of Earths surface, whereas ASTER, MODIS, Landsat 7 and others provide remotely sensed imagery of the Earth. Increasingly, these alternative park views are being used in USGS websites such as the Cascades Volcano Observatory and published printed materials on parks. Visual resources that catalog views of parks from Space and make them available electronically include NASAs Earth Observatory (http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov) and The Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth (http://eol.jsc.nasa.gov) and JPLs ASTER website (http://asterweb.jpl.nasa.gov).