Home > News > Miscellaneous >

Archive | New Products | Application | Business News | Miscellaneous | Submit Press Release
Current Headlines
Antarctica’s crevasses to be mapped

26 September 2005
Blinding blizzards, temperatures that drop below -40 degrees Celsius and deep crevasses are an occupational hazard for scientists working at Maitri, India’s second station in Antarctica. With depths ranging from a few meters to several kilometers, these crevasses have been unspotable till now. Not any more. To ensure the safety of the 25th Indian expedition team which leaves for Antarctica later this year, Pinak Ranadae of Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (CDAC) will accompany it and use satellite imagery to identify the dangerous crevasses. Earlier expeditions used helicopters to identify them. For the first time the Indian team will use satellite-based imagery and GIS to monitor those crevasses.

During Ranadae’s four-month stay on the cold continent he will plot the areas. Then, the data will be analysed and processed by CDAC to enable mapping of the hazardous zones.
Incidentally, CDAC had used the same technology to map and monitor glaciers and avalanche-prone regions in the Himalayas. Ever since India’s first camp, Dakshin Gangotri, got buried under a glacier, the glacier data study has gained significance. The satellite imagery will help in the endeavour because these land forms cannot be gauged using conventional methods. What’s challenging is the processing— the satellite images of the ice continent appear as white blots. The National Centre for Antarctic and Oceanic Resources (NCAOR), Goa, will jointly analyse the data for the environmental impact of oil spills in Antarctica.

Source : http://cities.expressindia.com

Bookmark this:
  Save This Page   Digg! Digg this story   Share on Facebook   StumbleUpon Toolbar Stumble It!


Tanzania keen on surveying its borders
SuperPad 3 now supports French language
Imagemaps in deal with Strong Engineering
Imagemaps expands reseller network in Asia
New channel manager for PCI Geomatics
g.on to present aimPort software at CeBIT 2010
CycloMedia finds new GIS partners
US city to use GTG services
SuperGeo to announce enterprise software
New human fossils found by satellite imagery‎
Goldenfields Water County Council selects Munsys
Power sector reforms take centre stage
Use GPS to control prices, suggests Indian PM's core group
China and Nepal agree to disagree on Mt. Everest’s height
Marine biologists to map threatened fish species
NASA awards USD 1.5 million grant for climate change research
Google Earth showcases oceans
3D Laser Mapping scans glacial terrains
OGC forms Aviation Domain Working Group