Remote Sensing for the Antarctic: A Down to Earth Review

The of McMurdo station below was taken on November 20th 2001 using the latest high resolution 2.44-meter natural colour multispectral sensor of the commercial Quickbird satellite (http:/hvmv_diqitalqlobe.com). State of the art digital image manipulation algorithms (Rees, 1999) have been used to invi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Turvey, Richard
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: University of Canterbury 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/14036
Description
Summary:The of McMurdo station below was taken on November 20th 2001 using the latest high resolution 2.44-meter natural colour multispectral sensor of the commercial Quickbird satellite (http:/hvmv_diqitalqlobe.com). State of the art digital image manipulation algorithms (Rees, 1999) have been used to invisibly merge the full contents of the Remote Sensing for Antarctica review paper into the pixel fabric of the image to create a unique holographic version of the report. By wearing the attached Holopromis• spectacles the report will appear in front of you as a 3D manifestation of a conventional printed book. You can move backwards and forwards through the (216) pages by gently rotating the irnage (or tilting your head, whichever proves most comfortable). The of McMurdo station below was taken on November 20th 2001 using the latest high resolution 2.44-meter natural colour multispectral sensor of the commercial Quickbird satellite (http:/hvmv_diqitalqlobe.com). State of the art digital image manipulation algorithms (Rees, 1999) have been used to invisibly merge the full contents of the Remote Sensing for Antarctica review paper into the pixel fabric of the image to create a unique holographic version of the report. By wearing the attached Holopromis• spectacles the report will appear in front of you as a 3D manifestation of a conventional printed book. You can move backwards and forwards through the (216) pages by gently rotating the irnage (or tilting your head, whichever proves most comfortable).