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Research Reveals Shift In US Landscapes

For most of the past four decades, observations from the Landsat satellite record show that humans have dominated changes to the U.S. landscape. Recent research revealed a shift in that trend, suggesting that disasters might be catching up.

In a NASA-funded study published in Nature Geoscience, scientists analyzed nearly 35 years of data from NASA/USGS Landsat satellites to better understand what has been shaping the continental U.S. landscape. The researchers, led by former Landsat science team member Zhe Zhu, found that "human-directed disturbances" like logging, agricultural expansion, and construction have declined, while "wild disturbances" like wildfires and hurricanes — disasters that can be influenced by human activity but are not controlled by people — have risen in frequency and intensity.

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by Joji Xavier

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