Producing stories and graphics with forest fire information is one of the most interesting applications that journalists can do using the satellites information. The slideshow you see above was very simple to do. I just colect all the fire alerts that Fire Information Resources Management System (FIRMS) send everyday on my email. Once you get in the website you can sign for a newsletter with your area of interested and they send you all the fire spots registered.
The FIRMS is done by the University of Maryland, a well known center of geo-technologies which work with NASA and a lot other institutions. One thing that helps me a lot on their website is Web Fire Mapper. It is pretty good deal for finding stories if you just ask to see the latest fire spots with the Protected Areas Layer. Go to the right hand side, click on ‘Layers’ and choose ‘Protected Areas’. You might see, if you live in tropical country like Brazil that, protected areas has been very much affected by fire.
And finally, do not forget testing the data on Google Earth. Just go the Web Mapping Services and choose ‘KML/Google Earth`. Once again you can choose the fire spots by region. Download the KML file (suitable for opening in Google Earth) and once it is open in you computer, try to cross the information. See which cities are close to the fire. Or even more interesting just import some protected area limits and see how they burned lately. Next post I will show where to get parks and reserves on KML format very easily.
2 responses so far ↓
Monitoring a protected area. « Geojournalism.com // November 30, 2008 at 11:17 pm |
[...] Participate! ← Tracking forest fires [...]
Journalism and the democratization of satellites « Geojournalism.com // March 27, 2009 at 3:18 pm |
[...] by defending my team here. Journalists are doing good use of the satellites and the geoweb tolls. I have shown in some posts bellow how useful it might be to tell a story about deforestation just spot…. Also how powerful it is to grab a image from the Modis Subset website and interpret it by [...]