Human Dimensions

The human dimensions discipline includes ways humans interact with the environment and how these interactions impact Earth’s systems. It also explores the vulnerability of human communities to natural disasters and hazards.

 

 

Human Dimensions RSS Feed
Human Dimensions

Human activities, such as the conversion of natural land to built-up areas, the cultivation of agricultural land, and the extent and type of agricultural production, movement and consumption of natural resources, can be tracked by sensors aboard Earth observing satellites. The combination of remotely sensed data with data collected by national and sub-national government agencies (such as census, disease, species diversity, and similar data) enables investigations into the impact of human activities on Earth. Additionally, these data are a vital resource for managing disaster response, such as using nighttime lights data to monitor power outages following storms or thermal anomaly data to track the movement of wildfires near populated areas.

 

Definition source: Colorado State University

You Might Also Be Interested In

Filter By

Content type
The Yangtze Delta is home to more than eighty million people in an area only a little larger than the state of Indiana.
Article
The city of Cairo is barely visible behind the pyramids in this photograph, due to the heavy layer of haze.
Article
A famer in southern St. Elizabeth, Jamaica prepares his field for planting his next crop of potatoes
Article
This angiogram, an X-ray technique using an injected dye, reveals a healthy human heart.
Article
This stovepipe tornado formed on May 31, 2010, near the border between Colorado and Oklahoma.
Article
This cleared hillside in Haiti now lacks the vegetation that used to stabilize its slopes.
Article
Prayer flags frame Ama Dablam Peak in the Nepalese Himalaya.
Article
The Clouds and the Earth’s Radiant Energy System (CERES) Ocean Validation Experiment (COVE) lighthouse site lies fifteen miles east of Chesapeake Bay, in the Atlantic Ocean
Article