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Original Articles

Hyperspectral indices for characterizing upland peat composition

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Pages 313-325 | Received 26 Feb 2003, Published online: 02 Jun 2010
 

Abstract

The erosion of blanket peat is a major environmental issue in the UK. Maps of erosion extent and peat composition, especially humification and moisture content, would aid our understanding of the erosion process and provide information for management decisions. HyMap images, acquired as part of the SAR and Hyperspectral Airborne Campaign (SHAC), were used to test candidate indices of peat composition for eroded blanket peat in the southern Pennines. Peat physical properties, including moisture content and degree of humification (measured as transmission), were derived in the laboratory and related to the remotely sensed data. Strong correlations were found between HyMap SWIR reflectance and transmission, but other peat physical properties were not significantly correlated. Spectral indices were calculated to express the depth of cellulose, lignin and water absorption features. Strong positive correlations were found between transmission and an adjusted cellulose absorption index (CAI), r 0.71, and the gradient of its shoulders between 2020 and 2200 nm, r 0.89. Other indices also performed well. Normalized indices performed better because they allowed for differences in brightness. Higher moisture content in poorly humified peats may have reinforced the effect of deeper ligno-celluloic absorptions, but further sampling is required to test this. The results suggest the potential for hyperspectral remote sensing to provide information on surface peat composition across large areas.

Acknowledgments

This paper is an extended version of a presentation made at the NERC conference on Field Spectral Measurements, held in Southampton on 15–16 April 2002. The authors acknowledge the support of the UK Natural Environment Research Council Equipment Pool for Field Spectroscopy (NERC EPFS) for provision of the ASD FieldSpec Pro spectroradiometer and the British National Space Centre (BNSC) and NERC for providing the SHAC HyMap data used in this research. Thanks are also due to: Manchester Geographical Society (MGS), Manchester and Newcastle Universities for funding and access to laboratory facilities; United Utilities and the National Trust High Peak Estate for field access; Swansea University for help with data processing; postgraduates at Manchester, Manchester Metropolitan and Salford Universities for fieldwork assistance.

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