A small-scale spatial analysis system for maritime Australia

1995 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 163-195 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neil T.M. Hamilton ◽  
K.D. Cocks
Energy Policy ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 161 ◽  
pp. 112753
Author(s):  
Steven März ◽  
Ines Stelk ◽  
Franziska Stelzer

1981 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 34-40 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roy A. Mead ◽  
Terry L. Sharik ◽  
Stephen P. Prisley ◽  
Joel T. Heinen

Spatium ◽  
2017 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Georgia Gemenetzi

The article explores the relationship between urban sprawl and the urban system. Urban sprawl is not considered to be a static, unsustainable urban form, but rather a dynamic process of urban deconcentration through which the urban structure evolves. After identifying the main characteristics of urban sprawl, this article investigates the connection between urban sprawl and the urban system through the concept of polycentricity. Finally, the two-way relationship between urban sprawl and the urban system is highlighted. Based on the above, an integrated theoretical, conceptual and methodological framework is formulated. A key finding was the emergence of ?small-scale? polycentricity, which implies increasing monocentricity over a wider spatial area. This raises questions over the distinction between the negative phenomenon of urban sprawl and sustainable polycentric forms, and points out a need to review the explanatory devices and theories used in spatial analysis and planning. Empirical evidence was extracted from Thessaloniki?s Influence Area.


2012 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ankiq Taofiqurohman ◽  
M. Furqon Azis Ismail ◽  
M. Furqon Azis Ismail ◽  
M. Furqon Azis Ismail

<p>ABSTRACT</p> <p>Observation of coastal shoreline changes in the Subang District was conducted using Digital Shoreline Analysis System Program based on the satelite images of Landsat TM from 1996 to 2010. The purpose of this study was to determine the distance of shoreline change. Methods used in this study were field survey and regression analysis of shoreline data. The results of this study indicated the existence of a region experiencing accretion and abrasion. The maximum width of accretion of the coast was 1,051.55 meter while the maximum abration was 1,206.83 meter. Coastal shoreline change in Subang District occurred mainly due to the development activities such as residential construction, altering the coastal mangrove to ponds and rice paddies, and sediment transport from the river around Subang District.</p> <p>Keywords: shoreline, Subang District, satelite images, accretion, abration</p>


2012 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ankiq Taofiqurohman ◽  
M. Furqon Azis Ismail ◽  
M. Furqon Azis Ismail ◽  
M. Furqon Azis Ismail

ABSTRACT Observation of coastal shoreline changes in the Subang District was conducted using Digital Shoreline Analysis System Program based on the satelite images of Landsat TM from 1996 to 2010. The purpose of this study was to determine the distance of shoreline change. Methods used in this study were field survey and regression analysis of shoreline data. The results of this study indicated the existence of a region experiencing accretion and abrasion. The maximum width of accretion of the coast was 1,051.55 meter while the maximum abration was 1,206.83 meter. Coastal shoreline change in Subang District occurred mainly due to the development activities such as residential construction, altering the coastal mangrove to ponds and rice paddies, and sediment transport from the river around Subang District. Keywords: shoreline, Subang District, satelite images, accretion, abration


2003 ◽  
Vol 69 ◽  
pp. 107-135 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. J. Ellis ◽  
Michael J. Allen ◽  
Julie Gardiner ◽  
Phil Harding ◽  
Claire Ingrem ◽  
...  

A small-scale excavation, undertaken in advance of building works at Faraday Road, Newbury, Berkshire, encountered an apparently intact Early Mesolithic layer containing abundant worked flint directly associated with animal bones. The site lay on the floodplain of the River Kennet in an area already well-known for Mesolithic remains and certainly represents an extension of the site found at nearby Greenham Dairy Farm in 1963. The flint assemblage was dominated by obliquely-blunted microlithic forms accompanied by a restricted range of other items. The animal bones were, unusually, dominated by wild pig with clear evidence of both primary butchery and food waste. Spatial analysis of the bone and flint assemblages indicated discrete activity areas, possibly associated with hearths. Both pollen and molluscan data were recovered which, together with the results of soil micromorphological examination, confirmed an Early Holocene date for the formation of the Mesolithic layer. Radiocarbon dates place the site in the late 10th–early 9th millennium BP. The paper re-examines the nature of known Early Mesolithic activity in this part of the Kennet valley, with particular reference to the specific environmental conditions that seem to have prevailed. It is concluded that the Faraday Road site represents one part of a continuum of Early Mesolithic occupation that stretches along a considerable length of the floodplain, with each focus of activity witnessing repeated, but intermittent, occupation spanning a period of more than a millennium.


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