A Delta rocket launched the small Earth Resources Technology Satellite in July 1972 with a simple mission: to capture multi-spectral imagery of the pl

New NASA satellite to continue half a century of changing Earth observations

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2021-09-27 15:00:11

A Delta rocket launched the small Earth Resources Technology Satellite in July 1972 with a simple mission: to capture multi-spectral imagery of the planet and assess changes over time.

Data from the polar-orbiting satellite proved so useful that NASA and the US Geological Survey renamed the vehicle Landsat 1 in 1975, and the organizations have since launched a succession of increasingly sophisticated "Landsat" satellites to continue observations. As a result, we now have a nearly half-century-long record of changes to the planet's surface—from farms and forests to glaciers and urban areas.

While the data from the Landsat missions has proved invaluable, it has also been somewhat depressing. The satellites have amassed an impartial record of tropical deforestation in the Amazon, verifying the claims of environmental protection organizations. They have also cataloged increasing water scarcity in the Western United States and chronicled ice losses across the vast majority of Earth's glaciers.

"Landsat has provided a critical reference for assessing long-term changes to Earth's land environment due to both natural and human forcing," scientists concluded in the journal Remote Sensing of Environment, in 2020.

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