Resource Type

Land cover change and remote sensing: Examples of quantifying spatiotemporal dynamics in tropical forests (open access)

Land cover change and remote sensing: Examples of quantifying spatiotemporal dynamics in tropical forests

Research on human impacts or natural processes that operate over broad geographic areas must explicitly address issues of scale and spatial heterogeneity. While the tropical forests of Southeast Asia and Mexico have been occupied and used to meet human needs for thousands of years, traditional forest management systems are currently being transformed by rapid and far-reaching demographic, political, economic, and environmental changes. The dynamics of population growth, migration into the remaining frontiers, and responses to national and international market forces result in a demand for land to produce food and fiber. These results illustrate some of the mechanisms that drive current land use changes, especially in the tropical forest frontiers. By linking the outcome of individual land use decisions and measures of landscape fragmentation and change, the aggregated results shows the hierarchy of temporal and spatial events that in summation result in global changes to the most complex and sensitive biome -- tropical forests. By quantifying the spatial and temporal patterns of tropical forest change, researchers can assist policy makers by showing how landscape systems in these tropical forests are controlled by physical, biological, social, and economic parameters.
Date: June 1, 1995
Creator: Krummel, J.R.; Su, Haiping; Fox, J.; Yarnasan, S. & Ekasingh, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of the Bespalov-Talanov gain spectrum in a dispersive medium with large n{sub 2} (open access)

Measurement of the Bespalov-Talanov gain spectrum in a dispersive medium with large n{sub 2}

Conditions which seed the self focussing of high-power broadband laser beams are determined by examining growth rates for plane-wave perturbations on a strong pump field as a function of frequency and angle. Measurements verifying predictions of growth based on the linearized stability analysis of Bespalov and Talanov extended to broadband fields are reported.
Date: June 15, 1995
Creator: Wegner, P. J.; Feit, M. D.; Fleck, J. A., Jr. & Eimerl, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
25th PolyMAC Conference, June 13-15, 1995 (open access)

25th PolyMAC Conference, June 13-15, 1995

This document contains abstracts of reports presented at the 25th Annual Polymeric, Materials, Adhesives and Composites Symposium. Reports covered aging, testing and performance, and encapsulating materials.
Date: June 1995
Creator: Smith, P. F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radioactive and mixed waste - risk as a basis for waste classification. Symposium proceedings No. 2 (open access)

Radioactive and mixed waste - risk as a basis for waste classification. Symposium proceedings No. 2

The management of risks from radioactive and chemical materials has been a major environmental concern in the United states for the past two or three decades. Risk management of these materials encompasses the remediation of past disposal practices as well as development of appropriate strategies and controls for current and future operations. This symposium is concerned primarily with low-level radioactive wastes and mixed wastes. Individual reports were processed separately for the Department of Energy databases.
Date: June 21, 1995
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Southeastern Science Policy Colloquium (open access)

Southeastern Science Policy Colloquium

This conference covers four main topics: (1) Southeastern Labor Market and its Impact on Corporate/Industry Development; (2) New Issues for Science and Technology in the Year 2000 and Beyond; (3) The Role of Academia in Developing the Labor Force of the Southeast; and (4) K-12 Education: Challenges for the 21st Century.
Date: June 22, 1995
Creator: Humphries, F.
System: The UNT Digital Library