

This website was designed as part of a term project done for the Emerging Technologies in Remote Sensing course for the Remote Sensing Concentration at the Nova Scotia Community College (NSCC) Centre of Geographic Sciences (COGS). Its focus is on Remote Sensing technologies and the role it plays in showing the effects of Natural Disasters.
The main technologies that will be discussed throughout this project are as follows: Medium and Low Spatial Resolution, (SAR), MultiSpectral, HyperSpectral, Thermal, and LiDar. Keeping these technologies in mind we will take a look at how they are used to show the effects of the land/surface, the infrastructure, and vegetation following a natural disaster such as an earthquake, landslide, hurricane, tornado, and fires.
The above image is of the Langtang Valley of Nepal. The below information is for the above image and a little background of what happened in this area. This information can be found on NASA's website (the link can be found at the end of the information.
"The magnitude 7.8 Gorkha earthquake that struck Nepal on April 25, 2015, caused extensive damage in Kathmandu Valley and severely affected Nepal's rural areas. The Langtang Valley in the Rasuwa district was particularly hard hit, as became apparent from pictures taken by a rescue helicopter mission on April 26. Numerous tourists and Nepali were, or are, still trapped in the valley as access is completely blocked by avalanches and landslides. The valley’s main village, Langtang , was completely destroyed by the earthquake and the large, wet, debris- and ice-rich avalanche and likely pressure wave from dust avalanche that it triggered, resulting in an unknown number of casualties. Other avalanches also struck elsewhere in the valley.
Space agencies around the world are providing extensive resources in a huge international effort. They are tasking their satellites to observe the areas hit by the earthquake. This effort began immediately after the disaster. Imaging initially focused on Kathmandu. Following the first social media reporting of the helicopter pilot’s comments, an emergency NASA-USGS-interagency Earthquake Response Team alerted satellite mission operations teams about the likely serious plight of Langtang and other Himalayan valleys. Advisories were also delivered to Nepal officials. The first relief missions arrived in the Langtang Valley about April 28.
United States Geological Survey/NASA Landsat-8 satellite observations were first obtained over Nepal after the earthquake on April 30. Landsat 8 acquired the first largely cloud-free image of the Langtang Valley (post-event Landsat image ID: LS081410412015043000000000MS00_GO006005004). Scientists analyzed the imagery and compared it with pre-earthquake imagery from a year earlier.
The analyses revealed the true extent of the disaster that took place in the Langtang Valley. Part of Langtang village was completely buried by a very large rock and ice avalanche that originated on the northwestern slopes above the village. The eastern part of Langtang village appears to have been destroyed by the pressure wave from the related dust avalanche. Large landslides or avalanches also affected the villages of Thyangshyup, Tsarding, Chyamki, Gumba, Mundu, Sindum and Kyangjing. The extent of the damage around these small settlements will require further investigation using higher-resolution imagery to be obtained from satellites, and word from relief crews on the ground. The river at the Langtang village avalanche appears to be blocked, but there is no evidence yet of a lake forming behind the blockage. This may indicate that the water has found its way through the debris, snow and ice. The valley is vulnerable to secondary events such as mudslides and debris and ice avalanches, and this situation could continue into the coming monsoon. Researchers will continue to monitor this situation closely using satellite data.
These scientists are part of a 35-member international volunteer group led by University of Arizona scientists Jeffrey Kargel and Gregory Leonard, who launched the group soon after the earthquake occurred. This effort has been incorporated into the NASA-USGS-interagency Earthquake Response Team. Their goal is to systematically investigate the entire quake-affected area using remote sensing. Their results will support relief operations and identify secondary hazards, such as glacier lake outbursts, rivers blocked by landslides and other unstable areas. This is the first volunteer report of the project.
For more information on the earthquake-triggered Langtang landslide disaster: contact W.W. Immerzeel (w.w.immerzeel@uu.nl), Philip Kraaijenbrink (P.D.A.Kraaijenbrink@uu.nl ) or Thomas Painter (Thomas.Painter@jpl.nasa.gov). On the Nepal earthquake volunteer analyst project: G.J. Leonard (gleonard@email.arizona.edu). On the Response Team’s Induced Hazards subgroup: Jeffrey Kargel (kargel@hwr.arizona.edu) or Dalia Kirschbaum (dalia.b.kirschbaum@nasa.gov )
Image Credit: USGS/NASA
Walter W. Immerzeel and Philip Kraaijenbrink, University of Utrecht, Netherlands
Dorothea Stumm, Joseph Shea, Inka Koch and Sharad Joshi, ICIMOD, Nepal
David Breashears, GlacierWorks, Marblehead, Massachusetts
Umesh Haritashya, University of Dayton, Ohio
Dan Shugar , University of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada; and University of Tacoma, Washington
Alexandre Bevington and Marten Geertsema, Government of British Columbia, Canada
Thomas Painter, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California
Giovanni Kappenberger, free glaciologist, Switzerland
Jürg Lichtenegger, European Space Agency, Switzerland
Evan Miles, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Jakob Steiner, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
Neal Young, University of Tasmania, Australia
Jeffrey S. Kargel and Gregory J. Leonard, University of Arizona, Tucson
Contact: Walter Immerzeel, w.immerzeel@futurewater.nl, (011) +31614531057
Last Updated: July 30, 2015
Editor: Tony Greicius"
Here is the link to find this image and also the above information: https://www.nasa.gov/jpl/landsat-8-reveals-extent-of-quake-disaster-in-nepal-s-langtang-valley

The above image is of the Kashmir regain in Pakistan back in 2005 after an earthquake hit the area. The information below is a little bit of information about the image above. The link to find the rest of the article that this little snippet came from can be found at the end.
"...These satellite images show the area surrounding Muzaffarabad before (top) and after (bottom) the 2005 earthquake. The most obvious effect of the quake was a series of landslides, which appear white or light gray. The images are made from near-infrared, red, and green light. Vegetation is red, water is blue, and developed areas are gray. (NASA images by Robert Simmon, based on ASTER data.)...
References
Avouac, J. P., Ayoub, F., Leprince, S., Konca, O., and Helmberger, D.V. (2006). The 2005, Mw 7.6 Kashmir earthquake: Sub-pixel correlation of ASTER images and seismic waveform analysis. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 249, 514–528.
Parsons, T., Yeats, R. S., Yagi, Y., and Hussain, A. (2006). Static stress change from the 8 October, 2005 M = 7.6 Kashmir earthquake. Geophysical Research Letters 33, L06304."
Here is the link where the rest of the article can be found: http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Features/KashmirEarthquake/page2.php
