Terrestrial Development Index for the western United States:1-kilometer moving window
Dates
Publication Date
2020-11-10
Start Date
1999
End Date
2014
Citation
Carr, N.B., and Leinwand, I.I.F., 2020, Terrestrial Development Index for the western United States:1-kilometer moving window: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P93ZU0R9.
Summary
The Terrestrial Development Index (TDI) quantifies the level of development (urban, agriculture, energy and mineral extraction and transmission, and transportation) based on the surface disturbance footprint. TDI values range from 0 to 100% and represent the total percentage of land surface occupied by the development footprint within a 1-kilometer (km) radius moving window.
Summary
The Terrestrial Development Index (TDI) quantifies the level of development (urban, agriculture, energy and mineral extraction and transmission, and transportation) based on the surface disturbance footprint. TDI values range from 0 to 100% and represent the total percentage of land surface occupied by the development footprint within a 1-kilometer (km) radius moving window.
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TDI_1000m_metadata_Ver3.xml Original FGDC Metadata
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Related External Resources
Type: Related Primary Publication
Carr, N.B., Leinwand, I.F., and Wood, D.J.A., 2017, A Multiscale Index of Landscape Intactness for Management of Public Lands, Chapter 5, p.55-74 in Carter, S.K., Carr, N.B., Miller, K.H., and Wood, D.J.A., eds., Multiscale guidance and tools for implementing a landscape approach to resource management in the Bureau of Land Management: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2016–1207, 79 p., https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr20161207.
The purpose of the Terrestrial Development Index is to quantify the percentage of the land surface occupied by the development footprint within a 1-km radius moving window.