The value of cartographic heritage for environmental applications is demonstrated with a test case in the Central Italian Alps. Land cover changes since the early 19th century are detected from sample maps of the Second Military Survey of the Habsburg Empire in Lombardy (1818-1829), available on the portal www.mapire.eu. They are compared with 1954 areal surveys and successive land cover classification until 2018. Issues as land use classes homogenization, data vectorization, georeferencing errors are addressed. The dynamics of main land cover classes (woods, bush, meadows, crops) are investigated on sample areas and the potential use of this exercise for hydrological applications is explored. In fact, the impact of the observed natural afforestation on changes in hydrological losses due to evapotranspiration and its influence as a likely cause for the decrease in runoff monitored since 1845 in the Adda river basin and needs to be assessed in a systematic way. The proposed test case can pave the road for a project extended at European scale, a sort of “CORINE 1800 land cover” Geographic Information System, which could have several environmental, cartographic and socio-economic applications.
Land cover changes since the 19th century detected from historic maps for environmental applications: toward a ``CORINE 1800'' project?
Roberto Ranzi;Matteo Balistrocchi;Stefano Barontini;Marco Peli
2022-01-01
Abstract
The value of cartographic heritage for environmental applications is demonstrated with a test case in the Central Italian Alps. Land cover changes since the early 19th century are detected from sample maps of the Second Military Survey of the Habsburg Empire in Lombardy (1818-1829), available on the portal www.mapire.eu. They are compared with 1954 areal surveys and successive land cover classification until 2018. Issues as land use classes homogenization, data vectorization, georeferencing errors are addressed. The dynamics of main land cover classes (woods, bush, meadows, crops) are investigated on sample areas and the potential use of this exercise for hydrological applications is explored. In fact, the impact of the observed natural afforestation on changes in hydrological losses due to evapotranspiration and its influence as a likely cause for the decrease in runoff monitored since 1845 in the Adda river basin and needs to be assessed in a systematic way. The proposed test case can pave the road for a project extended at European scale, a sort of “CORINE 1800 land cover” Geographic Information System, which could have several environmental, cartographic and socio-economic applications.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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