2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2006.10.013
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Rural land use in England and Wales between 1930 and 1998: Mapping trajectories of change with a high resolution spatio-temporal dataset

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Cited by 69 publications
(40 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
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“…In this study, topsoil data were grouped into two general classes: (1) Urban (combining DS Urban and Suburban categories) and (2) NonUrban (combining DS Arable, Forest and Woodland, Heath and Moorland, Meadow and Grass, and Orchard categories). Previous uses of the DS land use data and some of its limitations are described in Baily et al (2011);Swetnam, 2007;and Taylor et al, 2010.…”
Section: Pre-1940mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this study, topsoil data were grouped into two general classes: (1) Urban (combining DS Urban and Suburban categories) and (2) NonUrban (combining DS Arable, Forest and Woodland, Heath and Moorland, Meadow and Grass, and Orchard categories). Previous uses of the DS land use data and some of its limitations are described in Baily et al (2011);Swetnam, 2007;and Taylor et al, 2010.…”
Section: Pre-1940mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Swetnam [55] presented a method to explore land use change characteristics or trajectory using the combinations of the three spatial indices (similarity, turnover, and diversity) to classify the land use change into six groups: stepped, cyclical, dynamic, no constant trend (NCT), and (stable) [56]. In this study, trajectory analysis was made for natural wetland, artificial wetland, and non-wetland classes because of their ecological importance.…”
Section: Trajectories Of Wetland Changementioning
confidence: 99%
“…One of the fundamental prerequisites for evaluating longterm land use and the development of water bodies in an integrated river basin is the study of old topographic maps, preferably at a medium scale (Palang et al, 1998;Haase et al, 2007;Swetnam, 2007;Van Eetvelde and Antrop, 2009;Mackovčin, 2009;Skaloš et al, 2011;Demek et al, 2011;Skokanová et al, 2012;Havlíček et al, 2012;Mojses and Petrovič, 2013). When evaluating the development of water bodies and driving forces of land use changes, it is extremely appropriate to combine old topographic maps with historical data sources and available regional literature (Demek et al, 2011;Havlíček and Chrudina, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…in Poland (Pieńkowski, 2003), France (Passy et al, 2012) and Great Britain (Wood and Barker, 2000). Water bodies, however, are often addressed in the context of overall land use (Haase et al, 2007;Swetnam, 2007;Skaloš et al, 2011;Demek et al, 2011). In the Czech Republic, the long-term development of water bodies has been evaluated in research published by Pavelková Chmelová et al (2012), Frajer et al (2013) and Havlíček et al (2013b).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%