2005
DOI: 10.1080/13658810410001713407
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Spatio‐temporal dynamics in California's Central Valley: Empirical links to urban theory

Abstract: This paper explores an addition to theory in urban geography pertaining to spatio-temporal dynamics. Remotely sensed data on the historical extent of urban areas were used in a spatial metrics analysis of geographical form of towns and cities in the Central Valley of California (USA). Regularities in the spatiotemporal pattern of urban growth were detected and characterized over a hundred year period. To test hypotheses about variation over geographical scale, multiple spatial extents were used in examining a … Show more

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Cited by 260 publications
(182 citation statements)
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References 35 publications
(62 reference statements)
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“…Many urban growth theories have been developed using information derived from basic land cover change-detection techniques (Herold et al, 2003;Herold et al, 2005;Dietzel et al, 2005). As mentioned previously, however, these methods do not account for urban changes at the sub-pixel level, notably the process of re-densification (Yang et al, 2003).…”
Section: More Than Two Imagesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many urban growth theories have been developed using information derived from basic land cover change-detection techniques (Herold et al, 2003;Herold et al, 2005;Dietzel et al, 2005). As mentioned previously, however, these methods do not account for urban changes at the sub-pixel level, notably the process of re-densification (Yang et al, 2003).…”
Section: More Than Two Imagesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, while the development of urban remote sensing has been largely technology driven, urban remote sensing professionals should be equipped with not only solid technical skills but also essentials of intellectual knowledge on the urban environment, including relevant core concepts, theoretical debates, and emerging methods; such knowledge can help better plan and implement an urban remote sensing project, as indicated by some recent literatures (e.g., Yang and Lo, 2003;Lo, 2004;Dietzel et al, 2005) and several chapters included in this volume (Ch. 2,Ch.…”
Section: Summary and Concluding Remarksmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In recent years, the greater availability of land-cover data derived from remotely sensed images has made it easier to study urban growth and sprawl (Dietzel et al 2005;Stefanov et al 2001;Vogelmann et al 1998;Yang and Lo 2002;Wang and Moskovits 2001) and to detect urban land fragmentation (Luck and Wu 2002;Wu et al 2010). Landsat images have been used in some cross-site studies to study urban land-use fragmentation (e.g., Luck and Wu 2002;Schneider and Woodcock 2008;Seto and Fragkias 2005;Wu et al 2010).…”
Section: Socio-politicaleconomic Template Pulsesmentioning
confidence: 99%