GEON LiDAR System Updates

GEON has been working diligently over the past few months to make improvements to the GEON LiDAR System, available via its portal. Updates have been made to the user interface as well as to the underlying architecture to improve the user’s experience. Notable improvements include the replacement of interactive maps in the portal with Google Maps to provide better base-imagery and geographic context. Also, the LiDAR database is now being hosted on a dedicated Linux-based compute cluster utilizing parallel database technology, yielding significantly faster query times and an overall reduction in job time.
As the sole distribution pathway for the new GeoEarthScope LiDAR datasets, GEON has been adding additional DEMs to the distribution system as they are delivered. Currently, there are 2167 1 km^2 DEM tiles available for download via the GEON Portal. These data are very popular, being accessed by hundreds of users who have downloaded over 5500 DEM tiles thus far.
A Short Course on “Processing and Analysis of GeoEarthscope and Other Community LiDAR Topography Datasets” will be offered April 29-May 1, as part of the UNAVCO 2008 Series. This course will be taught by Chris Crosby, GEON Project, SDSC; Ramon Arrowsmith, Arizona State University; and David Phillips, UNAVCO. This 1.5 day short course will focus on high-resolution topographic data from airborne LiDAR. Although there is no registration deadline, space is limited and registration will be closed when the course becomes full. Full details can be found at http://www.unavco.org/edu_outreach/uscs/2008/LiDAR_Course_2008.html

Developers at the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC), Incorporated Research Institution for Seismology (IRIS), University NAVSTAR Consortium (UNAVCO) and International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP) successfully delivered the alpha release of the EarthScope Data Portal (ESDP) on March 1st. This release provides functionality for discovery and download of EarthScope data hosted by United States Seismic Array (USArray), Plate Boundary Observatory (PBO) and San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth (SAFOD).

This year’s Geoinformatics 2008 meeting will provide an international forum for researchers and educators from earth and planetary sciences, and information technology/computer science to present new data, data analysis or modeling techniques, visualization schemes or technologies as they relate to developing the cyberinfrastructure for the geosciences.