Publication Date:
2005-12-01
Description:
Presettlement land survey records (PLSRs) of North America provide insights into the landscape before European disturbance and have been used in various ecological studies. The usefulness of the data, however, varies with their characteristics and qualities. The purpose of this paper is to examine the geographic characteristics of PLSRs, to review PLSR studies in the last five decades and trends in these studies based on the geographic characteristics that have been analysed, and to investigate data quality issues concerning the PLSRs. The framework used in this examination is that of Geographic Information Science (GIScience), including geographic characteristics of space, theme and time, and data quality components of lineage, positional accuracy, attribute accuracy, logical consistency and completeness. The results show that different types of PLSRs have distinct geographic characteristics, especially regarding the spatial characteristics of shape and size/resolution. Prior studies have used PLSRs in six modes of analysis, with presettlement vegetation patterns and compositions analysed most often. Data quality investigations suggest that whether the potential quality issues will influence an analysis depends on the study purpose and the spatial extent of interest. In cases of studying vegetation dynamics of small areas, the positional accuracy of landscape features is essential, while this issue may not impede large area reconstruction. Finally, thoughts concerning future research avenues are presented. This study uses a GIScience framework to provide a more systematic and comprehensive examination of the usefulness and limitations of PLSRs than previous studies, and can assist future research to employ the data most appropriately.
Print ISSN:
0309-1333
Electronic ISSN:
1477-0296
Topics:
Geography
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