European Space Agency showing Salt Lake City some remote sensing love
As a local to the Wasatch Front I spend a lot of time sailing, birding, and floating on the Great Salt Lake. As a Remote Sensing Specialist I also regularly use Sentinel imagery to study our earth. Sentinel is the ESA equivalent to Landsat. I am currently working on a project that highlights the health hazards of an expanding dry lake bed from the potential dust storms. As the lake gets lower the more dry lake bed is exposed and more dust is kicked up into the air. It is to the benefit of the people of the Wasatch Front to keep that lake wet. I love this video because it highlights just a few of my favorite things. Check it out for some info on the features and history of the Great Salt Lake, the Salt Lake Valley, as well as showing off Sentinel's impressive imagery.
If you are interested in learning more about the Great Salt Lake, here is a whitepaper published by Utah State University last week about the challenges posed by diverting flow to the GSL and the hazards associated with lower Great Salt Lake.
And if that isn't enough and you want to learn even more about the GSL, let me know, I have enough research to keep you busy for days.
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