NC State faculty and staff participate in a wide variety of GIS research and outreach activities - a brief overview of some of these projects is presented below, with links for obtaining more information.

Digital Library Initiatives, NCSU Libraries

Center for Earth Observation

Curriculum & Instruction: College of Education

Outreach Programs and Projects

Design Research & Extension Program: College of Design

Marine, Earth &Atmospheric Sciences: College of Physical & Mathematical Sciences

Office of Academic Affairs: College of Natural Resources

Boys and Girls Club of Wake County - GIS Project

Parks, Recreation & Tourism Management: College of Natural Resources

Population Health & Pathobiology: College of Veterinary Medicine

The Effect of Bridges and Road Runoff on Freshwater Mussel Populations

Public Administration Program:
   College of Humanities and Social Sciences

Geographic Information Systems for Small to Medium Law Enforcement Jurisdictions

SCI-LINK Environmental Education Programs: College of Education

K-12 Teacher Training

Soil Science, Crop Science, and Biological and Agricultural Engineering: College of Agriculture and Life Sciences


Digital Library Initiatives, NCSU Libraries

Data Preservation Project

The Library of Congress and the North Carolina State University Libraries entered into a cooperative agreement to complete a $1.044 million project through the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program on September 30, 2004. The NCSU Libraries is partnering with the North Carolina Center for Geographic Information and Analysis on a three-year project to collect and preserve at-risk digital geospatial data resources from state and local government agencies. Although this effort will focus solely on North Carolina, it is expected to serve as a demonstration project for other states. The geospatial resources targeted include digitized maps, geographic information systems data sets, and remote sensing data resources such as digital aerial photography created by state and local agencies for use in tax assessment, transportation planning, hazard analysis, health planning, political redistricting, homeland security, and utilities management.


Center for Earth Observation

Remote Sensing and GIS Approaches to Fire Fuel Modeling in the Southeastern US

The President’s National Fire Plan is concerned that fuel loads are reaching hazardous levels that can lead to widespread catastrophic wildfires in forest ecosystems and the forest/urban interface. Land managers need tools to enable them to classify, estimate, and monitor fuel loading, and to predict wildfire risk and behavior based on inputs of fuel, weather, and topography for a specific location. Working with personnel from the Forest Service, the National Park Service, and NC Division of Forest Resources we developed protocols for mapping fire fuel loads using digital aerial photography, satellite remote sensing, vegetation maps, and field data.
Principal Investigator: Hugh Devine.

An Early Warning System for Hemlock Woolly Adelgid in the Southern Appalachians

Hemlock forests throughout eastern North America are currently threatened by the hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA). If the pest continues to spread at its current rate, it will rapidly invade the remainder of the southern Appalachian region. HWA attack is almost always fatal and has already virtually eliminated the Hemlock population in the Shenandoah National Park. HWA could potentially entirely remove these ecologically important trees from the whole region if preventive measures are not developed and deployed in a timely manner.

We developed a new approach to data fusion that allowed the combined use a multiple remote sensing data sources (Landsat TM , ASTER, etc.) and combined this with the development of a suite of decision rules involving topography, geology, and other factors to predict HWA infestation with reasonable accuracy. Using this discriminate approach, we described a new hemlock mapping protocol that can be scaled to the entire region. We then developed a predictive model of HWA risk that can be used to prioritize control measures.
Principal Investigator: Hugh Devine

Habitat Change Analysis Using Landsat TM

The North Carolina Sandhills Conservation Partnership is developing a conservation strategy for the red-cockaded woodpecker, the longleaf pine forests, and the other ecosystems and biota of the Sandhills in North Carolina. The plan emphasizes the conservation, restoration, and management of key land parcels within the mosaic of existing land uses embedded in the Sandhills longleaf pine ecosystem. To assist with this effort, we used regional (multispectral) image data to map vegetation changes significant to wildlife management objectives. Site specific (hyperspectral) image data were used in discriminating pine forest types, which provide key habitat for wildlife species of concern.
Principal Investigator: Hugh Devine

Improved Urban Forest Management via GIS

As North Carolina and the Southeast have become more urbanized, the need for better understanding of the Urban Forest environment has become a major issue. Local governments are spending very significant portions of their budgets trying to maintain healthy street tree and green space ecosystems with very little information on tree inventory, management costs, and environmental impact. In addition, most of these same governments have invested heavily in Geographic Information Systems primarily to assist with their tax parcel management and emergency dispatch systems. Therefore a very promising opportunity to develop and deploy detailed urban tree inventory and modeling systems exists with the potential to dramatically impact the immediate course of urban forest planning and management. Working with other NC State University departments we have developed a prototype urban forest GIS program based on high-resolution digital orthophotography, integrated GPS and PDA technologies, customized GIS software, and wireless Internet access.
Principal Investigator: Hugh Devine.


Curriculum & Instruction: College of Education

Outreach Programs and Projects

The Walnut Creek Educational Wetland Park is a cooperative project with the NC State Natural Learning Lab, six Wake County middle and high schools, and The Partners for Environmental Justice. This project is an interdisciplinary study that is using GIS to help plan an environmental education park.

In the Ligon History Project, high school students used GIS models of Southeast Raleigh in the 1800s, 1950, 1960, 1970, and today to tell the story of change over time. Oral Histories of the African American perspective of life during Ligon High School's pre- and Civil Rights era, 1953-1971, written by Ligon students, were the focus of the project. This project brought together many partners including the Ligon alumni, NC State Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Raleigh GIS, NC Depaptment of Environment and Natural Resources, NC Division of Archives and History, NC Division of Forest Resources, and the US Forest Service.


Design Research & Extension Program: College of Design

Visual Sensitivity Mapping of Blue Ridge Parkway Viewsheds

This project uses new mapping techniques to identify visible lands and their degree of visual exposure with respect to the Blue Ridge Parkway. Results are used to help prioritize surrounding lands for scenic conservation and to promote responsible land planning and design in critical scenic areas.
Principal Investigators: John Fels, James Tomlinson, and Michael Holmes

Techniques to Restore Shellfish Resources in Jumping Run Creek

This project is a watershed-based effort to investigate urban planning and design techniques that can be implemented to restore watershed hydrology and reduce shellfish closures.
Principal Investigators: Nancy White, Dan Line, Bill Kirby Smith, Lu Garrigan, and JD Potts


Marine, Earth & Atmospheric Sciences: College of Physical & Mathematical Sciences

GeoInformation Science and Environmental Modeling

Marine, Earth & Atmospherice Sciences Department faculty are involved in a variety of geoinformation science and environmental modeling research. Projects focus on:

National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program

Under this program, detailed geologic mapping is being conducted in three rapidly growing regions in North Carolina to help address growth-related issues such as waste disposal siting, groundwater conservation and development, and infrastructure planning.


Office of Academic Affairs: College of Natural Resources

Boys and Girls Club of Wake County - GIS Project

The goal of this collaborative project with the Boys and Girls Club of Wake County is to use GIS to engage students in an exciting technology and to encourage them to pursue higher education. High School students are introduced to to the fundamentals of GIS and to the urban environmental analysis software, CityGreen. Our aim is to extend this collaborative project to all five Wake County Boys and Girls Clubs.
Project Coordinator: Kris Fowler.


Parks, Recreation & Tourism Management: College of Natural Resources

Recreation Resources Service: Assisting Communities with Park Planning

In partnership with the NC Division of Parks and Recreation, the NC State University Department of Parks, Recreation & Tourism Management Recreation Resources Service (RRS) uses GIS to provide technical, park planning assistance to local governments throughout the state. GIS technology is instrumental in assisting with the establishment of and site planning for new parks.

Analysis of the North Carolina Golf Industry

Over the last ten years, golf course development has increased in North Carolina by more than 25 %, with 12 golf courses opening since 1989. The golf industry creates jobs, increases real estate values, and brings out-of-state revenue to local comunities. We worked with the Marketing Committee of the North Carolina Golf Alliance to establish a specialized GIS database to enhance their marketing efforts. This project yielded an award-winning undergraduate GIS research paper. Principal Investigator: Gene Brothers.



Population Health & Pathobiology: College of Veterinary Medicine

The Effect of Bridges and Road Runoff on Freshwater Mussel Populations in the Upper Neuse River Basin of North Carolina

North American freshwater ecosystems support the largest diversity of freshwater mussel species on the planet. However, more than 70% of freshwater mussel species are endangered, threatened, or of special concern. One of several studies conducted by the Aquatic Animal Epidemiology and Conservation Gnomics Laboratory, this project used GIS to examine the potential relationship between land-use, stream characteristics, bridge and road attributes, and chemical contaminants with freshwater mussel health, abundance, and diversity.
Sponsor: NC Department of Transportation
Principal Investigator: Jay Levine


Public Administration Program:
   College of Humanities and Social Sciences

Geographic Information Systems for Small to Medium Law Enforcement Jurisdictions: Strategies and Effective Practices

Geographic information systems (GIS) are increasingly recognized within the law enforcement community as an effective new tool for analyzing crime patterns, allocating enforcement resources, and supporting strategic planning. On the other hand, actual use of this tool has proven illusive . A booklet produced as part of this study outlines obstacles, opportunities, and action steps relevant to the implementation of GIS in law enforcement agencies of small to medium size jurisdictions.
Principal Investigator:
G. David Garson.


SCI-LINK Environmental Education Programs: College of Education

K-12 Teacher Training

The innovative SCI-LINK Program brings leading scientists together with leading educators to translate the results of current scientific research into teaching content and practices.  One of the program's key objectives is to help middle and junior/senior high school teachers develop the knowledge and skills needed to utilize the extraordinary resources of environmental research in science education.  Participants in SCI-LINK professional development institutes and workshops create classroom applications focused on contemporary science topics--acid rain, ozone depletion, carbon dioxide, global warming, global environmental change, etc.--using GIS and other computing tools.
Program Director: Harriett Stubbs


Soil Science, Crop Science, and Biological and Agricultural Engineering: College of Agriculture and Life Sciences

Remote Sensing and Precision Technologies to Optimize Nitrogen Management and Water Quality

Ground- and surface water nitrogen contamination from southeastern Coastal Plain agriculture is a regulatory and social issue threatening regional crop production. In an effort to improve crop production efficiency and water quality, a group of scientist with North Carolina State University's Departments of Soil Science and Crop Science was recently awarded a four-year grant to study "Remote Sensing and Precision Technologies to Optimize Nitrogen Management and Water Quality".
Sponsor: U.S. Department of Agriculture
Principal Investigator: Jeff White

Geospatial and Precision Technologies Regional Education Initiative

The adoption of geospatial and precision technologies requires adequately trained agricultural professionals and natural resource managers that can collect, display, and analyze spatial data. Knowledge of GPS, remote sensing, variable input application, and GIS are essential to be successful. The Department of Soil Science, in cooperation with the Departments of Crop Science and Biological and Agricultural Engineering, will develop and deliver effective, science-based education through the recently funded Geospatial and Precision Technologies Regional Education Initiative.
Sponsor: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Initiative for Future Agriculture and Food Systems.
Principal Investigator: David Crouse.