Geography HiMViD | High Mountain Visual Database: Repeat Photography
Repeat photography has evolved as a valuable tool to detect and analyse land use and land cover change. A comparative interpretation of the original photographs with their latter replicates allows for a detailed assessment of change or persistence of landscape features. Based on a visual interpretation of repeat photography, vegetation dynamics and changes in land use and settlement pattern can be identified. This method has also been widely used to detect glacier changes since the late 19th century. It is possible to identify fluctuations of the glacier terminus, changes of the ratio between debris-covered and non-debris-covered glacier parts, ice cliffs and vegetation succession in the vicinity of the glacier portal. As such, repeat photography has become a valuable tool for communicating effects of global change. The same holds true for capturing seasonal variability.
Selected Publications
NÜSSER M & SCHMIDT S (2021): Assessing glacier changes in the Nanga Parbat region using a multitemporal photographic dataset. Data in Brief 37C, 107178. doi:10.1016/j.dib.2021.107178
NÜSSER M & SCHMIDT S (2021): Glacier changes on the Nanga Parbat 1856-2020: A multi-source retrospective analysis. Science of the Total Environment 785, 147321. doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.147321
NÜSSER M (2002): Bildvergleiche und Kulturlandschaftsentwicklung am Nanga Parbat (Nordpakistan). In: Verhandlungen der Gesellschaft für Erdkunde zu Berlin 2001: 16-21.
NÜSSER M (2001): Understanding Cultural Landscape Transformation: A Re-Photographic Survey in Chitral, Eastern Hindukush, Pakistan. Landscape and Urban Planning 57 (3-4): 241-255.