Abstract
Four SPOT HRV images of the same area of East Anglia, acquired between February and September 1986, have been evaluated at the National Remote Sensing Centre for their potential use in agricultural land cover mapping. Spectral coincidence plots were used in feature selection. Information from single images contained a high level of spectral confusion between cover types. Vegetation index images and original data were used in supervised maximum likelihood classification. Higher classification accuracies were achieved using the original data than the vegetation indices. An overall classification accuracy of 71 per cent for 10 land cover types was improved to 88 per cent by reducing the number of classes. Although the imagery acquired for the study did not correspond well to key dates in the crop calendar, the broad land cover categories, cereal crops, field crops (sugar beet and vegetables), grass land and broadleaved woodlands could be mapped from SPOT. Using vegetation indices from the whole scene, a map of land cover has been produced for an administrative district within the scene. Comparison with simulated Thematic Mapper data indicates greater crop discrimination is provided in the mid-infrared part of the spectrum.

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