Extracting Khmer Rouge Irrigation Networks from Pre-Landsat 4 Satellite Imagery Using Vegetation Indices
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Date
2020
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Citation of Original Publication
Coakley, Corrine, Mandy Munro-Stasiuk, James A. Tyner, Sokvisal Kimsroy, Chhunly Chhay, and Stian Rice. 2019. "Extracting Khmer Rouge Irrigation Networks from Pre-Landsat 4 Satellite Imagery Using Vegetation Indices" Remote Sensing 11, no. 20: 2397. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs11202397
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Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
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Abstract
Often discussed, the spatial extent and scope of the Khmer Rouge irrigation network has
not been previously mapped on a national scale. Although low resolution, early Landsat images
can identify water features accurately when using vegetation indices. We discuss the methods
involved in mapping historic irrigation on a national scale, as well as comparing the performance
of several vegetation indices at irrigation detection. Irrigation was a critical component of the
Communist Part of Kampuchea (CPK)’s plan to transform Cambodia into an ideal communist society,
aimed at providing surplus for the nation by tripling rice production. Of the three indices used,
normalized di erence, corrected transformed, and Thiam’s transformed vegetation indexes, (NDVI,
CTVI, and TTVI respectively), the CTVI provided the clearest images of water storage and transport.
This method for identifying anthropogenic water features proved highly accurate, despite low spatial
resolution. We were successful in locating and identifying both water storage and irrigation canals
from the time that the CPK regime was in power. In many areas these canals and reservoirs are no
longer visible, even with high resolution modern satellites. Most of the structures built at this time
experienced some collapse, either during the CPK regime or soon