Geo-Environmental Estimation of Land Use Changes and Its Effects on Egyptian Temples at Luxor City
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Study Area
1.2. Luxor City Temples
1.2.1. East Luxor City Temples
1.2.2. West Luxor City Temples
1.3. Environmental Status
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Materials
2.2. Methods
2.2.1. Image Processing
Band Combination
Supervised Classification of Images
Accuracy Assessment
3. Results and Discussion
4. Recommendation
- Deliberate destruction of heritage
- Flooding
- Housing
- Impacts of tourism/visitor/recreation
- Land conversion
- Management activities
- Management systems/management plan
- Water (rain/water table)
- Other Threats
- Rising underground water level
- Risks of flooding (Valleys of Kings and Queens)
- Absence of a comprehensive Management Plan
- Major infrastructure and development projects taking place or scheduled
- Uncontrolled urban development
- Housing and agricultural encroachment on the West Bank of the Nile
- (I).
- Current space technologies could be incorporated in traditional technologies for improving environmental analysis, following Lasaponara et al. [65,66,67,68,69] and the approaches proposed by UNESCO in the Man and Biosphere Program (MAB); that is based on the application of the concept of “biosphere reserves
- (II).
- In Luxor, the risk mitigation can be performed using a “Zonation System” that applies different management policies to different zones {50 m}. The archaeological area is to be surrounded by three areas, as suggested by UNESCO. The first area for monitoring; the second for the research, experiment, education, and training; and, the third area for tourism and recreation (Figure 16). The proposed zonation is based on the consideration that for the Hatshepsut temple the areas identified have to cope with the need to.
- (III).
- As a result of the bad environmental status around the archaeological area of Luxor, it becomes very necessary to choose some suitable places to dig some trenches in order to collect the ground water, including the wastewater originated by the urban uncontrolled expansion (to cope with the needs highlighted in the UNESCO reports). Figure 17 shows the location of the trenches that are connected with pumps defined considering ancillary information and the slope of the area, also depicted in Figure 17. When considering the slope and topographical features of the area, these trenches, connected with pumps, should be located at a depth around 9 m. Moreover, these wastewaters will be transferred to a water recycling station, which finally will move them to the nearest canal, to purify water made them suitable for irrigation.
- (IV).
- In the next future, additional investigations based on GIS-modeling methodology will also be addressed to the identification the alternative sites for urban areas and agricultural activities to minimize their adverse impact on the cultural properties. Potential feasible sites will be identified on the basis of external impact factors such as Roads, DEM, archaeological area, Agriculture land, and Urban (see Figure 17 and Figure 18), management purposes, following the UNESCO recommendations.
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Number | Satellite | Sensor | Resolution (m) | Acquisition Date | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Corona | KH-4A | 1.8 m | August 1964 | USGS |
2 | Landsat | TM | 30 m | October 1984 | GLCF |
3 | Quickbird 2 | XS/P | 0.6 m | November 2005 | NARSS |
4 | Sentinel | 2A | 10 m | November 2016 | USGS |
Year | Luxor Area | |
---|---|---|
Kappa Coefficient | Overall Accuracy | |
1984 | 78.5714% | 0.7306 |
2005 | 72.7135% | 0.6501 |
2016 | 97.9401% | 0.9450 |
Class | Study Area | 1964 (km2) | Change Detection ± km2 | 1984 (km2) | Change Detection ± km2 | 2005 (km2) | Change Detection ± km2 | 2016 (km2) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Urban | Luxor | 4.539 | 7.792 | 12.331 | 2.734 | 15.065 | 1.763 | 16.828 |
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Elfadaly, A.; Wafa, O.; Abouarab, M.A.R.; Guida, A.; Spanu, P.G.; Lasaponara, R. Geo-Environmental Estimation of Land Use Changes and Its Effects on Egyptian Temples at Luxor City. ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2017, 6, 378. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi6110378
Elfadaly A, Wafa O, Abouarab MAR, Guida A, Spanu PG, Lasaponara R. Geo-Environmental Estimation of Land Use Changes and Its Effects on Egyptian Temples at Luxor City. ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information. 2017; 6(11):378. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi6110378
Chicago/Turabian StyleElfadaly, Abdelaziz, Osama Wafa, Mohamed A. R. Abouarab, Antonella Guida, Pier Giorgio Spanu, and Rosa Lasaponara. 2017. "Geo-Environmental Estimation of Land Use Changes and Its Effects on Egyptian Temples at Luxor City" ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information 6, no. 11: 378. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi6110378
APA StyleElfadaly, A., Wafa, O., Abouarab, M. A. R., Guida, A., Spanu, P. G., & Lasaponara, R. (2017). Geo-Environmental Estimation of Land Use Changes and Its Effects on Egyptian Temples at Luxor City. ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information, 6(11), 378. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi6110378