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PD0RDD > NASA     25.10.98 00:41l 115 Lines 5267 Bytes #-10028 (0) @ WW
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Onderwerp: NASA SELECTS REGIONAL EARTH SCIENCE APPLICATIONS CENTERS
David E. Steitz
Headquarters, Washington, DC                      October 22, 1998
(Phone:  202/358-1730)

RELEASE:  98-193

NASA SELECTS REGIONAL EARTH SCIENCE APPLICATIONS CENTERS

     NASA's Office of Earth Science has selected nine 
public/private consortia throughout the U. S. to form seven 
Regional Earth Science Applications Centers (RESACs).  The RESAC 
program will use NASA's Earth science results, technologies and 
data products to help resolve issues with regional economic and 
policy significance and to support regional assessments supporting 
the U.S. Global Change Research Program.  

     The centers selected will be comprised of "end-to-end" 
consortia (from user needs definition to product delivery) and 
will include members from the research community, private 
industry, public agencies and other potential information users in 
the public and private sectors.  The selected consortia involve 
over 20 private companies, about ten state and local government 
agencies, 20 Federal agency regional offices, and 15 universities.

     The RESACs will apply state-of-the-art NASA Earth science 
research results to such diverse areas as precision farm 
management; monitoring of forest growth and health; regional water 
resources and hydrology; assessment of the impact of long-term 
climate variability and change; land cover and land use mapping; 
agricultural crop disease and infestation detection; management of 
fire hazards; watershed and coastal management; environmental 
monitoring; and primary and secondary science education.  

     For example, one RESAC will address water management problems 
in the arid Southwestern U. S.  Using hydrologic models derived 
from NASA-sponsored research, the RESAC will use spaceborne and 
airborne instruments to provide improved information on water 
resource availability.  This information will assist planners in 
developing strategies for resource allocation among competing 
economic and environmental uses in a rapidly evolving global 
economy.

     "Regional-scale problems are well-suited to NASA's Earth 
science data and technology; no other system of observation is 
available for analyzing such large-scale issues," said Dr. Ghassem 
Asrar, Associate Administrator for Earth Science, NASA 
Headquarters, Washington, DC.  "This program will capitalize on 
the science and technology developed over the past decade by 
NASA's Earth Science enterprise to provide solutions to practical 
and societal problems that exist today and help in mitigating them 
in the future."  

     "The selection of the RESACs is the first of a number of 
planned NASA initiatives to develop new methods for bringing 
together the research, service and user communities to apply 
NASA's research results to practical, near-term problems," added 
Alex Tuyahov, Manager, Earth Science Applications Research 
Program, NASA Headquarters.  

The selected consortia are:

     Northern Great Plains RESAC, led by George A. Seielstad of 
the University of North Dakota

     Northeast Applications of Useable Technology In Land Planning 
for Urban Sprawl RESAC, led by Chester Arnold of the University of 
Connecticut
 
     NASA Southwest Earth Science Applications Center, led by 
Roger C. Bales of the University of Arizona

     Upper Great Lakes RESAC, led by Marvin E. Bauer of the 
University of Minnesota, St. Paul

     Midwest Center for Natural Resource Management, led by George 
R. Diak of the University of Wisconsin, Madison

     Wildlands Fire Hazard Center, led by Christopher Lee of the 
California State University, Dominguez Hills

     Great Plains RESAC, led by Edward A. Martinko of the 
University of Kansas

     California Water Resources Research and Applications Center, 
led by Norman L. Miller of the Lawrence Berkeley National 
Laboratory

     Mid-Atlantic RESAC Consortium, led by Stephen D. Prince of 
the University of Maryland, College Park

     NASA is investing approximately $14 million in these seven 
new RESACs in FY99.  The three-year grants will take advantage of 
NASA's extensive Earth Science program, a long term effort to 
study human-induced and natural changes in the whole Earth system.

                             -end-

                                                     .   
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