Roy S. Stine

Dr. Stine's research interests involve the application of GIS, remote sensing, and geographic visualization to environmental and archaeological issues, especially the use of remotely sensed data for environmental impact statements and problems and in Egypt to determine predynastic settlement patterns. Dr. Stine is a contributing author to Snapshots of the Carolinas, Interpreting Space: GIS and Archaeology and Carolina's Historical Landscapes. He has received a three year grant from NASA totaling $948,913, various hardware and software grants totaling more than $71,000, a Summer Excellence Research award from UNCG, a National Science Foundation grant with Dr. Patton and grants from Syngenta, the National Park Service, and Audubon International.

There are 4 included publications by Roy S. Stine :

TitleDateViewsBrief Description
Comparison of Digital Image Processing Techniques for Classifying Arctic Tundra 2010 2290 The arctic tundra vegetation classified in the study area, Toolik Lake Field Station, Alaska, was relatively small in stature (with varying species growing in clusters) and must therefore be placed in different communities. This study compared differ...
Geographic Information Science in Health: Priming the Pump 2006 1173 Today, public health professionals, researchers, policy makers and many others are increasingly using GIS to understand the spatial and environmental factors that affect health outcomes, disease transmission, disaster response, access to health care ...
Multidisciplinary Landscape Research at Tannenbaum Historic Park, Guilford County, North Carolina 2003 2565 Interdisciplinary research demonstrates that the extant Hoskins log cabin (31GF413**), at Tannenbaum Historic Park in Greensboro, North Carolina, is located on or near an eighteenth-century house site. The Park is part of the Guilford Courthouse B...
Public Archaeology in the National Park Service: A Brief Overview and Case Study 2014 3659 Archaeologists are integral in National Park Service (NPS) culture. Some archaeologists “wear the hat” and the authoritative uniform symbolizing the park service, yet non–park service archaeologists can work at the parks with research permits under t...