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Tracking New Zealand’s Shifting Ground From Space with InSAR Radar
New Zealand straddles the volatile boundary between the Pacific and Australian plates. This tectonic marriage means our mountains, valleys and coastlines are always on the move – sometimes slowly, sometimes in sudden lurches. For decades, scientists relied on ground‑based instruments to measure these shifts. Today, we are using a combination of radar satellites and clever mathematics, to monitor the land movements... even from hundreds of kilometres above. InSAR land-movement

Avant
Aug 64 min read


Using Satellite-Based Geotech Reports to Track Land Subsidence
Gaining 10-year historical land movement insights in New Zealand via InSAR Satellite. If you're tackling ground stability head‑on as an...

Avant
Jun 272 min read


InSAR Ground Motion Monitoring for NZ Infrastructure
A satellite the size of a small car can spot the ground beneath it shift by less than the width of a fingernail. Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) does this by comparing the phase of microwave echoes recorded on repeat satellite passes; any change in path length shows up as coloured fringes that can be converted into millimetres of motion. Because radar works through cloud and in darkness, the technique delivers truly all-weather ground-deformation maps, turni

Avant
Jun 123 min read

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