Human Footprint 1993 (Terrestrial)

The Human Footprint (HFP) provides a measure of the direct and indirect human pressures on the environment globally in years 1993 and 2009. It is derived from remotely-sensed and bottom-up survey information compiled on eight measured variables. This represents not only the most current information of its type, but also the first temporally-consistent set of Human Footprint maps. Data on human pressures were acquired or developed for: 1) built environments, 2) population density, 3) electric infrastructure, 4) crop lands, 5) pasture lands, 6) roads, 7) railways, and 8) navigable waterways. Pressures were then overlaid to create the standardized Human Footprint maps for all non-Antarctic land areas. The Human Footprint maps find a range of uses as proxies for human disturbance of natural systems and can provide an increased understanding of the human pressures that drive macro-ecological patterns, as well as for tracking environmental change and informing conservation science and application. HFP values range from 0 (no human impact) to 50 (heavily human impacted).

See: Venter, O. et al., 2016. Sixteen years of change in the global terrestrial human footprint and implications for biodiversity conservation. Nature Communications, 7, pp.1–11 [https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms12558].

Data can also be downloaded from Dryad [https://datadryad.org/resource/doi:10.5061/dryad.052q5].

Data and Resources

This dataset has no data

Additional Info

Field Value
Source https://app.mapx.org/static.html?views=MX-JRYK4-XWKCS-U2V1X&zoomToViews=true#JAAc6
Author UNEP/GRID-Geneva
Maintainer UNEP/GRID-Geneva
Last Updated December 7, 2022, 08:13 (UTC)
Created December 7, 2022, 08:13 (UTC)
GUID MX-JRYK4-XWKCS-U2V1X
Issued 2018-04-26 11:44:37
Language EN
Modified 2021-12-01 18:47:02
Publisher email info@mapx.org
Publisher name UNEP/GRID-Geneva
Theme Web Map
data_type geospatial
keywords_m49 WLD
projects_description UNEP Colombia
projects_id MX-SXE-0C1-TTW-KC8-VP4
projects_title UNEP Colombia
range_end_at_year 2021
range_start_at_year 1993
source_abstract The Human Footprint (HFP) provides a measure of the direct and indirect human pressures on the environment globally in years 1993 and 2009. It is derived from remotely-sensed and bottom-up survey information compiled on eight measured variables. This represents not only the most current information of its type, but also the first temporally-consistent set of Human Footprint maps. Data on human pressures were acquired or developed for: 1) built environments, 2) population density, 3) electric infrastructure, 4) crop lands, 5) pasture lands, 6) roads, 7) railways, and 8) navigable waterways. Pressures were then overlaid to create the standardized Human Footprint maps for all non-Antarctic land areas. The Human Footprint maps find a range of uses as proxies for human disturbance of natural systems and can provide an increased understanding of the human pressures that drive macro-ecological patterns, as well as for tracking environmental change and informing conservation science and application. HFP values range from 0 (no human impact) to 50 (heavily human impacted). See: Venter, O. et al., 2016. Sixteen years of change in the global terrestrial human footprint and implications for biodiversity conservation. Nature Communications, 7, pp.1–11 [https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms12558]. Data can also be downloaded from Dryad [https://datadryad.org/resource/doi:10.5061/dryad.052q5].
source_title Human Footprint 1993 (Terrestrial)
spatial WLD