COSAM » COSAM Faculty » Geosciences » Luke J. Marzen

Luke Marzen
Geosciences
Professor

Research Areas: Remote sensing and Geographic Information Systems, Land Use Change, water resources, biogeography, Weather and Climate

Office: 2046E Haley Center

Address:
2050 Beard Eaves Coliseum
Auburn, AL 36849

Phone: (334) 844-3462
Fax: (334) 844-3409
E-Mail: marzelj@auburn.edu


Education

Ph.D., Geography, Kansas State University
2001
M.S., Geography, Oklahoma State University
1997
B.S., Geography, Northwest Missouri State University
1995


Professional Employment

Professor, Auburn University
2011 - Present
Associate Professor, Auburn University
2006 - 2011
Assistant Professor, Auburn University
2001 - 2006


Research and Teaching Interests

Dr. Marzen’s specialty is in Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems. He is a physical geographer who has spent much of his career investigating the relationships between human activity and the natural environments using Remote Sensing and GIS. In particular, he is interested in Land Use/Land Cover change and the associated impacts of such changes.  Recently, Dr. Marzen has been exploring methods in Geographic Object Based Image Analysis (GeOBIA) fusing aerial and satellite imagery with airborne and terrestrial LiDAR. Dr. Marzen has been active in outreach activities and serves as the Co-Director of AlabamaView: a consortium of Alabama universities and agencies working to promote the advancement of geospatial technologies in the state of Alabama.


Selected Publications

  1. Emran, A., L. Marzen, D. King Jr. (2020) Semi-automated Identification and Characterization of Dunes at Hargraves Crater, Mars. Earth and Space Science. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019EA000935
  2. Cash, J., C. Anderson, L. Marzen. (2020) Evaluating a Free and Simple Remote Sensing Method for Mapping Chinese privet (Ligustrum sinense) Invasions in Hardwood Forest. SN Applied Sciences.
  3. Jones, T., L.J. Marzen, M. Barbour, and C. Mitra. (2018) Identification and classification of geographically isolated wetlands in North Alabama using geographic object based image analysis (GeOBIA), Geocarto International, https://doi.org/10.1080/10106049.2018.1438527
  4. Jones, T., L. Marzen, and A. Chappelka. (2016). Mapping, Modeling, and Estimating Tree Measurements of Urban Tree Canopy Structure Using Terrestrial LiDAR Scanning, Papers in Applied Geography, 2 (2), 236-242, https://doi.org/10.1080/23754931.2015.1114512
  5. Marzen, L.J., Z. Szantoi , L.M.B. Harrington, and  J.A. Harrington, (2011), Implications of Management Strategies and Vegetation Change in the Mount St. Helens Blast Zone. Geocarto International, v. 26, n. 5, p. 359-376.






Last updated: 10/29/2021