Visual Greenness

Idabel Broken Bow Wister Talihina Clayton Cloudy Hugo Antlers Lane Durant Wilburton Stigler Sallisaw Webbers Falls Cookson Westville Tahlequah Eufaula McAlester Stuart Centrahoma Tishomingo Holdenville Madill Burneyville Ardmore Newport Fittstown Sulphur Haskell Porter Okmulgee Inola Bixby Tulsa Okemah Seminole Ada Byars Pauls Valley Ringling Hectorville Bristow Shawnee Ketchum Ranch Washington Norman Chandler Spencer OKC East Waurika Chickasha Acme Oilton Minco Guthrie Walters Apache Grandfield Medicine Park Fort Cobb Tipton Altus Hobart El Reno Hinton Perkins Marena Stillwater Lake Carl Blackwell Pawnee Red Rock Marshall Kingfisher Watonga Weatherford Bessie Jay Pryor Skiatook Wynona Burbank Miami Vinita Nowata Talala Copan Foraker Newkirk Blackwell Mangum Hollis Erick Putnam Butler Cheyenne Breckinridge Lahoma Fairview Seiling Camargo Medford Cherokee Alva May Ranch Freedom Woodward Arnett Buffalo Slapout Beaver Hooker Goodwell Boise City Kenton Elk City Valliant Eva Yukon
Visual Greenness (VG) ranges from 0-100% and indicates how green each 500-m square pixel of land is in relation to a standard reference such as a highly green agricultural field. A given VG value represents the same level of greenness no matter where it occurs in the state. A value of 100% represents the highest greenness level and 0%, the lowest greenness level. VG is calculated daily from the past 7 days of VIIRS satellite imagery using NDVI (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index). In that 7-day period the highest value of NDVI is used. If a given pixel is cloudy during the entire weekly period, the VG value is not calculated and the pixel appears light blue on the VG map. This map is updated daily when the daily VIIRS satellite data is processed.