The detailed description that follows is represented largely in terms of processes and symbolic representations of operations by conventional computer components, including a processor, memory storage devices for the processor, connected display devices and input devices. Furthermore, some of these processes and operations may utilize conventional computer components in a heterogeneous distributed computing environment, including remote file servers, computer servers and memory storage devices.
The phrases “in one embodiment,” “in various embodiments,” “in some embodiments,” and the like are used repeatedly. Such phrases do not necessarily refer to the same embodiment. The terms “comprising,” “having,” and “including” are synonymous, unless the context dictates otherwise. As used herein a quantity is “about” a value X only if they differ by less than a factor of 3, unless context dictates otherwise. As used herein “numerous” means hundreds or more, unless context dictates otherwise. As used herein a structure is “porous” only if it has numerous moisture-permeable pores (i.e. holes smaller than 5 microns in diameter) pervading therethrough. As used herein a structure is “absorbent” only if it is porous enough to soak up more than 5 microliters of liquid per hour by wicking (capillary action, e.g.).
“Aboard,” “about,” “above,” “absorbent,” “advantageous,” “aerial,” “allowed,” “along,” “artificial,” “at least,” “automatic,” “balanced,” “below,” “between,” “biodegradable,” “biometric,” “by,” “closed,” “compressed,” “concentrated,” “concerning,” “condensed,” “conditional,” “current,” “deployed,” “downward,” “enhanced,” “enough,” “extending,” “first,” “forestry,” “forward,” “funnel-shaped,” “having,” “in response,” “indicated,” “integrated,” “lateral,” “latticed,” “local,” “location-specific,” “longitudinal,” “made of,” “narrowest,” “near,” “non-toxic,” “numerous,” “obtained,” “of,” “opened,” “optical,” “outside,” “part,” “penetrated,” “photographic,” “pneumatic,” “porous,” “prioritized,” “processed,” “qualified,” “received,” “remote,” “retracted,” “said,” “scalar,” “second,” “selected,” “selected,” “some,” “staging,” “thereof,” “third,” “toward,” “transmitted,” “tubular,” “unmanned,” “upon,” “wherein,” “within,” or other such descriptors herein are used in their normal yes-or-no sense, not merely as terms of degree, unless context dictates otherwise. In light of the present disclosure those skilled in the art will understand from context what is meant by “remote” and by other such positional descriptors used herein. Terms like “processor,” “center,” “unit,” “computer,” or other such descriptors herein are used in their normal sense, in reference to an inanimate structure. Such terms do not include any people, irrespective of their location or employment or other association with the thing described, unless context dictates otherwise. “For” is not used to articulate a mere intended purpose in phrases like “circuitry for” or “instruction for,” moreover, but is used normally, in descriptively identifying special purpose software or structures.
Reference is now made in detail to the description of the embodiments as illustrated in the drawings. While embodiments are described in connection with the drawings and related descriptions, there is no intent to limit the scope to the embodiments disclosed herein. On the contrary, the intent is to cover all alternatives, modifications and equivalents. In alternate embodiments, additional devices, or combinations of illustrated devices, may be added to, or combined, without limiting the scope to the embodiments disclosed herein.
Referring now to
As shown, system 100 may (optionally) include one or more instances of interchangeable batteries/UAV fuel 126; of a central processing unit (CPU) programmed with routes and a link to firing 128; of a firing control mechanism 161; of an interchangeable compressed gas canister 162; of gas regulator configurations 163; of global positioning (GPS) systems and integrated navigation sensor (INSS) systems 171; of optical imaging sensors 172 (multispectral, hyperspectral, or RGB sensors, e.g.); of LIDAR/LADAR sensors 173; of memory storage 174; of satellite (SAT) uplinks 175. Moreover, the aircraft (UAV, e.g.) may further comprise additional sensor payloads such as thermal image sensors.
The LIDAR/LADAR sensor 173 may (optionally) be configured to measure reflective values of materials, such as soil, on the ground. The measured reflective values are transmitted to the CPU, which determines whether the reflective values fall within a predetermined threshold range. If the reflective values fall within the predetermined threshold, the area is designated as a qualified planting area for trees. If the reflective values fall outside of the predetermined range, the area is disqualified as a planting area. It is contemplated, however, that the present system may be used for planting and monitoring the growth off other types of plants, crops, and the like. Similarly, the hyperspectral image sensor may be used to gain detailed information about the ground. More specifically, the hyperspectral image sensor allows an operator or another end user to “see” the soil, water, and nutrient levels on the ground, particularly in areas that are difficult to access manually. If a spectral signature for an area identifies materials or conditions (or both) suitable for planting, the area is identified as a qualified planting area
It is contemplated that the CPU is configured to collect and consolidate multiple data sets of data from various sensors as a key attribute to plotting microsites. In this way, the consolidated data is used to generate a single map for a subsequent planting phase. Additionally, if the data obtained from the LIDAR/LADAR sensor and the hyperspectral sensor or another sensor is inconsistent, then the sensors are configured to re-scan the area until there are no more discrepancies. As such, operators can conduct reconnaissance of a terrain remotely in a convenient and efficient manner.
Measured data and the grid coordinates of the area associated therewith may be stored in the memory unit or transmitted to a remote server via the SAT uplink. Preferably, the grid coordinates are determined via the GPS, INS, or other suitable navigation systems. Additionally, a GPS correction method such as real-time kinematic (RTK) is used to increase the accuracy of the positioning. The areas designated as a qualified planting area may be saved as a part of a planned route for the subsequent planting phase. Within each of the planting areas, a plurality of microsites is identified.
Microsites are points where material delivery operations can occur (where seeds can be planted or herbicides applied, e.g.). Targeted points are selected based on several factors, such as the desired number of plantings per acre, species of plants, surface tension of the soil, soil type, seasonal edaphic factors, biotic limitations (e.g. competing vegetation, presence of herbivores), and beneficial landscape features. The microsites are separated at both regular and irregular intervals, depending upon spacing specified by an expert. In one embodiment, each planting microsite is at a minimum of seven feet apart so as to provide enough room for plant growth but to allow for circumstantial microsite selection.
The aircraft is further equipped with a pneumatic firing apparatus, which comprises a firing control mechanism, a pneumatic system, a plurality of gas regulators, connecting hoses and chambers, and a seed barrel, in which the seed barrel 190 comprises interchangeable seed magazines 188 therein. The foregoing components, including the sensors, memory unit, and the processor as described above, are powered via interchangeable batteries or fuel, depending upon embodiment. Additionally, all of the components on the aircraft are light in weight in order to increase fuel efficiency or to preserve power.
The one or more seed magazines 188 comprise individual seed capsules. The seed capsules comprise a housing that is composed of polyvinyl alcohol or other suitable non-toxic and dissolvable material, in which the housing has a defined interior volume for storing seeds therein. The seed capsules also comprise hydrogels, polymers, or polyacrylamides for preventing the seeds from drying out. Having hydrogels, polymers, or polyacrylamides in the seed capsules and near the roots improves access to water while maintaining aeration. Additionally, the seed capsules further comprise fertilizers, mycorhizal fungi, mycelium, pesticides, herbicides, predator deterrents, or any combination thereof.
As the aircraft flies over the microsites, the pneumatic system is adapted to eject the seed capsules. It is contemplated that the microsites are targeted so that the seed capsules are shot toward the microsites and landed therein. Additionally, the gas regulators optimize the pressure to control the velocity of the seed capsule as it is shot. The velocity may vary depending on various factors such as wind speed, soil surface tension, species preferred germination habit, and the like. In some embodiments, the gas regulators may be adjusted manually or programmed to adjust automatically for different planting areas. Because the seed capsules are dissolvable, the seeds need not be buried or penetrated in soil and allows the root structure of the seed plant to expand without hindrance.
In some variants, the present invention may (optionally) further comprise seed amendment pellets. The pellets comprise a shotgun shell shape and include mycorhizzal fungi inoculated medium, pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers, odors or compounds, hydrogels, beneficial plants, multiple seeds, or any combination thereof.
Referring now to
Referring now to
During a “reconnaissance” phase 360, UAV 233 flies over an area. While airborne, the sensors of the UAV help identify suitable planting areas and microsites within the planting areas by collecting data. The collected data is processed via the CPU and stored in the memory unit or transmitted to a remote database server. Based on the data, at phase 370, the CPU maps at least one route for planting. Alternatively, the collected data is transmitted to another server or a mapping module on ground that may be configured to perform route mapping.
During a “planting” phase 380, UAV 233 flies over a preplanned route and launches the seed capsules when it is within a shooting range of the microsites. In this way, the UAV can fire encapsulated plant seeds into the ground in places identified as good growing area. Optionally, the UAV may be programmed to fly over the planned route periodically to monitor seed germination and seedling growth.
In various embodiments, any of client devices 600A-C may be networked computing devices having form factors including general purpose computers (including “desktop,” “laptop,” “notebook,” “tablet” computers, or the like); mobile phones; watches, glasses, or other wearable computing devices. In the example shown in
As is described in more detail below, in various embodiments, remote information management server 500 may be a networked computing device generally capable of accepting requests over network 468 e.g. from any one of respondent devices 600A-C and/or other networked computing devices (not shown), and providing responses accordingly. In a typical context, one or more devices 600A-B networked together as described herein may rely upon a bandwidth-limited signal path 401A-B and one or more other devices 600C also networked will rely upon a bandwidth-unlimited signal path 401C, the significance of which will be appreciated by one skilled in the art in light of the disclosure that follows. In general, bandwidth-limited signal path 401A-B and the devices 600A-B that rely upon them are not adequate to allow a human user thereof to review pictographic and other bandwidth-intensive data and provide a timely verdict thereon (a diagnosis, work request, or other consequential decision soon enough to make a difference, e.g.).
The functional components of an exemplary information management server 500 that remotely supports advanced interactions with various client devices 600A-C are described below in reference to
As shown, memory 504 of exemplary server 500 may store an operating system 510, as well as program code for a number of software applications, such as a client hosting application 514. These and other software components, as well as various data files (not shown) may be loaded into memory 504 via network interface (optional) 506 (or via a selectively removable computer readable storage medium 518, such as a memory card or the like). For hardware functions such as network communications via network interface 506, obtaining data via user input 508, rendering data via display 512 and/or speaker, and alposition of memory 504 to various resources, operating system 510 may act as an intermediary between software executing on server 500 and the server's hardware.
For example, operating system 510 may cause a representation of locally available software applications, such as client hosting application 514, to be rendered locally (via display 512, e.g.). If operating system 510 obtains, e.g. via user input 508, a selection of client hosting application 514, operating system 510 may instantiate a client hosting application 514 process (not shown), i.e. cause processing unit 502 to begin executing the executable instructions of client hosting application 514 and allocate a portion of memory 504 for its use. In some variants, moreover, a download service 524 resident in memory may allow apps (inventoried in medium 518, e.g.) to be downloaded upon request to authorized client devices as described below. Alternatively or additionally, operations described below may be implemented with special-purpose circuitry 522 resident in server 500 as described below.
Although an exemplary server 500 has been described, a server 500 may be any of a great number of computing devices capable executing program code, such as the program code corresponding to hosting application 514. Alternatively or additionally, the structures described with reference to
As shown, memory 604 of exemplary client device 600 may store an operating system 610, as well as program code for a number of software applications, such as a client web browser application 614. Client web browser application 614 is a software application by which, under server control, client devices can present data to users and transmit data entered by them. These and other software components, as well as various data files (not shown) may be loaded into memory 604 via network interface (optional) 606 (or via a selectively removable computer readable storage medium 618, such as a memory card or the like). For hardware functions such as network communications via network interface 606, obtaining data via user input 608, rendering data via display 612 and/or speaker, and alposition of memory 604 to various resources, operating system 610 may act as an intermediary between software executing on client device 600 and the client device's hardware.
For example, operating system 610 may cause a representation of locally available software applications, such as client web browser application 614, to be rendered locally (via display 612, e.g.). If operating system 610 obtains, e.g. via user input 608, a selection of client web browser application 614, operating system 610 may instantiate a client web browser application 614 process (not shown), i.e. cause processing unit 602 to begin executing the executable instructions of client web browser application 614 and allocate a portion of memory 604 for its use. Alternatively or additionally, operations described below may be implemented with special-purpose circuitry 622 resident in client device 600 as described below.
Execution block 705 depicts information management routine 700 obtaining current photographic data of a land tract, in which “current” means that at least some of the data was detected from first, second, and third positions of the land tract via one or more sensors aboard one or more airborne vehicles as optical energy less than 3 days ago (at time T1). This can occur, for example, in a context in which the “positions” are respective positions 255A-C depicted in
Execution block 710 depicts information management routine 700 deriving a depiction (at time T2) of the land tract from the photographic data, in which a first location-specific artificial biometric of the depiction is associated with the first position of the land tract, in which a second location-specific artificial biometric of the depiction is associated with the second position of the land tract, and in which a third location-specific artificial biometric of the depiction is associated with the third position of the land tract. In some variants, execution block 710 may include selectively including a photograph of at least a part of the land tract that overlaps the third position (while omitting from the derived depiction at least some photographic data depicting the first or second positions of the land tract).
As used herein, an “artificial biometric” may refer to a human- or machine-made estimate (measurement or other quantification, e.g.) of one or more physical traits derived to characterize a health-related status of one or more non-animal life forms at a known position. It may describe one or more health-indicative physical traits of fungi or lichen, for example, or to adverse effects (by fire, flood, animal grazing, or infestation, e.g.) upon one or more crops. It may describe colorimetric or other filtered attributes tailored to identify and distinguish a life form of interest from some other having similar attributes (scotch broom versus bracken fern, e.g.). But mere raw optical data (unmodified reflectance or brightness measurements, e.g.) or image data that has merely undergone conventional content-neutral data processing (quantization, encoding, compression, shading, e.g.) is not an “artificial biometric” as used herein. Though many artificial biometrics can be derived from pixel hue in light of teachings herein, for example, those skilled in the art will recognize that mere raw pixel hue and pixel grouping shape are not “artificial biometrics” as used herein.
Distance-indicative artificial biometrics that are derived (at least partly) from optical data and of interest herein include stand dimensions, tree heights, trunk diameters, nearest-crop-tree spacings, and other such distances as well as computations based thereon (averages, multiplicative products, comparisons, or other such computations partly based on elevation, grade, rainfall, or other position-dependent or historical determinants, e.g.).
Execution block 720 depicts information management routine 700 determining that a scalar value of the first location-specific artificial biometric of the depiction is below a selected range. This can occur, for example, in a context in which the range 277A is “selected” by a user of a client device 600A who only plans to be available for diagnoses and decisionmaking via a limited-bandwidth signal path 401A during forestry operations described herein.
Execution block 730 depicts information management routine 700 determining that a scalar value of the second location-specific artificial biometric of the depiction is above the selected range.
Execution block 740 depicts information management routine 700 determining that a scalar value of the third location-specific artificial biometric of the depiction is within the selected range.
Execution block 775 depicts information management routine 700 generating an automatic prioritization of the third position of the land tract over the first and second positions of the land tract partly based on the scalar value of the third location-specific artificial biometric of the depiction being within the selected range, partly based on the scalar value of the first location-specific artificial biometric of the depiction being below the selected range, and partly based on the scalar value of the second location-specific artificial biometric of the depiction being above the selected range.
Execution block 785 depicts information management routine 700 manifesting the automatic prioritization of the third position of the land tract over the first and second positions of the land tract by expressing the prioritization to a remote party.
Execution block 790 depicts information management routine 700 receiving a verdict (at time T3) at least about the third position from the remote party within two days after that party received the automatic prioritization of the third position. This can occur, for example, in a context in which the times T1-T3 are respective event times 291-293 depicted in
The information management routine 700 ends at termination block 799.
Alternatively or additionally, in some contexts the generating a depiction 825 include a determination (either by server 500 or by a processing unit 602 within vessel 230, e.g.) that an artificial biometric pertaining to a different position 255A may be prioritized as to a different client device 600B (in use by and associated with party 898B as shown, e.g.) by virtue of having fallen within a range 277B provided by that client device 600B. This can occur, for example, in a context in which a corresponding biometric pertaining to position 255B is below range 277B; in which a corresponding biometric pertaining to position 255C is above range 277B; in which the conditional prioritized data selection 865B automatically transmitted to client device 600B is larger than 100 megabytes (including at least an image of position 255A, e.g.) but smaller than 100 terabytes (not including all the current images of land tract 250A in the current raw dataset, e.g.); in which such transmission preceded a long delay 870 (of 24-48 hours, e.g.) only by virtue of having been automatically prioritized and sent; and in which one or more verdicts 875A, 875B (decisions whether to plant or not, e.g.) would otherwise not have been acted upon 880 until a subsequent deployment (when station 235 returned to land tract 250A more than a year later, e.g.).
Such verdicts 875 may each include one or more instances of positive decisions 901, of negative decisions 902 (not to take an action under consideration, e.g.), of diagnoses (specifying a noxious organism with an organic species identification 903, e.g.), or of additional work requests (analyses and verdicts by other human authorities, e.g.). In some contexts, for example, such positive decisions 901 under consideration may be expressed as one or more portable module identifiers 921 (a serial number effectively determining which bioactive materials to apply to the “third position” under consideration. Alternatively or additionally, a verdict 875 may include one or more task or instruction sequences 922 or defined routes 923 (specifying when and how a drone-implemented delivery flight will be executed, e.g.). Alternatively or additionally, a verdict 875 may include one or more instances of bioactive material identifiers 935 (such as herbicide identifiers 931, pesticide identifiers 932, fertilizer identifiers 933, or other such deliverable cargo, e.g.). Alternatively or additionally, a verdict 875 may express one or more instances of crop species identifications 943 or other components of (positive) planting decisions 945.
In some contexts current data depicting a first microsite (position 255K, e.g.) may be used to characterize an entire “third” position even when that position has been extended to include a succession of additional adjacent microsites partly based on the value of the biometric of each microsite in the succession being within the range 277 and partly based on each microsite of the succession being adjacent another microsite of the succession. The effects of such algorithmic extensions are evident, for example, in the irregular shapes of positions 255E-G.
In a later deployment, one or more sensors 1140 (described with reference to
Execution block 1215 depicts configuring one or more sensors aboard one or more aircraft to obtain photographic data in memory thereof by detecting at least some optical energy at a first time T1 from a land tract (one or more client devices 600A-B remotely configuring one or more sensors 1140 aboard one or more drones 1131 or airborne vehicles to obtain photographic data in memory thereof by detecting optical energy 1108 at a “first” time 291 from land tract 250C, e.g.). This can occur, for example, in a context in which the one or more client devices 600A-B are “remote” by virtue of being more than 100 kilometers from land tract 250C. Alternatively or additionally, the memory may contain map data (indicating historical waterway positions or other indications of potential hazards, e.g.) or other background information that may affect current depiction 1025B. In some variants, moreover, execution block 1215 may be performed by server 500A or concurrently performed by a party (a device user operating device 600B, e.g.).
Execution block 1285 depicts obtaining a current depiction of a land tract that includes photographic data from one or more airborne vehicles, wherein a first location-specific artificial biometric of the current depiction is associated with a first position of the land tract, wherein a second location-specific artificial biometric of the current depiction is associated with a second position of the land tract, and wherein a third location-specific artificial biometric of the current depiction is associated with a third position of the land tract (a drone 1131, station 1135, or other client device 600 generating or receiving one or more biometric maps or similar depictions 1025 that include photographic data depicting a tract 250 as described herein, e.g.). In many contexts, such depictions are in fact obtained by a succession of devices that pass them along.
Execution block 1295 depicts receiving a verdict concerning said third position of said land tract from a party who has received a prioritization of said third location-specific artificial biometric of the current depiction over said first and second location-specific artificial biometrics of the current depiction partly based on a scalar value of said third location-specific artificial biometric of the current depiction being within a selected range, partly based on a scalar value of said first location-specific artificial biometric of the current depiction being below said selected range, and partly based on a scalar value of said second location-specific artificial biometric of the current depiction being above said selected range (a drone 1131, station 1135, or other client device 600 receiving a verdict 875 concerning said third position 255 from a party who has received such a prioritization 1151, e.g.). In many contexts, such verdicts 875 are in fact obtained by a succession of devices that pass them along.
The information management routine 1200 ends at termination block 1299.
As used herein, a “prioritization” may refer to a conditional automatic notification (requesting an expedited verdict selectively in response to some datasets 1377B-C but not to other datasets 1377A, e.g.), a ranking (listing the prioritized item before one or more other items, e.g.), or some other expression signifying elevated importance relative to that of a nearby position (microsite, e.g.) or its attributes. In some contexts, respective “prioritizations” may be different for different parties, such as in a context in which client device 600A prioritizes record 1068A over one or more other depicted records in response to “66” falling within range “A” (as shown in
In each of datasets 1377B-C, several location-specific artificial biometrics of the then-current depiction 1025 are above the selected range 277. In dataset 1377B, at least one location-specific artificial biometrics of the then-current depiction 1025 is within the selected range 277, suggesting that said biometric (and the “third” position to which it pertains) deserves a higher priority 1151 than one or more of the other (over-limit or under-limit) biometrics in the dataset 1377B (nominally) corresponding to the same time 291B. Likewise in dataset 1377C, a plurality of location-specific artificial biometrics of the then-current depiction 1025 (nominally taken at time 291C pursuant to execution block 705, e.g.) is within the selected range 277, suggesting that said biometrics (and the “third” positions to which they pertain) are “more marginal” and deserving of higher prioritization (ranking or conditionally urgent treatment, e.g.) than some or all of the other (over-limit or under-limit) biometrics in dataset 1377C. Many datasets 1377 described herein warrant special handling of within-range location-specific biometric values 1473 as contrasted with that of corresponding under-limit values 1471 and over-limit values 1472.
In light of teachings herein, numerous existing techniques may be applied for configuring special-purpose circuitry or other structures effective for obtaining and applying limits to biometric values as described herein without undue experimentation. See, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 9,420,737 (“Three-dimensional elevation modeling for use in operating agricultural vehicles”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,378,554 (“Real-time range map generation”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,373,149 (“Autonomous neighborhood vehicle commerce network and community”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,354,235 (“System and process for quantifying potentially mineralizable nitrogen for agricultural crop production”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,340,797 (“Compositions and methods for control of insect infestations in plants”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,310,354 (“Methods of predicting crop yield using metabolic profiling”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,412,140 (“Method and system for inspection of travelers”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,378,065 (“Purposeful computing”); U.S. Pat. No. 8,682,888 (“System and methods for tasking, collecting, and dispatching information reports”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,423,249 (“Biometric measurement systems and methods”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,286,511 (“Event registration and management system and method employing geo-tagging and biometrics”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,268,915 (“Systems and methods for diagnosis or treatment”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,137,246 (“Systems, methods and apparatus for multivariate authentication”); and U.S. Pat. No. 9,014,516 (“Object information derived from object images”). These documents are incorporated herein by reference to the extent not inconsistent herewith.
In light of teachings herein, numerous existing techniques may be applied for configuring special-purpose circuitry or other structures effective for manifesting and implementing priorities and verdicts as described herein without undue experimentation. See, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 9,311,605 (“Modeling of time-variant grain moisture content for determination of preferred temporal harvest windows and estimation of income loss from harvesting an overly-dry crop”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,390,331 (“System and method for assessing riparian habitats”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,383,750 (“System for predictively managing communication attributes of unmanned vehicles”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,378,509 (“Methods, apparatus, and articles of manufacture to measure geographical features using an image of a geographical location”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,373,051 (“Statistical approach to identifying and tracking targets within captured image data”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,355,154 (“Media sequencing method to provide location-relevant entertainment”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,336,492 (“Modeling of re-moistening of stored grain crop for acceptable time-of-sale moisture level and opportunity windows for operation of storage bin fans based on expected atmospheric conditions”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,277,525 (“Wireless location using location estimators”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,269,022 (“Methods for object recognition and related arrangements”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,237,416 (“Interactive advisory system for prioritizing content”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,202,252 (“System and method for conserving water and optimizing land and water use”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,131,644 (“Continual crop development profiling using dynamical extended range weather forecasting with routine remotely-sensed validation imagery”); U.S. Pat. No. 9,113,590 (“Methods, apparatus, and systems for determining in-season crop status in an agricultural crop and alerting users”); U.S. Pat. No. 8,775,428 (“Method and apparatus for predicting object properties and events using similarity-based information retrieval and modeling”); U.S. Pat. No. 8,146,539 (“Method of reducing herbaceous fuels in areas susceptible to wildfires”); U.S. Pat. No. 7,764,231 (“Wireless location using multiple mobile station location techniques”); and U.S. Pub. No. 2016/0073573 (“Methods and systems for managing agricultural activities”). These documents are incorporated herein by reference to the extent not inconsistent herewith.
In some contexts such petals 1662B may comprise a latticed layer of wire (a fine mesh, e.g.) with numerous holes therethrough each within 1-2 orders of magnitude of 0.5 millimeters in width/diameter so as to allow (optionally hydrophobic) surfaces 1766 thereof to have a higher effective moisture collection area per unit of air drag coefficient. In some variants, moreover, one or more propagules 1707 may be held within a chamber that provides protection (from wind and solar desiccation and propagule predation, e.g.) by having a largest opening 1747 larger than 1 square millimeter and smaller than 10 square centimeters and with all other openings thereof smaller than 3 square millimeters. Seed predation may be further reduced, in some variants, by having a housing 1740 configured to extend to a minimum height 1797 greater than 3 centimeters above the surrounding ground surface 1758. Moreover in some variants a porous or other hydration conduit/collector comprises a portion of housing 1740 that extends underground to a depth 1757B greater than 0.2 millimeters, with at least some of the housing 1740 below surface 1758 being configured to serve as an additional moisture collector as a function of capillarity and moisture gradients between the surface of housing 1740 and the edaphic environment.
In some contexts, seepage 1891 is a best-available source of moisture 1833, necessitating a below-ground-moisture collector (a tip 1719 having primarily longitudinal capillaries therethrough, e.g.) intimately coupled with a moist soil or ground-based substrate (e.g. woody detritus) interface 1824 (by deep placement, e.g.). Alternatively or additionally, a single porous structure 1825 may serve as both a below-ground moisture collector 1822 and a conduit 1823 in direct contact with the propagule(s) 1823. In some variants, moreover, a mass-produced capsule subassembly 1828 may be made of a harder medium 1826A pressed toward and fused with a softer medium 1826B with one or more propagules therebetween. Alternatively or additionally, one or more such media 1826 may include a cavity 1829 (an air-filled recess, e.g.) larger than 1 milliliter. In some contexts, moreover, artificial hydration 1894 delivered (as a conditional response to several hot, dry days following a capsule deployment, e.g.) via a hydration deployment (drone route, e.g.) may pass to ailing propagules 1807 via an artificial rain collector 1821A, an artificial dew collector 1821B, or an artificial below-ground-moisture collector 1822 (or via a combination of these).
In some contexts such cartridges may be mass produced and kept in a climate-controlled environment with a humidity and temperature therein both artificially maintained below suitable setpoints (the setpoint being below 80% and 80 degrees Fahrenheit respectively, e.g.) until less than 24 hours before they are mounted (on an unmanned vehicle configured to perform individual capsule deployment, e.g.). Alternatively or additionally, some such cartridges may be configured to be opened so that one or more propagule capsules 1810 therein are thereby modified inside the cartridge 1988 (by exposing propagule capsules 1810 therein to artificial heating or hydration, e.g.) within 24 hours before an individual deployment of a particular one of the propagule capsules 1810 therein.
In some variants, moreover, one or more changes to a structure or composition of each propagule capsule 1810 may be made successively within a staging subassembly 1990 (of an unmanned vehicle 1530, e.g.) en route. This can occur, for example, in a context in which a staging subassembly 1990 is configured to puncture or otherwise cut into most or all propagule capsules 1810 from a given cartridge 1988 successively during a single deployment of the unmanned vehicle 1530. In some variants, for example, a staging subassembly 1990 may be configured to alter a structure or composition (or both) of the first propagule capsule 1810C before deploying the first propagule capsule 1810C and also configured to alter a structure or composition of a second propagule capsule 1810D less than one minute after deploying the first propagule capsule 1810C and less than one minute before deploying the second propagule capsule 1810C.
Alternatively or additionally, a (variant of a) staging subassembly 1990 may be configured (1) to open a first valve 2083 so that a propagule capsule 1810D (pushed by loader 2065, e.g.) can approach a staging position, (2) to allow the staging subassembly 1990 to engage the propagule capsule 1810D at a staging position therein, (3) to finely aim a chute 1978 of a targeting subassembly 1570 toward a target 1556, and (4) to allow the staging subassembly 1990 to release the propagule capsule 1810D via the finely-aimed chute 1978 so that the propagule capsule 1810D has a precisely controlled direction 2081 relative to a downward direction. This can occur, for example, in a context in which one or more cameras 2006 of the payload has a field 2076 of view that overlaps an endmost portion of chute 1978 and in which an applied propellant pressure (from canister 2062, e.g.) that accelerates the propagule capsule 1810D is controlled or taken into account (or both) when deciding when to release the propagule capsule 1810D toward the target 1556 and in which (one or more solenoids, servos, or other motor controls of) gimbal 1989 finely tunes the release angle of chute 1978 using image data obtained from the one or more cameras 2006.
In some variants one or more systems 1500, 1900, 2100 described herein implement a staging subassembly 1990 configured to alter a composition of a propagule capsule 2110 (as an instance of one or more other capsules 1810 described herein, e.g.) by depositing an injectant 2101 into the first propagule capsule before deploying (releasing or shooting, e.g.) the first propagule capsule and also configured to alter a composition of a second propagule capsule by depositing the injectant 2101 into the second propagule capsule less than one minute after deploying the first propagule capsule 1810C and less than one minute before deploying the second propagule capsule. This can occur, for example, in a context in which any such modification (as an injectant 2101, e.g.) would not otherwise be feasible because of a premature structural degradation of its housing 2110 that would prevent a successful targeting and ground penetration of adequate depth 1757.
Operation 2720 describes storing the data (special-purpose circuitry at station 1135 storing the raw data 820 of the materials on the planting area 250, 1550 that includes the first microsite 255, 1555, e.g.).
Operation 2730 describes qualifying the first microsite as a suitable planting area (special-purpose circuitry at station 1135 generating or accepting a decision to plant the area 250, 1550, e.g.).
Operation 2745 describes placing propagules into propagule capsules (special-purpose circuitry in factory robots assembling propagules 1807 into capsule subassemblies 1828 or capsule subassemblies into propagule capsules 1810, e.g.). This can occur, for example, in a context in which such assembly also includes loading cartridges 1988 with propagule capsules 1810.
Operation 2755 describes deploying an unmanned vehicle to the planting area with many loaded propagule capsules (special-purpose circuitry at station 1135 directing unmanned vehicle 1530 to commence a planting route for a next swath of planting area 1550, e.g.).
Operation 2760 commences a loop.
Operation 2770 describes determining that the unmanned vehicle is within range of an unplanted target (special-purpose circuitry aboard unmanned vehicle 1530 successfully moving so that a next planting target 1556 is currently within range 1577, e.g.).
Operation 2775 describes launching a propagule capsule targeted toward and landing within a corresponding microsite (special-purpose circuitry aboard unmanned vehicle 1530 successfully triggering a launch of a propagule capsule 1810 targeted toward and landing within a corresponding microsite 1555, e.g.).
Operation 2760 moves control to a next iteration of the loop unless all available microsites are planted or it is time to reload.
In light of teachings herein, numerous existing techniques may be applied for configuring special-purpose circuitry or other structures effective for configuring structures and materials as described herein without undue experimentation. See, e.g., U.S. Pub. No. 2018/0077855 (“Seed Planter Using Air Propulsion”), U.S. Pub. No. 2018/0075834 (“Noise Cancellation for Aerial Vehicle”), U.S. Pub. No. 2018/0035606 (“Smart Interactive and Autonomous Robotic Property Maintenance Apparatus, System, and Method (Finds Bare Spots, Uses Gimbal Gyroscope)”), U.S. Pub. No. 2018/0024570 (“Gimbaled Universal Drone Controller”), U.S. Pub. No. 2018/0024422 (“Gimbal Having Parallel Stability Mechanism”), U.S. Pub. No. 2018/0000028 (“Multi-Media Structures Containing Growth Enhancement Additives”), U.S. Pub. No. 2017/0359943 (“Automatic Target Recognition and Dispensing System”), U.S. Pub. No. 2017/0288976 (“Modules Registration and Status Update Of Modular Assembly System”), U.S. Pub. No. 2017/0286089 (“Firmware of Modular Assembly System”), U.S. Pub. No. 2017/0285927 (“Host Applications of Modular Assembly System”), U.S. Pub. No. 2017/0282091 (“Modular Assembly System”), U.S. Pub. No. 2017/0029109 (“Aircraft Seed Broadcasting Systems, Apparatus and Methods”), U.S. Pub. No. 2016/0234997 (“Systems and Methods for Aerial Seeding”), U.S. Pub. No. 2011/0303137 (“Seed Sensor System and Method for Improved Seed Count and Seed Spacing”), U.S. Pub. No. 2011/0035999 (“Structures and Methods for Attaching a Display Article to a Germinateable Seed and a Germinated Plant Carrying the Structure and/or the Display Article”), U.S. Pub. No. 2009/0107370 (“Planting Devices, Structures, and Methods”), and U.S. Pub. No. 2006/0042530 (“Product for and Method of Aerial Seeding Using Agglomerated Minerals”). These documents are incorporated herein by reference to the extent not inconsistent herewith.
With respect to the numbered clauses and claims expressed below, those skilled in the art will appreciate that recited operations therein may generally be performed in any order. Also, although various operational flows are presented in a sequence(s), it should be understood that the various operations may be performed in other orders than those which are illustrated or may be performed concurrently. Examples of such alternate orderings may include overlapping, interleaved, interrupted, reordered, incremental, preparatory, supplemental, simultaneous, reverse, or other variant orderings, unless context dictates otherwise. Furthermore, terms like “responsive to,” “related to,” or other past-tense adjectives are generally not intended to exclude such variants, unless context dictates otherwise. Also in the numbered clauses below, specific combinations of aspects and embodiments are articulated in a shorthand form such that (1) according to respective embodiments, for each instance in which a “component” or other such identifiers appear to be introduced (with “a” or “an,” e.g.) more than once in a given chain of clauses, such designations may either identify the same entity or distinct entities; and (2) what might be called “dependent” clauses below may or may not incorporate, in respective embodiments, the features of “independent” clauses to which they refer or other features described above.
1. (Independent) A time-sensitive forestry information management system comprising:
transistor-based circuitry (as a component of special-purpose circuitry 522, 622, e.g.) configured to obtain a current depiction 1025 (at least) of a land tract 250 that includes (at least) aerial photographic data 1389 (at least) from one or more aircraft 130, wherein a first location-specific artificial biometric 1102 of said depiction 1025 is associated with a first position 255 of said land tract, wherein a second location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction is associated with a second position 255 of said land tract, and wherein a third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction is associated with a third position 255 of said land tract; and
transistor-based circuitry (as a component of special-purpose circuitry 522, 622, e.g.) configured to receive a verdict 875 concerning (at least) said third position of said land tract (at least) from a first party 898A who has received an automatic prioritization 1151 of said third position over (at least) said first and second positions partly based on (at least) a current scalar value 1384 of said third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being within a range 277, partly based on a current scalar value of said first location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being below said range, and partly based on a current scalar value of said second location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being above said range, wherein (said scalar values and said depiction are “current” insofar that) all of said scalar values of said location-specific artificial biometrics resulted from the one or more aircraft having received (at least some) optical energy 1108 while airborne at a time T1 (time 291, e.g.) less than six months before a time T2 (time 292, e.g.) of the current depiction (for the aerial photographic data) and also less than six months before a time T3 (time 293, e.g.) of said verdict (being received).
2. The system of any of the above SYSTEM CLAUSES, further comprising:
a motorized drone (drone 1131, e.g.) supporting said transistor-based circuitry configured to obtain said current depiction of said land tract that includes aerial photographic data from one or more aircraft, wherein said first location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction is associated with said first position of said land tract, wherein said second location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction is associated with said second position of said land tract, and wherein said third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction is associated with said third position of said land tract and said transistor-based circuitry configured to receive said verdict concerning said third position of said land tract from said first party who has received said automatic prioritization of said third position over said first and second positions partly based on said current scalar value of said third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being within said range, partly based on said current scalar value of said first location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being below said range, and partly based on said current scalar value of said second location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being above said range, wherein all of said scalar values of said location-specific artificial biometrics resulted from the one or more aircraft having received optical energy while airborne at said time T1 less than six months before said time T2 of the current depiction and also less than six months before said time T3 of said verdict.
3. The system of any of the above SYSTEM CLAUSES, further comprising:
a motor vehicle (vessel 230, e.g.) supporting said transistor-based circuitry configured to obtain said current depiction of said land tract that includes aerial photographic data from one or more aircraft, wherein said first location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction is associated with said first position of said land tract, wherein said second location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction is associated with said second position of said land tract, and wherein said third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction is associated with said third position of said land tract and said transistor-based circuitry configured to receive said verdict concerning said third position of said land tract from said first party who has received said automatic prioritization of said third position over said first and second positions partly based on said current scalar value of said third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being within said range, partly based on said current scalar value of said first location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being below said range, and partly based on said current scalar value of said second location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being above said range, wherein all of said scalar values of said location-specific artificial biometrics resulted from the one or more aircraft having received optical energy while airborne at said time T1 less than six months before said time T2 of the current depiction and also less than six months before said time T3 of said verdict.
4. The system of any of the above SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the system is configured to perform any of the METHOD CLAUSES set forth herein.
5. (Independent) A time-sensitive forestry information management method comprising:
invoking transistor-based circuitry configured to obtain a current depiction 1025 of a land tract 250 that includes aerial photographic data 1389 from one or more aircraft 130, wherein a first location-specific artificial biometric 1102 of said depiction 1025 is associated with a first position 255 of said land tract, wherein a second location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction is associated with a second position 255 of said land tract, and wherein a third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction is associated with a third position 255 of said land tract; and
invoking transistor-based circuitry configured to receive a verdict 875 concerning said third position of said land tract from a first party who has received an automatic prioritization 1151 of said third position over said first and second positions partly based on a current scalar value 1384 of said third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being within a range 277, partly based on a current scalar value of said first location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being below said range, and partly based on a current scalar value of said second location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being above said range, wherein (said scalar values and said depiction are “current” insofar that) all of said scalar values of said location-specific artificial biometrics resulted from the one or more aircraft having received (at least some) optical energy 1108 while airborne at a time T1 (time 291, e.g.) less than six months before a time T2 (time 292, e.g.) of the current depiction (for the aerial photographic data) and also less than six months before a time T3 (time 293, e.g.) of said verdict (being received).
6. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, wherein the method includes all of the operations depicted in
7. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
computing several distance estimates 1383 each as a corresponding one of said current scalar values of said first, second, and third location-specific artificial biometrics.
8. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
obtaining said range by allowing said first party to select said range from a menu and to define one or more conditions under which the first party is to be notified of said prioritization;
determining that the one or more conditions under which the first party is to be notified of said prioritization are met; and
providing a conditional notification 1351 to the first party of said prioritization as an automatic and conditional response to the one or more conditions under which the first party is to be notified of said prioritization having been met.
9. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
configuring one or more sensors aboard the one or more aircraft to obtain other aerial photographic data by detecting other optical energy at least 24 hours at a prior time T0 before time T1 from said land tract;
configuring said one or more sensors aboard the one or more aircraft to obtain said aerial photographic data by detecting said optical energy at said time T1 from said land tract; and
obtaining said first, second, and third location-specific artificial biometrics of said depiction as a component of the current depiction at least by comparing said photographic data from said time T1 against the other photographic data from said prior time T0.
10. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
configuring one or more sensors aboard the one or more aircraft to obtain said aerial photographic data by detecting said optical energy at or before said time T1 from said land tract.
11. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
configuring one or more sensors aboard the one or more aircraft to obtain said aerial photographic data by detecting said optical energy at or before said time T1 from said land tract; and
using at least some additional aerial photographic data taken after said time T1 and before said time T2 of the current depiction in configuring the current depiction.
12. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
configuring one or more sensors aboard the one or more aircraft to obtain said aerial photographic data by detecting said optical energy at or before said time T1 from said land tract; and
including at least some additional aerial photographic data taken after said time T1 and before said time T2 of the current depiction in the current depiction.
13. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
determining that said current scalar value of said first location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction is below said range;
determining that said current scalar value of said second location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction is above said range; and
determining that said current scalar value of said third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction is within said range.
14. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
receiving at least a component of said range from said first party before the current depiction of said land tract is obtained and before said first party receives said automatic prioritization of said third position over said first and second positions.
15. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
receiving at least a component of said range from a second party 898B before the current depiction of said land tract is obtained and before said first party receives said automatic prioritization of said third position over said first and second positions.
16. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
allowing a second party to configure one or more sensors aboard the one or more aircraft and to select and to configure said range (as one menu option among a plurality of menu options, e.g.) before the current depiction of said land tract is obtained and before said first party receives said automatic prioritization (as a conditional notification 1351, e.g.) of said third position over said first and second positions.
17. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
obtaining a positive decision 901 concerning one or more drone routes 923 that selectively include said third position (to distribute Douglas fir seeds selectively to a target planting region that includes said third position, e.g.) as a component of said verdict (excluding either the first or second region, e.g.).
18. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
obtaining a negative planting decision 902 (not to plant said third position, e.g.) as a component of said verdict.
19. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
obtaining an organic species identification 903 as a component of said verdict.
20. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
obtaining a payload module identifier 921 (a serial number identifying a sensor-containing or payload item to be carried by an aircraft, e.g.) as a component of said verdict.
21. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
obtaining a drone-executable command sequence 922 (mapping a flight and material deposition pattern executable by a particular drone, e.g.) as a component of said verdict.
22. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
obtaining an herbicide identification 931 as a component of said verdict.
23. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
obtaining a pesticide identification 932 as a component of said verdict.
24. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
obtaining a therapeutic bioactive material identification 935 as a component of said verdict.
25. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
obtaining a crop species identification 943 (naming “Douglas fir” in lieu of a deciduous crop tree, e.g.) as a component of said verdict.
26. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
obtaining a dataset 1377B-C having a minimum value as said current scalar value 1471 of said first location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction 1025, a maximum value as said current scalar value 1472 of said second location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction, and an intermediate value 1473 as said current scalar value of said third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction; and
deriving said range as having a lower limit (limit 261, e.g.) above said minimum value and below said intermediate value and as having an upper limit (limit 263, e.g.) above said intermediate value and below said maximum value.
27. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
obtaining a dataset 1377B-C having a minimum value as said current scalar value 1471 of said first location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction 1025, a maximum value as said current scalar value 1472 of said second location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction, and an intermediate value 1473 as said current scalar value of said third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction; and
deriving said range as having a lower limit (limit 261, e.g.) halfway between said minimum value and said intermediate value and as having an upper limit (limit 263, e.g.) halfway between said intermediate value and said maximum value.
28. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, wherein said depiction 1025 includes said automatic prioritization 1151 and wherein said automatic prioritization 1151 ranks said third position above said first and second positions as a conditional response to said third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being within said range and to said first and second location-specific artificial biometrics of said depiction being outside said range.
29. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, wherein said prioritization 1151 manifests a conditional notification 1351 sent in response to said third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being within said range and to said first and second location-specific artificial biometrics of said depiction being outside said range.
30. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, wherein a server receives said verdict at time T3 within a month of both said time T1 at which said optical energy was detected and said time T2 at which said current depiction was generated.
31. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, wherein a server receives said verdict at time T3 within a week of both said time T1 at which said optical energy was detected and said time T2 at which said current depiction was generated.
32. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, wherein a server receives said verdict at time T3 within 24 hours of both said time T1 at which said optical energy was detected and said time T2 at which said current depiction was generated.
33. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, wherein a server receives said verdict at time T3 within 3 hours of both said time T1 at which said optical energy was detected and said time T2 at which said current depiction was generated.
34. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, wherein said obtaining said depiction of said land tract that includes aerial photographic data from one or more aircraft comprises:
selectively including in said depiction an aerial photograph 1387 of at least a part of said land tract that overlaps said third position while selectively omitting from said depiction at least a portion of said photographic data that depicts the first or second positions of said land tract as a component of automatically prioritizing said third position over said first and second positions partly based on said current scalar value of said third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being within said range, partly based on said current scalar value of said first location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being below said range, and partly based on said current scalar value of said second location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being above said range.
35. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, wherein said obtaining said depiction of said land tract that includes aerial photographic data from one or more aircraft comprises:
selectively including in said depiction 1025 an aerial photograph 1387 of at least a part of said land tract 250 that overlaps said third position 255 while selectively omitting from said depiction at least a portion of said photographic data that depicts the first or second positions of said land tract.
36. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, wherein said receiving said verdict 875 concerning said third position of said land tract from said first party who has received said automatic prioritization of said third position over said first and second positions partly based on said current scalar value of said third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being within a range, partly based on said current scalar value of said first location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being below said range, and partly based on said current scalar value of said second location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being above said range comprises:
selectively including in said depiction an aerial photograph 1387 of at least a part of said land tract that overlaps said third position while selectively omitting from said depiction at least a portion of said photographic data that depicts the first or second positions of said land tract as a component of automatically prioritizing said third position over said first and second positions partly based on said current scalar value of said third location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being within said range, partly based on said current scalar value of said first location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being below said range, and partly based on said current scalar value of said second location-specific artificial biometric of said depiction being above said range.
37. The method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, further comprising:
acting upon said verdict (by initiating a planting, material distribution, or supplemental surveillance task, e.g.).
38. (Independent) An aerial deployment planting method, comprising:
placing one or more (seeds or other) propagules 1707 in a first propagule capsule 1810 (at operation 2745, e.g.); and
deploying propagules 1810 from an unmanned vehicle (at operation 2770 via aircraft 130, e.g.) so that each is targeted toward and lands within a corresponding microsite 255, 1555, wherein the propagule capsules 1810 include the first propagule capsule and wherein the first propagule capsule is targeted and lands within a first one of the microsites 255, 1555.
39. The aerial deployment planting method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, wherein deploying the propagule capsules comprises:
firing the propagule capsules with a pneumatic firing apparatus (including an interchangeable compressed gas canister 162, 1962, e.g.) aboard the unmanned vehicle 1530 (at operation 2775, e.g.).
40. The aerial deployment planting method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, wherein deploying the propagule capsules comprises:
gathering data 820 of materials on a planting area 250, 1550 that includes the first microsite 255, 1555 (at operation 2715, e.g.);
storing the data 820 of the materials on the planting area 250, 1550 that includes the first microsite 255, 1555 (at operation 2720, e.g.); and
qualifying the first microsite as a suitable planting area (at operation 2730, e.g.).
41. The aerial deployment planting method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, wherein deploying the propagule capsules comprises:
performing a reconnaissance phase (at operations 2715-2730, e.g.) in which an unmanned vehicle 1530 collects data 820 that is processed and used for mapping at least one route 923 for planting;
along the at least one route 923 for planting determining that the unmanned vehicle is within a shooting range 1577 of the microsites 255, 1555 corresponding to each of the propagule capsules 1810 (at operation 2770, e.g.); and
performing a planting phase in which the unmanned vehicle 1530 launches the propagule capsules 1810 to the microsites (at operation 2775, e.g.).
42. The aerial deployment planting method of any of the above METHOD CLAUSES, wherein placing the one or more propagules in a first propagule capsule 1810 comprises:
constructing the first propagule capsule 1810 to include a (housing 1740 or other) substrate 1840 composed of a non-toxic biodegradable material (polyvinyl alcohol, e.g.).
43. (Independent) An aerial deployment planting system comprising:
a first propagule capsule 1810 configured to contain one or more propagules and to be supported by an unmanned vehicle 1530, the first propagule capsule 1810 comprising:
44. (Independent) An aerial deployment planting system comprising:
a first propagule capsule 1810 configured to contain one or more propagules 1707 and to be supported by an unmanned vehicle 1530, the first propagule capsule 1810 comprising:
45. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, comprising:
a drone propulsion subassembly 1535 having one or more robotic limbs (propellers 1534 or legs, e.g.) configured to allow the first unmanned vehicle 1530 to ambulate (walk or fly, e.g.) over irregular ground 1559 (inaccessible by a tractor, e.g.), wherein the drone propulsion subassembly 1535 supports dozens of propagule capsules 1810 including first propagule capsule 1810A.
46. (Independent) An aerial deployment planting system comprising:
a first unmanned vehicle 1530 having a drone propulsion subassembly 1535, the drone propulsion subassembly 1535 having one or more robotic limbs (propellers 1534 or legs, e.g.) configured to allow the first unmanned vehicle 1530 to ambulate (walk or fly, e.g.) over irregular ground 1559 (inaccessible by a tractor, e.g.), wherein the drone propulsion subassembly 1535 supports dozens of propagule capsules 1810 including a first propagule capsule 1810A; and
a first targeting subassembly 1570 gimbaled relative to the drone propulsion subassembly 1535 so as to stabilize the first targeting subassembly 1570 while the first propagule capsule 1810 is released aerially (via chute 1678, e.g.) toward a target 1556 smaller than a square meter.
47. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a frontmost 25% of a length 1946 of the first propagule capsule 1810 includes a narrowest portion of the first propagule capsule 1810 and wherein a middle half of the length 1946 of the first propagule capsule 1810 (a longitudinal section closer to a midpoint than an endpoint thereof, e.g.) includes a widest portion of the first propagule capsule 1810.
48. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a frontmost 25% of a length 1946 of the first propagule capsule 1810 includes a narrowest portion of the first propagule capsule 1810 and wherein a rear half of the length 1946 of the first propagule capsule 1810 includes a widest portion (including petals 1662, e.g.) of the first propagule capsule 1810.
49. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a weight majority of the one or more artificial moisture-transfer conduits 1823 (i.e. by weight when dry) comprise one or more fiber-based growing media 1726.
50. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the one or more artificial moisture-transfer conduits 1823 include a concentration of bloodmeal therein within a factor of ten of 0.2% (by weight).
51. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a majority the one or more artificial moisture-transfer conduits 1823 (by weight when dry) comprise one or more growing media 1726 each selected from the group consisting of rock wool, perlite, vermiculate, expanded clay, biochar, coco chips, coco fiber, sawdust, sand, and pumice.
52. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a first substrate 1840 configured to support one or more artificial moisture-transfer conduits 1823 adjacent the one or more propagules 1807 thereof includes a housing 1740 that advantageously balances a crash damage vulnerability (structural integrity upon deployment, e.g.) with preventing compression damage upon the one or more propagules 1707 (that would result if none of the casing were water soluble, e.g.) by dissolving enough to rupture as a conditional response to being wet for more than a (nominal) time T, wherein T is greater than 1 hour and less than 1000 hours.
53. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a first substrate 1840 configured to support one or more artificial moisture-transfer conduits 1823 adjacent the one or more propagules 1807 thereof includes a housing 1740, 2340 that advantageously balances initial structural integrity (i.e. upon deployment) with preventing compression damage upon the one or more propagules by having (at least) a longitudinal housing portion thereof (a water-soluble adhesive within a seam 2308, e.g.) having an aqueous solubility greater than 5 grams per liter.
54. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a first substrate 1840 configured to support one or more artificial moisture-transfer conduits 1823 adjacent the one or more propagules 1807 thereof includes a housing 1740 having a plurality of substantially longitudinal guides 2586 (ribs or grooves more axial than lateral in direction, e.g.) so as to guide root egress of the one or more (roots 2587 of) propagules 1707, 1807 downward as they grow.
55. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a first substrate 1840 configured to support one or more artificial moisture-transfer conduits 1823 adjacent the one or more propagules 1807 thereof includes a housing 1740 that is separable from a tip 1719 of the first substrate 1840 and wherein the tip 1719 of the first substrate 1840 has a mass on the order (i.e. within an order of magnitude) of 1 gram.
56. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a first substrate 1840 configured to support one or more artificial moisture-transfer conduits 1823 adjacent the one or more propagules 1807 thereof includes a housing 1740 and a tip 1719 of the first substrate 1840 and wherein the tip 1719 of the first substrate 1840 is made of a tubular and biodegradable material.
57. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a first substrate 1840 configured to support one or more artificial moisture-transfer conduits 1823 adjacent the one or more propagules 1807 thereof includes a housing 1740 and a tip 1719 of the first substrate 1840 and wherein the tip 1719 engages a forward-most portion of the housing 1740 by a friction fit.
58. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a first substrate 1840 configured to support one or more artificial moisture-transfer conduits 1823 adjacent the one or more propagules 1807 thereof includes a housing 1740 and a tip 1719 of the first substrate 1840 and wherein the tip 1719 of the first substrate 1840 is made of a porous and biodegradable injection molded plastic.
59. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a first substrate 1840 configured to support one or more artificial moisture-transfer conduits 1823 adjacent the one or more propagules 1807 thereof includes a housing 1740 that is separable from a tip 1719 of the first substrate 1840 and wherein the tip 1719 of the first substrate 1840 is made of a porous and biodegradable injection molded plastic.
60. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 has a funnel shape (generally tapering from a wider top end 1912 to a pointed bottom end 1914, e.g.).
61. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein one or more artificial moisture-transfer conduits 1823 of the first propagule capsule 1810 are integrally formed with one or more artificial above-ground-moisture collectors 1821 (as an integrated porous structure 1825, e.g.).
62. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein one or more artificial moisture-transfer conduits 1823 of the first propagule capsule 1810 are integrally formed with one or more absorbent below-ground-moisture collectors 1822 (as an integrated porous structure 1825, e.g.).
63. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 includes two or more petal-shaped above-ground-moisture collectors 1821A-B.
64. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 includes one or more above-ground-moisture collectors 1821A-B that extend laterally (relative to an axis thereof while traveling in a forward direction 1681 or planted in a downward direction 1682, e.g.) far enough to create drag (by a lateral distance of more than 1 mm, e.g.) upon the first propagule capsule 1810 so as to enhance an orientation of the first propagule capsule 1810 during flight.
65. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 includes an above-ground-moisture collector 1821 having a hydrophobic surface 1766 (at least) on an upper/posterior surface 1766 thereof.
66. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 includes an above-ground-moisture collector 1821 having a hydrophobic coating (at least) on a posterior surface 1766 thereof.
67. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 includes an above-ground-moisture collector 1821 having a hydrophobic coating (at least) on a lateral surface thereof.
68. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 includes an above-ground-moisture collector 1821 having a latticed layer of wire with numerous holes (i.e. at least 200) therethrough each within an order of magnitude of 0.5 mm in width.
69. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 includes an above-ground-moisture collector 1821 having a latticed layer of wire (a fine mesh, e.g.) with numerous holes therethrough each within an order of magnitude of 0.05 mm in width.
70. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 has a drag coefficient greater than 0.04 and less than 0.5 in flight right before landing.
71. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 has a chamber in which a first propagule of the one or propagules is held and wherein the chamber advantageously balances chamber access with protection (from wind desiccation and propagule predation, e.g.) by having only a single largest opening 1747 larger than 1 square millimeter and smaller than 10 square millimeters.
72. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 includes an above-ground-moisture collector 1821 having a diagonally-extending posterior surface 1766 configured to guide condensed dew 1898 toward an opening 1747 in the first propagule capsule 1810.
73. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 includes an above-ground-moisture collector 1821 having a diagonally-extending posterior surface 1766 configured to deflect falling precipitation 1792 (snow or rain, e.g.) toward an opening 1747 in the first propagule capsule 1810.
74. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 includes an above-ground-moisture collector 1821 configured to contain above-ground water (rain 1892 or an artificial hydration 1894 in a catch basin, e.g.).
75. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 (includes the first below-ground-moisture collector 1822 and) is configured to be deployed aerially from the unmanned vehicle so that the first below-ground-moisture collector 1822 (one or more of housing 1740 or tip 1719, e.g.) penetrates a ground surface 1758 by more than 0.2 millimeters (extending to a depth 1757 of about 1 centimeter, e.g.).
76. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the unmanned vehicle is an unmanned aerial vehicle equipped with a global positioning system (GPS) 171, a hyperspectral image sensor 172, a LIDAR/LADAR sensor 173, an inertial navigation system (INS) processor (implementing CPU 128, e.g.), and a memory unit (memory storage 174, e.g.).
77. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 includes one or more propagules 1707, an anterior protrusion 1649 configured to penetrate a ground surface 1758, and one or more artificial moisture-transfer conduits 1823 adjacent the one or more propagules 1807 configured to allow seepage 1891 to flow therethrough to the one or more propagules 1707.
78. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 contains a cavity 1829 (an air-filled recess, e.g.) larger than 1 milliliter.
79. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the unmanned vehicle includes a staging subassembly 1990 configured (1) to alter the first propagule capsule 1810C before releasing the first propagule capsule 1810C and (2) to alter a second propagule capsule 1810D less than one minute after releasing the first propagule capsule 1810C and less than one minute before releasing the second propagule capsule 1810C.
80. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the unmanned vehicle includes a staging subassembly 1990 configured to alter a composition of the first propagule capsule 1810C before deploying the first propagule capsule 1810C and also configured to alter a composition of a second propagule capsule 1810D less than one minute after deploying the first propagule capsule 1810C and less than one minute before deploying the second propagule capsule 1810C.
81. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the unmanned vehicle includes a staging subassembly 1990 configured to alter a composition of the first propagule capsule 1810C by depositing an injectant 2101 into the first propagule capsule 1810C before deploying (releasing or shooting, e.g.) the first propagule capsule 1810C and also configured to alter a composition of a second propagule capsule 1810D by depositing the injectant 2101 into the second propagule capsule 1810D less than one minute after deploying the first propagule capsule 1810C and less than one minute before deploying the second propagule capsule 1810C.
82. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, comprising a staging subassembly 1990 configured to cut into several propagule capsules 1810 aboard the unmanned vehicle 1530 during a single deployment (flight or planting route, e.g.) of the unmanned vehicle 1530.
83. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, comprising a staging subassembly 1990 configured to puncture several propagule capsules 1810 during a single deployment (flight or planting route, e.g.) of the unmanned vehicle 1530.
84. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, comprising a cartridge 1988 configured to allow a first propagule capsule 1810 to leave the cartridge 1988 while dozens (i.e. at least 24) of other propagule capsules 1810 are all nominally aligned in parallel (in a downwardly diagonal direction 2096, e.g.).
85. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, comprising:
a drone propulsion subassembly 1535 having one or more robotic limbs (propellers 1534 or legs, e.g.) configured to allow the first unmanned vehicle 1530 to ambulate (walk or fly, e.g.); and
a targeting subassembly 1570 having a steerable chute 1978 and one or more actuators (a solenoid or other motor control in gimbal 1989, e.g.) configured to adjust an angle of the steerable chute 1978 relative to the drone propulsion subassembly 1535 by more than one degree in less than 100 milliseconds.
86. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, comprising a staging subassembly 1990 having a plurality of actuators 2133C-D and configured to perform a method comprising:
opening a first valve 2083 so that a propagule capsule 2110 (pushed by loader 2065, e.g.) can approach a staging position;
allowing a first actuator 2133D of the staging subassembly 1990 to engage the propagule capsule 2110 at a staging position;
allowing a second actuator 2133C of the staging subassembly 1990 to engage the propagule capsule 2110 (at one or more side walls thereof, e.g.);
allowing the first actuator 2133D of the staging subassembly 1990 to disengage the propagule capsule 2110 (by moving more than 1 millimeter laterally, e.g.);
aiming a targeting subassembly 1570 of the unmanned vehicle 1530 toward a target 1556 (in consideration of a developed pressure in chamber 2284 and a current angle and direction 2081 of a release chute 1978 thereof; and
allowing the second actuator 2133C of the staging subassembly 1990 to release the propagule capsule 2110.
87. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES,
comprising a staging subassembly 1990 having a plurality of actuators 2133C-D and configured (with special-purpose circuitry thereof, e.g.) to perform a method comprising:
opening a first valve 2083 so that a propagule capsule 2110 (pushed by loader 2065, e.g.) can approach a staging position;
allowing a first actuator 2133D of the staging subassembly 1990 to engage the propagule capsule 2110 at a staging position;
closing the first valve 2083 and allowing an elevated pressure to build up between the first valve 2083 and the propagule capsule 2110 (by opening another valve between a pressurized canister 2062 and chamber 2284, e.g.);
allowing a second actuator 2133C of the staging subassembly 1990 to engage the propagule capsule 2110 (at one or more side walls thereof, e.g.);
allowing the first actuator 2133D of the staging subassembly 1990 to disengage the propagule capsule 2110 (by moving more than 1 millimeter laterally, e.g.);
aiming a targeting subassembly 1570 of the unmanned vehicle 1530 toward a target 1556 (in consideration of a developed pressure in chamber 2284 and a current angle and direction 2081 of a release chute 1978 thereof; and
allowing the second actuator 2133C of the staging subassembly 1990 to release the propagule capsule 2110.
88. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES,
comprising a staging subassembly 1990 having a plurality of actuators 2133A-D and configured to perform a method comprising:
opening a first valve 2083 so that a propagule capsule 2110 (pushed by loader 2065, e.g.) can approach a staging position;
allowing a first actuator 2133D of the staging subassembly 1990 to engage the propagule capsule 2110 at a staging position;
closing the first valve 2083 and allowing an elevated pressure to build up between the first valve 2083 and the propagule capsule 2110 (by opening another valve between a pressurized canister 2062 and chamber 2284, e.g.);
allowing a second actuator 2133B of the staging subassembly 1990 to puncture the propagule capsule 2110 (at one or more side walls thereof, e.g.);
allowing a third actuator 2133A of the staging subassembly 1990 to deposit injectant 2101 (a hydrating liquid or gel, e.g.) into the propagule capsule 2110 via a syringe 2136;
allowing the second actuator 2133B of the staging subassembly 1990 to withdraw the syringe 2136 from the one or more side walls of the propagule capsule 2110;
allowing a fourth actuator 2133C of the staging subassembly 1990 to engage the propagule capsule 2110 (at one or more side walls thereof, e.g.);
allowing the first actuator 2133D of the staging subassembly 1990 to disengage the propagule capsule 2110 (by moving more than 1 millimeter laterally, e.g.);
aiming a targeting subassembly 1570 of the unmanned vehicle 1530 toward a target 1556 (in consideration of a developed pressure in chamber 2284 and a current angle and direction 2081 of a release chute 1978 thereof; and
allowing the fourth actuator 2133C of the staging subassembly 1990 to release the propagule capsule 2110.
89. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a dry weight majority of an artificial moisture-transfer conduit 1823 is a growing medium 1726C configured to undergo a volumetric expansion of more than 20% when hydrated (saturated with water, e.g.).
90. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a dry weight majority of an artificial moisture-transfer conduit 1823 is made of (at least partly) dehydrated compressed peat, a growing medium 1726C configured to undergo a volumetric expansion of more than 20% (a transition like that depicted in
91. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein one or more changes to a structure or composition of a propagule capsule 1810 are made within a staging subassembly 1990 (of an unmanned vehicle 1530, e.g.).
92. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a capsule-containing cartridge 1988 is configured to be opened and wherein one or more propagule capsules 1819 therein are thereby modified inside the cartridge 1988 (by exposing propagule capsules 1810 therein to artificial heating or hydration, e.g.) shortly before a deployment of a first one of the propagule capsules 1810 therein.
93. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a backside 2086 of a capsule-containing cartridge 1988 is configured to be opened (removed, e.g.) and wherein one or more propagule capsules 1819 therein are thereby modified inside the cartridge 1988 (by adding petals 1662, coatings, or other capsule components via posterior openings 1747 thereof, e.g.) within 24 hours of a deployment of a first one of the propagule capsules 1810 therein.
94. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a propagule capsule includes a plurality of coniferous tree seeds as propagules.
95. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a propagule capsule includes a plurality of coniferous tree seeds as propagules.
96. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein an exterior surface 2368A-B of the first propagule capsule 1810 includes a soil-contacting portion of the first below-ground-moisture collector 1822 larger than 1 square centimeter.
97. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein an exterior surface 2368A-B of the first propagule capsule 1810 includes a soil-contacting portion of the first below-ground-moisture collector 1822 larger than 1 square centimeter and configured to absorb more than 5 microliters of liquid per hour from surrounding (adjacent) soil by wicking.
98. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein a weight majority of an endmost portion (a forwardmost part of housing 1740 with tip 1719, e.g.) longer than 0.5 mm of the first propagule capsule 1810 comprises one or more types of natural fiber (wood fiber, e.g.).
99. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein an endmost portion (a forwardmost part of housing 1740 with tip 1719, e.g.) longer than 0.5 mm of the first propagule capsule 1810 has a footprint (a maximum cross-sectional area, e.g.) of about 2 square millimeters.
100. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein an endmost portion (a forwardmost part of housing 1740 with tip 1719, e.g.) longer than 0.5 mm of the first propagule capsule 1810 is porous.
101. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the first propagule capsule 1810 is less than 20% (hydrogel-constituent or other) water by weight when the first propagule capsule 1810 is deployed (fired or otherwise released, e.g.) by the unmanned vehicle 1530.
102. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein more than 15% (by weight) of the first propagule capsule 1810 is a hydrogel when the first propagule capsule 1810 is deployed by the unmanned vehicle 1530.
103. The aerial deployment planting system of any of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein the one or more propagules 1707, 1807 comprise a dormant seed of a coniferous tree (a pine, e.g.).
104. An aerial deployment planting method using any one of the above PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSES, wherein all of the components of that one PLANTING SYSTEM CLAUSE are used in the method.
While various system, method, article of manufacture, or other embodiments or aspects have been disclosed above, also, other combinations of embodiments or aspects will be apparent to those skilled in the art in view of the above disclosure. The various embodiments and aspects disclosed above are for purposes of illustration and are not intended to be limiting, with the true scope and spirit being indicated in the final claim set that follows.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional App. No. 62/240,167 (“Aerial Tree Planting System and Method of Use”) filed 12 Oct. 2015 and to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/292,059 (“Forestry Information Management Systems and Methods Streamlined by Automatic Biometric Data Prioritization”) and incorporates the same herein by reference in their entirety.
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20180263170 A1 | Sep 2018 | US |
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62240167 | Oct 2015 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15292059 | Oct 2016 | US |
Child | 15985392 | US |