Geographic Information System (GIS).

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Introduction to Geographic Information System
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Presentation transcript:

Geographic Information System (GIS)

GIS: What is it? Any computer-based manipulation, analysis, or presentation of geographical data Common data for land cover applications includes: -roads -lakes and rivers -land use (forestry, mining, residential neighbourhood, etc.) GIS now has a wide variety of applications

GIS: What is it? The key to all data in a GIS is that it is georeferenced, meaning it has a known location. All information in a GIS has an attribute (What it is.) and a location (Where it is.) GIS is ultimately a problem solving/decision making tool.

GIS: Database Structure A GIS database is comprised of layers (themes) and attributes Example: Layer-Forest cover Attributes-tree species (overstory) -height (m) -canopy closure (%) -understory species -age Can you think of attributes for a “roads” layer?

GIS: Database Structure Information in a GIS is stored in four ways, depending on the feature. Points: hospitals, oil wells, phone booths Lines: roads, streams/rivers, railroads Polygons (Areas): crop fields, forest stands Pixels: for raster-based GIS

GIScience Geographic Information Sciences GIS is only one discipline of GISciences-the analysis, problem solving, decision making, and modelling How do we get the data into a GIS? . . . This is where GIScience becomes important

GIScience Cartography-the art and science of map making Geodesy-the science and accurate measurement of the earth Surveying-the science and accurate measurement of natural and man- made features on the Earth Photogrammetry-the science of measurement from photographs and images

GIScience GPS-the accurate collection of positional information Laser Altimetry-the accurate measurement of height from the air (trees, buildings, etc.) Remote Sensing-the science of Earth observation from space Image Processing-the science of analyzing imagery to gain useful

Areas of Practical Application Natural-Resource Applications *natural resource inventories (FRI) *water quality, level, flow management *environmental assessment and EIA *viewshed/viewscape analysis *groundwater modelling, hydrology analysis *wildlife habitat analysis, migration routes, etc.

Areas of Practical Application Land (Parcel) Applications *zoning, tracking urban sprawl *land acquisition, land ownership Facilities/Utilities Management *locating underground cables and pipes *municipal telephone systems *tracking energy use

Areas of Practical Application Network Analysis *web/network analysis and mapping *least cost path analysis (ambulance, other services) *address matching *vehicle scheduling and routing (delivery) *location analysis/site selection

GIS Subsystems Data Processing Subsystem *data acquisition - from maps, images or field surveys *data input - data must be input from source material to the digital database *data storage - how often is it used, how should it be updated, is it confidential?

GIS Subsystems Data Analysis Subsystem *retrieval and analysis - may be simple responses to queries, or complex statistical analyses of large sets of data *information output - how to display the results? as maps or tables? Or will the information be fed into some other digital system?

GIS Subsystems Information Use Subsystem *users may be researchers, planners, managers interaction needed between GIS group and users to plan analytical procedures and data structures Management Subsystem *organizational role - GIS section is often organized as a separate unit within a resource management agency offering spatial database and analysis services *error management *GIS management staff

GIS Subsystems Data Processing Subsystem *data acquisition - from maps, images or field surveys *data input - data must be input from source material to the digital database *data storage - how often is it used, how should it be updated, is it confidential?