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GEOG. 44535453

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Title: GEOG. 44535453


1
WELCOME !
  • GEOG. 4453/5453
  • Introduction to Geographic Information Systems

2
Introduction to Geographic Information Systems
  • About us
  • Course logistics and expectations
  • Your expectations and what we hope youll achieve
  • What is GIS and Spatial Analysis ?
  • The nature of GIS
  • GIS resources

3
Course Logistics
  • Lectures Tuesday 900-1015 - A236 SEC
  • Labs Thursday 9.00-10.15 - N106 SEC(Grading
    25 )
  • Individual Project due 30 April, 99(Grading
    GEOG4453 - 25 GEOG 5453 - 50)
  • GEOG 4453 - Final Exam - 50(multiple choice,
    worked problems, short essay questions)
  • GEOG 5453 - Literature review due 23 March, 99
    (Grading 25)

4
Lectures
  • Cover material from textbooks
  • Clarke, Keith C. 1998. Getting Started with
    Geographic Information Systems, 2nd edition
  • ESRI 1997. Getting to Know ArcView GIS
  • Also handouts and other media in lectures
  • Course material available at
  • http//parker.gcn.ou.edu/blyons/teachingframe.ht
    ml
  • Support materials on the WWW
  • http//www.prenhall.com/clarke
  • (Chapter summaries, Resource Guide, Glossary,
    Sample assignments and study questions)

5
Laboratory classes
  • Seven lab assignments using ArcView GIS software
    (No prior knowledge of ARCView is assumed)
  • Well effectively do the ESRI ARCView course
  • Lab Manuals/Online help for ArcView
  • All data and printed lab assignments supplied
  • All labs must be completed for grade (due one
    week after scheduled class)

6
Projects
  • Use your knowledge of GIS and Spatial Analysis to
    examine real-world issues
  • We have suggested some topics for you
  • (can choose others - particularly graduate
    students)
  • All data needed for topics is available
  • Scheduled lab sessions for you to work on
    projects
  • Might like to present as a poster report
  • Due 30 April for all students(Note the different
    requirements and grading for Geog. 4453 Geog.
    5453)

7
What will I learn?
  • An overview of GIS
  • How GIS data are captured, stored, retrieved,
    analysed displayed
  • Where to go for more information
  • GIS software and its functionality
  • Where GIS is going
  • How to use a basic GIS (ArcView)

8
What is GIS and spatial analysis ?
  • Getting Started
  • Some Definitions of GIS
  • A Brief History of GIS
  • Sources of Information on GIS

9
What is a GIS?
  • What in the world is a "GIS"?
  • Item on the Internet's
  • comp.infosystems.gis FAQ.
  • GISs are simultaneously the telescope, the
  • microscope, the computer, and the Xerox
  • machine of regional analysis and synthesis
  • of spatial data. (Ron Abler, 1988)

Clarke chapter 1 ESRI chapter 1
10
G, I, and S
  • G geographic
  • spatial data
  • geo-referenced
  • I information
  • databases
  • representations
  • S systems
  • users
  • hardware
  • software

11
What is spatial analysis ?
  • GIS is about linking our information to
    location(or bringing the where to bear on the
    what)
  • Spatial analysis is a collection of statistical
    techniques to explore and understand data and its
    structure
  • Helps us disclose the hard-to-see patterns and to
    examine associations in space and time across
    disparate data sets
  • A new way of integrating information

12
Where Did GIS Come From?
  • GIS is built upon knowledge from geography,
    cartography, computer science and mathematics.
  • Geographic Information Science is a new
    interdisciplinary field built out of the use and
    theory of GIS.

13
Defining GIS
  • Different definitions of a GIS have evolved in
    different areas and disciplines.
  • All GIS definitions recognize that spatial data
    are unique because they are linked to maps.
  • A GIS at least consists of a database, map
    information, and a computer-based link between
    them.

14
Spatial and non-spatial data
15
Definition 1 A GIS is a toolbox
  • "a powerful set of tools for storing and
    retrieving at will, transforming and displaying
    spatial data from the real world for a
    particular set of purposes"
  • (Burrough, 1986, p. 6).
  • "automated systems for the capture, storage,
    retrieval, analysis, and display of spatial
    data." (Clarke, 1995, p. 13).

16
Definition 2 A GIS is an information system
  • "An information system that is designed to work
    with data referenced by spatial or geographic
    coordinates. In other words, a GIS is both a
    database system with specific capabilities for
    spatially-referenced data, as well as a set of
    operations for working with the data" (Star and
    Estes, 1990, p. 2).

17
Map Overlay
18
Duecker's 1979 definition (p. 20) has survived
the test of time.
  • "A geographic information system is a special
    case of information systems where the database
    consists of observations on spatially distributed
    features, activities or events, which are
    definable in space as points, lines, or areas. A
    geographic information system manipulates data
    about these points, lines, and areas to retrieve
    data for ad hoc queries and analyses" (Duecker,
    1979, p 106).

19
The Feature Model
  • Duecker's definition uses the feature model of
    geographic space.
  • The standard feature model divides a mapped
    landscape up into features, that can be points,
    lines, or areas.
  • Using a GIS involves capturing the spatial
    distribution of features by measurement of the
    world or of maps.
  • Almost all human activity and natural phenomena
    are spatially distributed, so can be studied
    using a GIS.
  • A GIS uses map features to manage data.

20
The Feature Model
21
Whither GIS ?
  • A GIS is flexible enough to be used for ad hoc
    query and analysis.
  • A GIS can do analysis, modeling and prediction.

22
Definition 3 GIS is an approach to science
  • Geographic Information Science is research both
    on and with GIS.
  • "the generic issues that surround the use of GIS
    technology, impede its successful implementation,
    or emerge from an understanding of its potential
    capabilities."
  • (Goodchild, 1992)

23
Solving and Visualising Complex Problems
24
Definition 4 GIS is a multi-million dollar
business.
  • The growth of GIS has been a marketing
    phenomenon of amazing breadth and depth and will
    remain so for many years to come. Clearly, GIS
    will integrate its way into our everyday life to
    such an extent that it will soon be impossible to
    imagine how we functioned before

25
A Brief History of GIS
  • GISs origins lie in thematic cartography.
  • Many planners used the method of map overlay
    using manual techniques.
  • Manual map overlay as a method was first
    described comprehensively by Jacqueline Tyrwhitt
    in a 1950 planning textbook.
  • McHarg used blacked out transparent overlays for
    site selection in Design with Nature.

26
A Brief History of GIS (ctd)
  • The 1960s saw many new forms of geographic data
    and mapping software.
  • Computer cartography developed the first basic
    GIS concepts during the late 1950s and 1960s.
  • Linked software modules, rather than stand-alone
    programs, preceded GISs.
  • Early influential data sets were the CIA World
    Data Bank and the GBF/DIME files.
  • The Harvard University Odyssey system was
    influential due to its topological arc-node
    (vector) data structure.

27
A Brief History of GIS (ctd)
  • GIS was significantly altered by (1) the PC and
    (2) the workstation.
  • During the 1980s, new GIS software could better
    exploit more advanced hardware.
  • User Interface developments led to GIS's vastly
    improved ease of use during the 1990s.
  • During the 1980s, new GIS software could better
    exploit more advanced hardware.

28
Sources of Information on GIS
  • The amount of information available about GIS can
    be overwhelming.
  • Sources of GIS information include journals and
    magazines, books, professional societies, the
    World Wide Web, and conferences.
  • GIS has Web Home pages, network conference
    groups, professional organizations, and user
    groups.
  • Most colleges and universities now offer GIS
    classes in geography departments.

29
WWW Resources USGS
30
GIS Resources Conferences
31
GIS Resources Glossies
32
Major GIS-Only Journals
  • International Journal of Geographical
    Information Science
  • Geographical Systems
  • Transactions in GIS
  • Geo Info Systems
  • GIS World

33
Specialty Journals
  • Business Geographics
  • GIS Law
  • GrassClippings
  • GIS Asia/Pacific
  • GIS World Report/CANADA
  • GIS Europe
  • Mapping Awareness

34
Regular GIS Papers
  • Annals of the Association of American Geographers
  • Cartographica
  • Cartography and GIS
  • Computer Computers, Environment, and Urban
    Systems
  • Computers and Geosciences
  • IEEE Transactions on Computer Graphics and
    Applications
  • Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing

35
Occasional GIS papers
  • Cartographic Perspectives
  • Cartographica
  • Journal of Cartography
  • Geocarto International
  • IEEE Geosciences
  • International Journal of Remote Sensing
  • Landscape Ecology
  • Remote Sensing Review
  • Mapping Science and Remote Sensing
  • Infoworld

36
Popular Distribution Magazines
  • Business geographics
  • Geo info systems
  • GIS law
  • GIS world
  • GPS World
  • Mapping awareness/Mapping awareness and GIS in
    Europe.

37
Proceedings of Conferences
  • AUTOCARTO International Symposium on Automated
    Cartography.
  • GIS/LIS. Sponsored by AAG, ACSM, AM/FM, ASPRS,
    URISA. Held every year.
  • International Advanced Study Symposium on
    Topological Data Structures for Geographic
    Information Systems.
  • Proceedings International Symposium on Spatial
    Data Handling. IGU Commission on GIS.
  • SSD Advances in spatial databases

38
Professional Organisations
  • AM/FM International Automated Mapping and
    Facilities Management.
  • AAG The Association of American Geographers.
  • ACSM American Congress on Surveying and Mapping.
  • ASPRS American Society for Photogrammetry and
    Remote Sensing.
  • NACIS North American Cartographic Information
    Society.
  • URISA Urban and Regional Information Systems
    Association.

39
Related Terms
  • Automated Mapping and Facility Mapping (AM/FM)
  • Artificial Intelligence (AI)
  • Computer Aided Design or Computer Aided Drafting
    Design (CAD or CADD)
  • Computer Cartography (CC)
  • Emergency Information Systems (EIS)
  • Expert Systems (ES)
  • Geomatics
  • Land Information Systems (LIS)
  • Spatial Information Systems (SIS)
  • Spatial Decision Support Systems (SDSS)

40
Internet Resources (1/2)
  • USGS Geo Data http//edcwww.cr.usgs.gov/doc/edcho
    me/ndcdb/ndcdb.html
  • OK USGS http//csdokokl.cr.usgs.gov/index.html
  • NSDI http//www.fgdc.gov/NSDI/Nsdi.html
  • TIGER http//www.census.gov/geo/www/tiger/
  • ICPSR http//www.icpsr.umich.edu/archive1.html
  • EPA http//www.epa.gov/epahome/Data.html
  • FGDC http//www.fgdc.gov
  • NHD at FGDC http//nhd.fgdc.gov/

41
Internet Resources (2/2)
  • SEIC http//www.seic.okstate.edu/
  • NRCS http//www.nrcs.usda.gov/
  • OK NRCS http//www.ok.nrcs.usda.gov/index.htm
  • NWCC at NRCS http//www.wcc.nrcs.usda.gov/
  • NCGIA www.ncgia.org
  • UCGIS www.ucgis.org
  • ESRI www.esri.com
  • AAG GIS specialty group http//www.cla.sc.edu/gi
    s/aaggis.html

42
References (1/2)
  • Burrough, P. A. (1986) Principles of Geographical
    Information Systems for Land Resources
    Assessment. Oxford University Press, New York.
  • Calkins, H. W. and R. F. Tomlinson (1977)
    Geographic Information Systems Methods and
    Equipment for Land Use Planning. International
    Geographic Union Commission on Geographical Data
    Sensing and Processing. Resource and Land
    Investigations (RALI) Programs, U.S.G.S., Reston,
    Virginia.
  • Clark, K. (1990) Analytical and Computer
    Cartography, Prentice Hall, New Jersey.
  • Cowen, D. (1988) GIS vs. CAD vs. DBMS What are
    the Differences? Photogrammetric Engineering and
    Remote Sensing, 54 1551-1555.

43
References (2/2)
  • Goodchild, M. F. (1985) Geographic Information
    Systems in Undergraduate Geography A
    Contemporary Dilemma. The Operational Geographer,
    834-38.
  • Goodchild, M. F. 1992 Geographical information
    science. International Journal of Geographical
    Information Systems, 6(1) 31-45.
  • Laurini, R. and D. Thompson (1993) Fundamentals
    of Spatial Information Systems. Academic Press.
  • Star, J. and J. Estes (1988) Geographic
    Information Systems An Introduction. Prentice
    Hall, New Jersey.
  • Tomlin, C. D. (1990) Geographic Information
    Systems and Cartographic Modeling. Prentice Hall,
    New Jersey.
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