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Introduction To Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Lesson 1

Geographic Information Systems (GIS) allow users to analyze and display spatial data. GIS is used by governments, private companies, non-profits, and academics to create maps, conduct environmental impact assessments, and support land use planning and resource management. A GIS stores geographic data in layers that can be linked together, with each layer containing attributes about features. Data is represented as vectors or rasters and stored along with metadata in a geodatabase. Spatial data infrastructures facilitate sharing of geographic knowledge and data between citizens, inventory systems, and decision makers.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
75 views22 pages

Introduction To Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Lesson 1

Geographic Information Systems (GIS) allow users to analyze and display spatial data. GIS is used by governments, private companies, non-profits, and academics to create maps, conduct environmental impact assessments, and support land use planning and resource management. A GIS stores geographic data in layers that can be linked together, with each layer containing attributes about features. Data is represented as vectors or rasters and stored along with metadata in a geodatabase. Spatial data infrastructures facilitate sharing of geographic knowledge and data between citizens, inventory systems, and decision makers.

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Introduction to

Geographic Information
Systems (GIS)

Lesson 1.

Amriddin Samiev, Ph.D.


TSPU,
Hungary 2012
Outlines

Introduction
Who use GIS? & what can we do with
GIS
How does GIS work?
Geography database & types of data
Features of GIS
SDI
summary
We Live in Two Worlds
Natural World Constructed World

Self-Regulating Managed

. . . These Are Increasingly In Conflict


Context and Content
Seeing the Whole Managing Places

Patterns Watersheds
Linkages Communities
Trends Neighborhoods
Districts
What is GIS?

1
Geographic Information System (GIS) is a
computer-based system including software,
hardware, people, and geographic information

A GIS can:
create, edit, query, analyze, and display
map information on the computer
Geographic Information System

Geographic 80% of government data collected is


associated with some location in space

Information - attributes, or the


characteristics (data), can be used to symbolize and
provide further insight into a given location

System a seamless operation linking the


information to the geography which requires
hardware, networks, software, data, and operational
procedures

not just software!


not just for making maps!
Who uses GIS?
International organizations
UN HABITAT, The World Bank, UNEP, FAO, WHO,
etc.
Private industry
Transport, Real Estate, Insurance, etc.
Government
Ministries of Environment, Housing, Agriculture,
etc.
Local Authorities, Cities, Municipalities, etc.
Provincial Agencies for Planning, Parks,
Transportation, etc.
Non-profit organizations/NGOs
World Resources Institute, ICMA, etc.
Academic and Research Institutions
Smithsonian Institution, CIESIN, etc.
What can you do with a GIS?

The possibilities are unlimited


Environmental impact assessment
Resource management
Land use planning
Tax Mapping
Water and Sanitation Mapping
Transportation routing
and more ...
How does a GIS work?
GIS data has a spatial/geographic
reference

This might be a reference that


describes a feature on the earth using:

a latitude & longitude


a national coordinate system
an address
a district
a wetland identifier
a road name
Geography and Databases
A GIS stores information about the
world as a collection of thematic layers
that can be linked together by
geography

Polygon 3 Scrub 17 Very high Clay


GIS provides Data Integration

107
Vectors
Topology Dimensions
Roads
Land Parcels Surveys
Population ABC
Utilities Networks
Land Mines Images Annotation
Hospitals CAD
Refugee Camps 27 Main St.
Drawings
Wells
Sanitation 3D Objects
Addresses Attributes
Terrain
Two fundamental types of data
Vector
A series of x,y coordinates
For discrete data represented as points, lines,
polygons
Raster
Grid and cells
For continuous data such as elevation, slope,
surfaces

A Desktop GIS should be able to handle both


types of data effectively!
Data Representation

Raster

Vector

Real World
Other features of a GIS
Produce good cartographic products
(translation = maps)
Generate and maintain metadata
Use and share geoprocessing models
Managing data in a geodatabase
using data models for each sector
Hint having GIS software does
not a cartographer make!
Good to know something about
these issues when creating a
map and doing spatial analysis
Scale/Resolution
Projection
Basic cartographic principles
regarding design, generalization,
etc.
Spatial Data Infrastructure
(SDI)

Definition - the technology, policies,


standards, human resources, and
related activities necessary to
acquire, process, distribute, use,
maintain, and preserve spatial data

Part of many nations e-Gov strategy

www.GSDI.org
Citizens

Inventory

Geographic
Knowledge The World

Decision Support
World Summit on
Sustainable Development
2002

Promote the development and


wider use of earth observation
technologies, including satellite
remote sensing, global mapping
and geographic information
systems, to collect quality data on
environmental impacts, land use
and land use changes.
Achieving the MDGs
requires all of us

working together
Thank You!

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