Spelling suggestions: "subject:"geographical information systems.""
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Spatial aspects of metaphors for information: implications for polycentric system design /Schroeder, Paul Charles, January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.) in Spatial Information Science and Engineering--University of Maine, 2003. / Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 242-266).
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Evaluating conflicts in the use and development of geographic information systems /Bethell, Amber, January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.) in Spatial Information Science and Engineering--University of Maine, 2002. / Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 99-105).
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WV LTAP PMS integrating GIS with PMS software /Parnicza, Justin W. January 2010 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--West Virginia University, 2010. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains ix, 97 p. : ill. (some col.), col. maps. Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 51).
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A geotemporal framework for hydrologic analysisGoodall, Jonathan Lee 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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The development of a land use decision making model for use on sites with naturally regenerating habitatFreeman, Claire January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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Digital photogrammetry as a means of data capture for GISChing, Siu-tong., 程肇堂. January 2004 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Geography / Master / Master of Geographic Information System
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Critical GIS : theorizing an emerging scienceSchuurman, Nadine Cato 05 1900 (has links)
This research takes as its starting point the past decade of critiques from human geographers, and proposes
an alternate model for appraisals of technology. The first section begins with an analysis of the bases and
motivation of external assessments of GIS. A historiographical account reveals that the critical impulse
among human geographers was not static, but evolved to incorporate greater subtlety based on cooperation
with GIS scholars. Critiques from human geographers, nevertheless, had a profound impact on the
discipline, and practitioners of GIS frequently felt that their perspectives on issues including the roots of
GIS, its epistemological bases, and its ethics had been undervalued by critics. A re-analysis of critiques,
from the perspectives of GIS practitioners, investigates objections to critical accounts of the technology.
The second half of the research builds upon existing critiques and responses to them, but asks the question,
"is there a more constructive means to engage with technology, from a theoretical perspective?" Two
contemporary research questions in GIS are investigated, as a means of establishing a preliminary
methodology for critique that engages with GIS at a conceptual, as well as a technical level. Factors that
have influenced the progress of automated generalization are examined in some detail. The argument is
made that both social and digital parameters define the technology, and it is unproductive to focus on one at
the expense of the other. The second research question concerns data models and the extent to which fields
and objects are inevitable. The case is made that a web of historical and scientific justification has
prevented researchers from seeking alternatives to the atomic and plenum views of space. Finally, an
appeal is made for continued theoretical examination of the technology as part of an effort to develop
geographic information science.
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A client/server-based intelligent GIS shell for transportationJia, Xudong 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Use of GIS, geostatistics, and multilevel modelling for biodiversity action planning : the use of habitat association models for multi-species habitat conservation in the Upper Thames Tributaries Environmentally Sensitive AreaBayliss, Julian Luke January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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The interpretation and characterisation of lineaments identified from Landsat TM imagery of SW EnglandRogers, John David January 1997 (has links)
Two Landsat TM scenes of SW England and a sub-scene of North Cornwall have been analysed visually in order to examine the effect of resolution on lineament interpretation. Images were viewed at several different scales as a result of varying image resolution whilst maintaining a fixed screen pixel size. Lineament analysis at each scale utilised GIS techniques and involved several stages: initial lineament identification and digitisation; removal of lineaments related to anthropogenic features to produce cleansed lineament maps; compilation of lineament attributes using ARC/INFO; cluster analysis for identification of lineament directional families; and line sampling of lineament maps in order to determine spacing. SW England lies within the temperate zone of Europe and the extensive agricultural cover and infrastructure conceal the underlying geology. The consequences of this for lineament analysis were examined using sub-images of North Cornwall. Here anthropogenic features are visible at all resolutions between 30m and 120m pixel sizes but lie outside the observation threshold at 150m. Having confidence that lineaments at this resolution are of non-anthropogenic origin optimises lineament identification since the image may be viewed in greater detail. On this basis, lineament analysis of SW England was performed using image resolutions of 150m. Valuable geological information below the observation threshold in 150m resolution images is likely, however, to be contained in the lineament maps produced from higher resolution images. For images analysed at higher resolutions, therefore, knowledge-based rules were established in order to cleanse the lineament populations. Compiled lineament maps were 'ground truthed' (primarily involving comparison with published geological maps but included phases of field mapping) in order to characterise their geological affinities. The major lineament trends were correlated to lithotectonic boundaries, and cross-cutting fractures sets. Major lineament trends produced distinct frequency/orientation maxima. Multiple minor geological structures, however, produced semi-overlapping groups. A clustering technique was devised to resolve overlapping groups into lineament directional families. The newly defined lineament directional families were further analysed in two ways: (i) Analysis of the spatial density of the length and frequency of lineaments indicates that individual and multiple lineament directional families vary spatially and are compartmentalised into local tectonic domains, often bounded by major lineaments. Hence, such density maps provide useful additional information about the structural framework of SW England. (ii) Lineament spacing and length of the lineament directional families were analysed for the effect of scale and geological causes on their frequency/size distributions. Spacing of fracture lineaments were found to be power-law, whereas lengths showed power-law and non-power-law distributions. Furthermore the type of frequency/size distribution for a lineament directional family can change with increasing resolution.
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