Geographical Information System

From Coastal Wiki
Revision as of 11:47, 11 January 2007 by Caitlin (talk | contribs) (CZM and GIS)
Jump to: navigation, search

Geographical Information System (GIS) is a tool for analysis and presentation of spatial data. It is a collection of computer hardware, software and geographic data for capturing, managing, analysing and displaying all forms of geographically referenced information.

What is GIS?

GISdefinition.jpg
Simple definition 
A Geographic Information System organizes large volumes of raw data into a map form for easy comprehension.
GIS divides raw data into layers so it can give you a better understanding for the whole world.









Why is GIS unique?

  • GIS handles SPATIAL information
    • Information referenced by its location in space
Spatialinfo.jpg


GIS functions

  • Data input
  • Storage
  • Management
  • Analysis
  • Output


Storing data using Geodatabase

  • Geodatabase is a container for spatial and non- spatial data that can be organized in a certain structure.
  • Advantages:
    • provide a single, consolidated data storage for field measurements and all types of data used.
    • Controlling data entry by applying validation rule on the attributes.
Geodatabase.jpg


CZM and GIS

  • GIS stores all data relevant for the CZM
  • GIS handles data on all spatial scales (North Egypt coast vs. a single harbour)
  • GIS is a powerful analysis tool.
    • Comparison of measurements from different years
    • Overlay analysis of measurements and modelling results


GISCZM.jpg
Coastal Zone management: GIS perspective

Data types

Dfs1 Data MIKE 21
  • DFS2 Data MIKE 21
  • Dfs1 Data MIKE 21
  • XYZ Data
  • Wave time series & Rose
  • Scanned Maps
  • CAD drawing
CAD drawing

Additional Data

  • Land use
  • Sediment classification
  • Satellite images
  • Geographical maps
  • Reports (design, licenses, Site investigation)
  • ….etc.


External links

Wikipedia: GIS

GIS WWWW resource list of servers likely to be of interest to the GIS community

GIS dictionary

8th January, Ulrik Lumborg and Caitlin Pilkington (caitlin.pilkington@gmail.com), DHI.