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Title: Geographic Information Systems GIS SGO1910


1
Geographic Information Systems (GIS)SGO1910
SGO4030 Fall 2006
2
Announcements
  • WUN GIS Seminar "Representations of space-time
    in GIS" by Donna Pequet, Penn State University
  • Date Wednesday, October 18, 17.00-19.00
  • Place UB (Georg Sverdrups hus) room 3514.
  • For more information on this series
    http//www.wun.ac.uk/ggisa/seminars.html

3
http//www.wun.ac.uk/ggisa/seminars.html
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6
Other Resources
  • GIS Club
  • GIS Day November 15, 2006
  • ESRI Brukerkonferanse (February 2007)

7
Midterm Quizzes
  • The first quiz will be handed back to you at the
    end of class today.
  • The next midterm quiz is in two weeks (on Oct.
    31), and will cover chapters 6,9,10,12 and three
    lectures.

8
  • 22. Geographic techniques can be applied to
    non-geographic spaces. True
  • But many of the methods used in GIS are also
    applicable to other non-geographic spaces,
    including the surfaces of other planets, the
    space of the cosmos, and the space of the human
    body that is captured by medical images (p. 8)

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10
  • Jeg er malerikonservator. I 2004-2005 designet og
    ledet jeg et prosjekt på Munch-museet som skulle
    svare på to spørsmål hva vil det koste å sette
    kommunens Munch-malerier i stand, og hvordan skal
    arbeidet prioriteres. Kommunen eier omlag 1150
    Munch-malerier, og alle skulle vurderes i dette
    prosjektet, kalt Konserveringsplanprosjektet.
  • Til å tilstandsregistrere og tidsberegne
    behandlingen av maleriene brukte jeg GIS ArcView.
    Prioriteringen av behandlingen av Munch-maleriene
    ble utarbeidet som en matrise basert på
    kunsthistorisk verdi og tilstand (GIS).

11
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12
Painting on church ceiling (1270 AD) -- Vestre
Slidre, Oppland
13
Oslo Project
  • The aim of this project is to integrate what you
    have learned in GIS lectures and labs through
    practical experience. Working in groups of three
    or four, you will address a spatial issue in Oslo
    (e.g. resource distribution, inequality) through
    the collection, mapping and analysis of data,
    which will then be presented in a concise
    professional report that is no more than 12 pages
    long, including maps and references.

14
Groups
  • You may select your own group, or we can create
    groups for you. Groups should be established over
    the next two weeks send me an email when your
    group is formed.
  • Graduate students have the option of doing an
    independent project related to their own
    research, or the Oslo project in a group.

15
Acquiring Map Data
  • Data sources in Norway

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19
Global Positioning Systems (GPS)
  • Sources of information
  • http//www.trimble.com/gps/
  • http//www.colorado.edu/geography/gcraft/notes/gps
    /gps.htmlDODSystem
  • http//home.no.net/perfrode/Kart/hva_er_gps_paa_no
    rsk.htm

20
GPS is a Satellite Navigation System
  • GPS is funded by and controlled by the U. S.
    Department of Defense (DOD). While there are many
    thousands of civil users of GPS world-wide, the
    system was designed for and is operated by the U.
    S. military.
  • GPS provides specially coded satellite signals
    that can be processed in a GPS receiver, enabling
    the receiver to compute position, velocity and
    time.
  • Four GPS satellite signals are used to compute
    positions in three dimensions and the time offset
    in the receiver clock.

21
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22
Space Segment
  • The Space Segment of the system consists of the
    GPS satellites. These space vehicles (SVs) send
    radio signals from space.

23
Space Segment (cont)
  • The nominal GPS Operational Constellation
    consists of 24 satellites that orbit the earth in
    12 hours.
  • The satellite orbits repeat almost the same
    ground track (as the earth turns beneath them)
    once each day. The orbit altitude is such that
    the satellites repeat the same track and
    configuration over any point approximately each
    24 hours (4 minutes earlier each day).
  • There are six orbital planes (with nominally four
    SVs in each), equally spaced (60 degrees apart),
    and inclined at about fifty-five degrees with
    respect to the equatorial plane.
  • This constellation provides the user with between
    five and eight SVs visible from any point on the
    earth.

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26
GPS Satellites Name NAVSTAR Manufacturer
Rockwell International Altitude 10,900 nautical
miles Weight 1900 lbs (in orbit) Size17 ft
with solar panels extended Orbital Period 12
hours Orbital Plane 55 degrees to equatorial
plane Planned Lifespan 7.5 years Current
constellation 24 Block II production satellites
Future satellites 21 Block IIrs developed by
Martin Marietta
27
Latest Development
  • Galileo, Europe's contribution to the Global
    Navigation Satellite System (GNSS), is creating a
    buzz in the Global Positioning Systems (GPS)
    applications market. With its advantages of
    signal reliability and integrity, it is poised to
    drive European GPS applications markets. Unlike
    its US counterpart, Galileo is envisioned as
    being independent of military control and is
    expected to be harnessed for widespread
    commercial and civilian purposes. (Space Daily,
    Dec. 18, 2003)

28
From Wikipedia
  • The system should be operational by 2010, two
    years later than originally anticipated.
  • The European Commission had some difficulty
    trying to secure funding for the next stage of
    the Galileo project. European states were wary of
    investing the necessary funds at a time of
    economic difficulty, when national budgets were
    being threatened across Europe. Following the
    September 11, 2001 attacks, the United States
    Government wrote to the European Union opposing
    the project, arguing that it would end the
    ability of the U.S. to shut down GPS in times of
    military operations. On January 17, 2002 a
    spokesman for the project somberly stated that,
    as a result of U.S. pressure and economic
    difficulties, "Galileo is almost dead." 1
  • A few months later, however, the situation
    changed dramatically. Partially in reaction to
    the pressure exerted by the U.S. Government,
    European Union member states decided it was
    important to have their own independent
    satellite-based positioning and timing
    infrastructure. All European member states became
    strongly in favour of the Galileo system in late
    2002 and, as a result, the project actually
    became over-funded, which posed a completely new
    set of problems for the European Space Agency
    (ESA), as a way had to be found to convince the
    member states to reduce the funding.

29
A Happy Ending??
  • In June 2004, in signed agreement with the United
    States, the European Union has agreed to switch
    to a range of frequencies known as Binary Offset
    Carrier 1.1, which will allow both European and
    American forces to block each other's signals in
    the battlefield without disabling the entire
    system. The European Union also agreed to address
    the "mutual concerns related to the protection of
    allied and U.S. national security capabilities.
  • International involvement China, Israel,
    Ukraine, South Korea, India, Morocco, Saudia
    Arabia, etc.

30
Control Segment
  • The Control Segment consists of a system of
    tracking stations located around the world.

31
The Master Control facility is located at
Schriever Air Force Base (formerly Falcon AFB) in
Colorado. These monitor stations measure signals
from the SVs which are incorporated into orbital
models for each satellites. The models compute
precise orbital data (ephemeris) and SV clock
corrections for each satellite. The Master
Control station uploads ephemeris and clock data
to the SVs. The SVs then send subsets of the
orbital ephemeris data to GPS receivers over
radio signals.
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33
User Segment
  • The GPS User Segment consists of the GPS
    receivers and the user community. GPS receivers
    convert SV signals into position, velocity, and
    time estimates. Four satellites are required to
    compute the four dimensions of X, Y, Z (position)
    and Time. GPS receivers are used for navigation,
    positioning, time dissemination, and other
    research.
  • Navigation in three dimensions is the primary
    function of GPS. Navigation receivers are made
    for aircraft, ships, ground vehicles, and for
    hand carrying by individuals.

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36
  • Precise positioning is possible using GPS
    receivers at reference locations providing
    corrections and relative positioning data for
    remote receivers. Surveying, geodetic control,
    and plate tectonic studies are examples.

37
Here's how GPS works in five logical steps
  • The basis of GPS is "triangulation" from
    satellites.
  • To "triangulate," a GPS receiver measures
    distance using the travel time of radio signals.
  • To measure travel time, GPS needs very accurate
    timing which it achieves with some tricks.
  • Along with distance, you need to know exactly
    where the satellites are in space. High orbits
    and careful monitoring are the secret.
  • Finally you must correct for any delays the
    signal experiences as it travels through the
    atmosphere.

38
Triangulating
  • Position is calculated from distance measurements
    (ranges) to satellites. 
  • Mathematically we need four satellite ranges to
    determine exact position. 
  • Three ranges are enough if we reject ridiculous
    answers or use other tricks. 
  • Another range is required for technical reasons
    to be discussed later.

39
Measuring Distance
  • Distance to a satellite is determined by
    measuring how long a radio signal takes to reach
    us from that satellite. 
  • To make the measurement we assume that both the
    satellite and our receiver are generating the
    same pseudo-random codes at exactly the same
    time. 
  • By comparing how late the satellite's
    pseudo-random code appears compared to our
    receiver's code, we determine how long it took to
    reach us. 
  • Multiply that travel time by the speed of light
    and you've got distance.

40
Getting Perfect Timing
  • Accurate timing is the key to measuring distance
    to satellites. 
  • Satellites are accurate because they have atomic
    clocks on board. 
  • Receiver clocks don't have to be too accurate
    because an extra satellite range measurement can
    remove errors.

41
2005 Nobel Prize in Physics
  • Two physicists (Hall and Haensch) shared the
    Nobel Prize in Physics for advancing the
    development of laser-based precision
    spectroscopy, a field that opens the way to the
    next generation of global positioning system
    (GPS) navigation and ultra-precise atomic clocks.

42
Satellite Positions
  • To use the satellites as references for range
    measurements we need to know exactly where they
    are. 
  • GPS satellites are so high up their orbits are
    very predictable. 
  • Minor variations in their orbits are measured by
    the U.S. Department of Defense. 
  • The error information is sent to the satellites,
    to be transmitted along with the timing signals.

43
  • Three satellites could be used determine three
    position dimensions with a perfect receiver
    clock. In practice this is rarely possible and
    three SVs are used to compute a two-dimensional,
    horizontal fix (in latitude and longitude) given
    an assumed height. This is often possible at sea
    or in altimeter equipped aircraft.
  • Five or more satellites can provide position,
    time and redundancy. More SVs can provide extra
    position fix certainty and can allow detection of
    out-of-tolerance signals under certain
    circumstances.

44
  • Position in XYZ is converted within the receiver
    to geodetic latitude, longitude and height above
    the ellipsoid.
  • Latitude and longitude are usually provided in
    the geodetic datum on which GPS is based
    (WGS-84). Receivers can often be set to convert
    to other user-required datums. Position offsets
    of hundreds of meters can result from using the
    wrong datum.

45
GPS errors are a combination of noise, bias,
blunders.
46
Selective Availability (SA)
  • SA is the intentional degradation of the SPS
    signals by a time varying bias. SA is controlled
    by the DOD to limit accuracy for non-U. S.
    military and government users.
  • SA was turned off in May, 2000!

47
Bias Error sources
  • SV clock errors uncorrected by Control Segment
    1 meter
  • Ephemeris data errors 1 meter
  • Tropospheric delays 1 meter. The troposphere is
    the lower part (ground level to from 8 to 13 km)
    of the atmosphere that experiences the changes in
    temperature, pressure, and humidity associated
    with weather changes. Complex models of
    tropospheric delay require estimates or
    measurements of these parameters.
  • Unmodeled ionosphere delays 10 meters. The
    ionosphere is the layer of the atmosphere from 50
    to 500 km that consists of ionized air. The
    transmitted model can only remove about half of
    the possible 70 ns of delay leaving a ten meter
    un-modeled residual.
  • Multipath 0.5 meters. Multipath is caused by
    reflected signals from surfaces near the receiver
    that can either interfere with or be mistaken for
    the signal that follows the straight line path
    from the satellite. Multipath is difficult to
    detect and sometime hard to avoid.

48
Blunders can result in errors of hundred of
kilometers.
  • Control segment mistakes due to computer or human
    error can cause errors from one meter to hundreds
    of kilometers.
  • User mistakes, including incorrect geodetic datum
    selection, can cause errors from 1 to hundreds of
    meters.
  • Receiver errors from software or hardware
    failures can cause blunder errors of any size.

49
Correcting Errors
  • The earth's ionosphere and atmosphere cause
    delays in the GPS signal that translate into
    position errors.
  • Some errors can be factored out using mathematics
    and modeling. 
  • The configuration of the satellites in the sky
    can magnify other errors. 
  • Differential GPS can eliminate almost all error.

50
  • GPS technology has matured into a resource that
    goes far beyond its original design goals. These
    days scientists, sportsmen, farmers, soldiers,
    pilots, surveyors, hikers, delivery drivers,
    sailors, dispatchers, lumberjacks, fire-fighters,
    and people from many other walks of life are
    using GPS in ways that make their work more
    productive, safer, and sometimes even easier.

51
Location Where am I?
  • The first and most obvious application of GPS is
    the simple determination of a "position" or
    location. GPS is the first positioning system to
    offer highly precise location data for any point
    on the planet, in any weather. That alone would
    be enough to qualify it as a major utility, but
    the accuracy of GPS and the creativity of its
    users is pushing it into some surprising realms.

52
Navigation Where am I going?
  • GPS helps you determine exactly where you are,
    but sometimes important to know how to get
    somewhere else. GPS was originally designed to
    provide navigation information for ships and
    planes. So it's no surprise that while this
    technology is appropriate for navigating on
    water, it's also very useful in the air and on
    the land.
  • The sea, one of our oldest channels of
    transportation, has been revolutionized by GPS,
    the newest navigation technology.

53
  • By providing more precise navigation tools and
    accurate landing systems, GPS not only makes
    flying safer, but also more efficient. With
    precise point-to-point navigation, GPS saves fuel
    and extends an aircraft's range by ensuring
    pilots don't stray from the most direct routes to
    their destinations.
  • GPS accuracy will also allow closer aircraft
    separations on more direct routes, which in turn
    means more planes can occupy our limited
    airspace. This is especially helpful when you're
    landing a plane in the middle of mountains. And
    small medical evac helicopters benefit from the
    extra minutes saved by the accuracy of GPS
    navigation.

54
  • Finding your way across the land is an ancient
    art and science. The stars, the compass, and good
    memory for landmarks helped you get from here to
    there. Even advice from someone along the way
    came into play. But, landmarks change, stars
    shift position, and compasses are affected by
    magnets and weather. And if you've ever sought
    directions from a local, you know it can just add
    to the confusion. The situation has never been
    perfect.
  • Today hikers, bikers, skiers, and drivers apply
    GPS to the age-old challenge of finding their
    way.

55
  • In 1994 Norwegian Borge Ousland reached the
    North Pole after skiing 1000 kilometers from
    Siberia alone and unsupported. For this
    incredible challenge Børge carried a bible to
    read, some Jimi Hendrix to listen to, and a
    Trimble Scout GPS receiver to help find his way.

56
Tracking
  • Commerce relies on fleets of vehicles to deliver
    goods and services either across a crowded city
    or through nationwide corridors. So, effective
    fleet management has direct bottom-line
    implications, such as telling a customer when a
    package will arrive, spacing buses for the best
    scheduled service, directing the nearest
    ambulance to an accident, or helping tankers
    avoid hazards.
  • GPS used in conjunction with communication links
    and computers can benefit applications in
    agriculture, mass transit, urban delivery, public
    safety, and vessel and vehicle tracking. So it's
    no surprise that police, ambulance, and fire
    departments are adopting GPS-based AVL (Automatic
    Vehicle Location) Manager to pinpoint both the
    location of the emergency and the location of the
    nearest response vehicle on a computer map. With
    this kind of clear visual picture of the
    situation, dispatchers can react immediately and
    confidently.

57
Timing
  • Although GPS is well-known for locating,
    navigation, and tracking, it's also used to
    disseminate precise time, time intervals, and
    frequency. Time is a powerful commodity, and
    exact time is more powerful still. Knowing that a
    group of timed events is perfectly synchronized
    is often very important. GPS makes the job of
    "synchronizing our watches" easy and reliable.
  • There are three fundamental ways we use time. As
    a universal marker, time tells us when things
    happened or when they will. As a way to
    synchronize people, events, even other types of
    signals, time helps keep the world on schedule.
    And as a way to tell how long things last, time
    provides and accurate, unambiguous sense of
    duration.
  • GPS satellites carry highly accurate atomic
    clocks. And in order for the system to work, our
    GPS receivers here on the ground synchronize
    themselves to these clocks. That means that every
    GPS receiver is, in essence, an atomic accuracy
    clock.

58
Mapping
  • Using GPS to survey and map it precisely saves
    time and money in this most stringent of all
    applications. Today, GPS makes it possible for a
    single surveyor to accomplish in a day what used
    to take weeks with an entire team. And they can
    do their work with a higher level of accuracy
    than ever before.
  • GPS technology is now the method of choice for
    performing control surveys, and the effect on
    surveying in general has been considerable. GPS
    pinpoints a position, a route, and a fleet of
    vehicles. Mapping is the art and science of using
    GPS to locate items, then create maps and models
    of everything in the world. Mountains, rivers,
    forests and other landforms. Roads, routes, and
    city streets. Endangered animals, precious
    minerals and all sorts of resources. Damage and
    disasters, trash and archeological treasures. GPS
    is mapping the world.

59
Geographic Databases
60
A GIS can answer the question What is where?
  • WHAT Characteristics of attributes or features.
  • WHERE In geographic space.

61
A GIS links attribute and spatial data
  • Attribute Data
  • Flat File
  • Relations
  • Map Data
  • Point File
  • Line File
  • Area File
  • Topology

62
Flat File Database
Attribute
Attribute
Attribute
63
Arc/node map data structure with files
13
1 x y
11
e
2 x y
l
i
12
3 x y
F

10
2
s
4 x y
t
7
n
5 x y
i
5
o
POLYGON A
6 x y
P
9
7 x y
4
8 x y
6
1
9 x y
2
10 x y
3
11 x y
8
12 x y
13 x y
1
File of Arcs by Polygon
1
1,2,3,4,5,6,7
A
1,2
, Area, Attributes
2
1,8,9,10,11,12,13,7
Arcs File
Figure 3.4
Arc/Node Map Data Structure with Files.
64
What is a Data Model?
  • A logical construct for the storage and retrieval
    of information.
  • Attribute data models are needed for the DBMS.
  • The origin of DBMS data models is in computer
    science.

65
Definitions
  • Database an integrated set of data on a
    particular subject
  • Geographic (spatial) database - database
    containing geographic data of a particular
    subject for a particular area
  • Database Management System (DBMS) software to
    create, maintain and access databases

66
A DBMS contains
  • Data definition language
  • Data dictionary
  • Data-entry module
  • Data update module
  • Report generator
  • Query language

67
Advantages of Databases
  • Avoids redundancy and duplication
  • Reduces data maintenance costs
  • Applications are separated from the data
  • Applications persist over time
  • Support multiple concurrent applications
  • Better data sharing
  • Security and standards can be defined and
    enforced

68
Disadvantages of Databases
  • Expense
  • Complexity
  • Performance especially complex data types
  • Integration with other systems can be difficult

69
Characteristics of DBMS (1)
  • Data model support for multiple data types
  • e.g MS Access supports Text, Memo, Number,
    Date/Time, Currency, AutoNumber, Yes/No, OLE
    Object, Hyperlink, Lookup Wizard
  • Load data from files, databases and other
    applications
  • Index for rapid retrieval

70
Characteristics of DBMS (2)
  • Query language SQL
  • Security controlled access to data
  • Multi-level groups
  • Controlled update using a transaction manager
  • Backup and recovery

71
Role of DBMS
Task
System
  • Data load
  • Editing
  • Visualization
  • Mapping
  • Analysis

Geographic Information System
  • Storage
  • Indexing
  • Security
  • Query

Database Management System
Data
72
Retrieval
  • The ability of the DBMS or GIS to get back on
    demand data that were previously stored.
  • Geographic search is the secret to GIS data
    retrieval.
  • Many forms of data organization are incapable of
    geographic search.
  • GIS systems have embedded DBMSs, or link to a
    commercial DBMS.

73
Types of DBMS Model
  • Hierarchical
  • Network
  • Relational - RDBMS
  • Object-oriented - OODBMS
  • Object-relational - ORDBMS

74
Historically, databases were structured
hierarchically in files...
Norge
Akershus
Oppland
Hordaland
Asker
Bærum
Ski
75
Relational DBMS
  • Data stored as tuples (tup-el), conceptualized as
    tables
  • Table data about a class of objects
  • Two-dimensional list (array)
  • Rows objects
  • Columns object states (properties, attributes)

Tuple??? A row in a relational table synonymous
with record, observation. A set of elements.
76
Relation Rules
  • Only one value in each cell (intersection of row
    and column)
  • All values in a column are about the same subject
  • Each row is unique
  • No significance in column sequence
  • No significance in row sequence

77
Table
Column property
Table Object Class
Row object
Object Classes with Geometry called Feature
Classes
78
Relational Join
  • Fundamental query operation
  • Table joins use common keys (column values)
  • Table (attribute) join concept has been extended
    to geographic case

79
Relational Data Bases
File
Patient Record
Key Check-in
Check Out
Room No.
42
2/1/96
2/4/96
N763
78
2/3/96
2/4/96
N712
Purchase Record
File
Item
Date
Price
Customer
Key
Skate Board
2/1/96
49.95
John Smith
42
Baseball Bat
2/1/96
17.99
James Brown
978
File
Accident Report
Date
Injury
Name
Key
Location
2/1/96
Broken Leg
John Smith
42
75 Elm Street
2/2/96
Concussion
Sylvia Jones
654
12 State Street
2/2/96
Cut on Ear
Robert Doe
123
2323 Broad Street
80
Most DBMS are now relational databases.
  • Based on multiple flat files for records, with
    dissimilar attribute structures, connected by a
    common key attribute.

81
Retrieval Operations
  • Searches by attribute find and browse.
  • Data reorganization select, renumber, and sort.
  • Compute allows the creation of new attributes
    based on calculated values.

82
Spatial Retrieval Operations
  • Attribute queries are not very useful for
    geographic search.
  • In a map database the records are features.
  • The spatial equivalent of a find is locate, the
    GIS highlights the result.
  • Spatial equivalents of the DBMS queries result
    in locating sets of features or building new GIS
    layers.

83
The Retrieval User Interface
  • GIS query is usually by command line, batch, or
    macro.
  • Most GIS packages use the GUI of the computers
    operating system to support both a menu-type
    query interface and a macro or programming
    language.
  • SQL is a standard interface to relational
    databases and is supported by many GISs.

84
SQL
  • Structured (Standard) Query Language
    (pronounced SEQUEL)
  • Developed by IBM in 1970s
  • Now de facto and de jure standard for accessing
    relational databases
  • Three types of usage
  • Stand alone queries
  • High level programming
  • Embedded in other applications

85
Types of SQL Statements
  • Data Definition Language (DDL)
  • Create, alter and delete data
  • CREATE TABLE, CREATE INDEX
  • Data Manipulation Language (DML)
  • Retrieve and manipulate data
  • SELECT, UPDATE, DELETE, INSERT
  • Data Control Languages (DCL)
  • Control security of data
  • GRANT, CREATE USER, DROP USER

86
Spatial Relations
  • Equals same geometries
  • Disjoint geometries share common point
  • Intersects geometries intersect
  • Touches geometries intersect at common boundary
  • Crosses geometries overlap
  • Within geometry within
  • Contains geometry completely contains
  • Overlaps geometries of same dimension overlap
  • Relate intersection between interior, boundary
    or exterior

87
Spatial Methods
  • Distance shortest distance
  • Buffer geometric buffer
  • ConvexHull smallest convex polygon geometry
  • Intersection points common to two geometries
  • Union all points in geometries
  • Difference points different between two
    geometries
  • SymDifference points in either, but not both of
    input geometries

88
Spatial Search
  • Buffering is a spatial retrieval around points,
    lines, or areas based on distance.
  • Overlay is a spatial retrieval operation that is
    equivalent to an attribute join.

89
Identify
90
Recode
OR
91
Data overlay
92
Overlay
93
Types of overlay operations
  • And
  • Or
  • Max
  • Min

94
Buffer (raster)
1
95
Buffer (vector)
96
Complex Retrieval Map Algebra
  • Combinations of spatial and attribute queries can
    build some complex and powerful GIS operations,
    such as weighting.

97
Summary
  • Database an integrated set of data on a
    particular subject
  • Databases offer many advantages over files
  • Relational databases dominate
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