"A
geographic information system (GIS) is a system designed to capture, store,
manipulate, analyze, manage, and present spatial or geographic data."
Geographic information system ( GIS ) |
The acronym GIS is sometimes used for geographic information science (GI Science) to refer to the academic discipline that studies geographic information systems and is a large domain within the broader academic discipline of geo-informatics. What goes beyond a GIS is a spatial data infrastructure, a concept that has no such restrictive boundaries.
In
general, the term describes any information system that integrates stores,
edits, analyzes, shares, and displays geographic information. GIS applications
are tools that allow users to create interactive queries (user-created
searches), analyze spatial information, edit data in maps, and present the
results of all these operations. Geographic information science is the science
underlying geographic concepts, applications, and systems.
GIS
can refer to a number of different technologies, processes, and methods. It is
attached to many operations and has many applications related to engineering,
planning, management, transport/logistics, insurance, telecommunications, and
business. For that reason, GIS and location intelligence applications can be
the foundation for many location-enabled services that rely on analysis and
visualization.
GIS
can relate unrelated information by using location as the key index variable.
Locations or extents in the Earth space–time may be recorded as dates/times of
occurrence, and x, y, and z coordinates representing, longitude, latitude, and
elevation, respectively. All Earth-based spatial–temporal location and extent
references should be relatable to one another and ultimately to a
"real" physical location or extent. This key characteristic of GIS
has begun to open new avenues of scientific inquiry.
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