the large volume of cartographic information is extracted from aerial
photographs and processed using manual and photomechanical procedures.
Above all, the final map product is a graphic designed for human inter
pretation.
Digital cartography is being used to embrace not only the procedures and
equipment being adopted for automated cartography, but also the concepts
associated with interpreting and analyzing cartographic data in a
virtual digital domain. The latter concepts go beyond the preparation
of graphic maps by automated techniques and require a consideration of
the merger of cartographic data into geographic information systems.
Digital cartography will require an almost revolutionary reexamination
of the entire cartographic process and the rules and standards by which
data are interpreted.
TRENDS IN MAPPING, ADP, AND DIGITAL CARTOGRAPHY
In the following series of illustrative graphs I have attempted to focus
on some of the significant trends in mapping, automated data processing
(ADP), and digital cartography that seem to have major importance.
These trends are due more to a historical series of conditions and tech
nological events rather than any particular technical capability. As
such they represent an inexorable framework that strongly influences the
rate and direction of the transition from analog to digital cartography.
Trends in Mapping
What I believe to be four of the most significant trends affecting topo
graphic mapping are shown in figure 1. The cost of preparing conven
tional line maps has been increasing primarily due to labor costs while
Figure 1.—Trends in mapping
420