users can access all available data sets, they are encouraged to
supply UNEP with other data sets in exchange for utilizing
the data already in stock. This approach to sharing data helps
keep data cost down for everyone and speeds processing.
Data acquisition can be a very time consuming and expensive
task and often an analysis requires immediate action.
Terrain Data
Besides satellite data and aerial photos, 3D terrain
visualization requires elevation data. Digital elevation models
(DEMS) have been segregated into a category of their own in
the past, but more and more users are realizing the benefits of
incorporating terrain data into a GIS. The products you can
create from DEMs add a new level of meaning to any
analysis.
Some of the layers you can create using elevation data include
slope, slope aspect, shaded relief, contour and perspective
views. These topographic data are essential for studies of
trafficability, route design, non-point source pollution,
intervisibility, siting of recreation areas and more. Terrain
data can also be used in models and in classification routines.
They can, for example, be a key to identifying wildlife
habitats that are associated with specific elevations. Slope and
aspect maps are often an important factor in assessing the
suitability of a site for a proposed use.
DEMSs can be purchased from the U.S. Geological Survey
(Reston, VA) at 1:250,000 scale for most areas of the United
States and at 1:24,000 scale for some areas. DEMS can also
be created through traditional photogrammetric triangulation
techniques or they can be created in the GIS environment
with softcopy photogrammetry software. Softcopy
photogrammetry eliminates the need for expensive and
complicated instrumentation. This means that elevation data
can be created for virtually any study area.
The ERDAS Digital Ortho module (ERDAS, Inc., Atlanta,
GA) is an example of a softcopy photogrammetry system.
Based on a user-friendly menu and prompt structure, the
software carries the user through the process of generating
DEMs. These DEMs can be created from overlapping aerial
photographs or from SPOT satellite stereopairs. Using
information that comes with the aerial photographs or in the
SPOT header file and user-selected ground control points, the
coordinates of the DEM are calculated through
photogrammetric triangulation. Then interactive matching and
densification processes are used to calculate the output DEM
surface at a user-specified resolution.
By draping aerial photos, satellite images or a GIS analysis
onto a DEM, users can create a three-dimensional perspective
view. Based on the position from which the view is
calculated, the graphic can look like the viewer is standing in
or hovering above the landscape. Perspective views are
extremely effective in showing before and after scenarios
simulating the effect of proposed development or possible
land use changes. When several 3D views are combined, they
can simulate travel through a landscape.
MEETING USER REQUIREMENTS
As hardware has evolved to handle larger and more complex
data sets, so have software packages. GIS has become one of
the most rapidly growing segments in the computer industry.
Once dominated by a few companies such as Environmental
Systems Research Institute, Inc., (ESRI) and ERDAS, Inc.,
there are now a proliferation of software packages on the
market. As GIS applications broaden, products must be
designed to be flexible. Along with appropriate functionality,
these packages must be easy to use. Today's GIS analyst
may be an expert in real estate, insurance or civil engineering,
but not necessarily an expert in GIS.
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Users have particular problems that must be attacked from
specific points of view. Their findings must be presented in a
way that both analysts and policy makers can understand.
The old cliche that a picture is worth a thousand words seems
perfect for GIS. If a static picture is worth a thousand words,
how many words is a 3D perspective view worth? What
about a 3D view that can be changed as parameters change?
Users must be able to query data in three dimensions by
geographic region or by a particular theme. "Show me all
possible sites where there are both Oak and Pine trees with a
body of water not more than 300 meters away and with an
elevation of at least 2000 feet that are visible from the
proposed parkway." Visual impact is no longer a guessing
game. It is now possible to see exactly what the new parkway
will look like and what the passengers driving along the
parkway will see.
These same techniques were applied in Operation Desert
Shield and Desert Storm. Dedicated military and civilian men
and women used a GIS to produce some unique map
products under very adverse conditions. The success of these
endeavors has created a renewed interest in satellite imagery
in other military applications such as Mission Planning and
Special Operations/low intensity conflict. Satellite images and
aerial photographs are invaluable in providing analysts with a
current and accurate view of the terrain, creating base maps
were none existed. These images can be input into a GIS to
model possible effects of proposed actions before any steps
are taken.
The Graphical User Interface
The emergence of the graphical user interface (GUI) has
shortened the learning curve tremendously. Users do not
have to learn a series of commands, or the order in which
programs must be run. They can simply point and click. The
first ERDAS software package was progressive in its use of a
menu-driven set of image processing and GIS programs.
Each program contained prompts with intelligent defaults to
help guide both experienced and novice users. This
environment was carried through the Version 7.5 software
package and is still being used by thousands worldwide.
However, the newest release, ERDAS IMAGINE, is based
on the X Windows GUI. Now processes can be
accomplished in any order and at any pace.
Other companies are also embracing the GUI. With the
popularity of GUI-based word processing and spreadsheet
packages, users are demanding the same ease of use from
GIS manufacturers. And since there are certain de facto
standards in GUI development, users can easily move from
one package to another.
ftware Functionali
Beyond the user interface, users are demanding more
functionality. The applications of GIS, both locally and
globally, are requiring that vendors cater to a much larger
audience. A regional planner in California may use GIS to
plan new subdivisions and a natural resource analyst in
Norway may use GIS to study the effects of global warming
on local vegetation, but both of these users require similar
tools. The order in which they use the tools is how the two
analysts differ. This is where the flexibility of a software
package is tested. Analysts all over the world must be able to
tailor the software to their particular niche. The sequence in
which they each use these same tools must be saved so that
others in the field can benefit from their research. In some
cases, as with petroleum exploration companies, these steps
are proprietary information. But, as with the data sharing
concept used by GRID, software solutions can save valuable
research time. ERDAS IMAGINE is designed so that scripts
can be written for a particular application such as forestry,
urban planning, mineral exploration or resource management.
These scripts will be written by experts in the respective
fields and will contain the common steps used to derive
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