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A constellation of
twenty-four satellites, 11,000 miles up, circling the globe every
twelve hours . . . monitoring stations on remote atolls
. . . and radio receivers, some small enough to be held
in the palm of your hand: that's the Global Positioning System, an
explosively growing technology that's changing the way we know
where we are, where we're going, and where we've been. Coupled with
a GIS (geographic information system), with its virtually limitless
layers of data and graphics and histories, it's nothing short of
revolutionary.
GPS technology is
helping researchers keep elephants from the brink of extinction,
mapping mazes of oil and gas pipeline, locating the sources of a
highly infectious disease, and keeping armchair sailors on the edge
of their seats as they chart the progress of a race across the
Atlantic. The ways GPS is being used range along an astonishingly
broad spectrum of activities, personal and public, commercial and
educational, business and pleasure.
Integrating GIS and
the Global Positioning System is a comprehensive
introduction to the powerful synergy between GIS and GPS
technologies. The book covers the basics of GPS--what the
components are, how they work in theory and in practice, how
accuracy can be improved almost to pinpoint level--and presents
several case studies that illustrate some of the ways the power of
GPS is being harnessed to GIS, ensuring, among other benefits,
increased accuracy in measurement and completeness of
coverage.
About the
author:
Karen Steede-Terry is an
ESRI Authorized ArcView Instructor and a Trimble Certified Trainer
for Global Positioning System technology.
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