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Department of Natural Science
Edgewood College
Madison, WisconsinGIS Online Resource List
GIS Resources are organized into the following categories:
Key GIS Resources
ESRI
http://www.esri.com/base/markets/k-12/k-12.html
Environmental Systems Research, Inc. Is the developer of ArcView GIS
software. The address below is their home page for learning and sharing
information about the use of GIS in K-12 schools and in non-formal education
sites. Also shows GIS maps based on animal migration data collected in the
Journey North project (http://www.learner.org/content/k12/jnorth/index.html).
Working With Maps (USGS)
http://www.usgs.gov/education/learnweb/wwmaps.html
Mapping activities for different grade levels.
The National Atlas of the United States
http://www-atlas.usgs.gov/
The National Atlas is being designed to serve the interests and needs of a
diverse populace in many ways; as an essential reference; as a framework for
information discovery; as an instrument of education; as an aid in research;
and as an accurate and reliable source for scientific information. Click the
Atlas Maps button to design and explore your own map or to view interactive
multimedia maps. The map pages require the use of Microsoft Internet Map
Explorer 4 or Netscape Navigator 4.
UW Land Information and Computer Graphics Facility (LICGF)
http://www.lic.wisc.edu/
A UW research, instruction, and outreach facility for geographic and land
information systems (GIS/LIS), LICGF helps develop solutions to technical
and institutional problems in managing land information. Involved with
several research projects, including: modeling land use impacts; interfacing
GIS/LIS with other technologies; evaluating the benefits and rate of
adoption of GIS/LIS; and implementation of land records modernization.
Includes links to online data sources, and information on projects such as
"How to Create a Forest/Tree Geographic Information System."
Watersheds, Ecosystem
Health, and Mapping
Heron Network
http://danenet.wicip.org/heron/
A group of Madison-area teachers working together on developing teaching
strategies that incorporate student inquiry. Explore their site and see how
they are using technology to promote innovative education and to help
connect students to "place."
Great Lakes Atlas (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Environment
Canada)
http://www.epa.gov/glnpo/atlas/intro.html
This Environmental Atlas and Resource Book is an excellent resource on the
Great Lakes, including physical characteristics, natural processes, people,
concerns, joint management and new directions. Includes an impressive
collection of full-color maps on a range of topics.
Water Science for Schools (USGS)
http://wwwga.usgs.gov/edu
Information on many aspects of water, along with pictures, data, maps, and
an interactive center where you can give opinions and test your water
knowledge.
GIS Data for Water Resources
http://water.usgs.gov/public/GIS/index.html
This site serves as a node of the National Spatial Data Infrastructure (NSDI)
for finding and accessing USGS spatial data related to water resources.
Includes: hydrologic unit maps, national hydrographic data set (use site),
thematic data sets for water, background data sets for water, and list of
water GIS data sets
State of the Land
http://www.nhq.nrcs.usda.gov/land/home.html
This USDA site provides data on land use and change, soil erosion and soil
quality, water quality, wetlands, and other issues regarding the
conservation and use of natural resources on non-Federal land in the United
States. Includes links to the metadata for the various State of the Land
basemap coverages, which follow standards set by the Federal Geographic Data
Committee. All coverages are in Arc/Info Export format (.e00) and are
compressed using standard .zip compression.
K-12 GIS in Education Projects
Journey North
http://www.learner.org/jnorth/
Includes activities, data-collection protocols, and information-sharing on
seasonal changes, phenology, animal migrations.
Piney Woods Students Growing Roots in GIS Through the Urban Forestry Tree
Inventory and Management Program
http://www.maris.state.ms.us/htms/p287.htm
High school students at Piney Woods Country Life School, Piney Woods,
Mississippi, are learning the importance of trees in an urban environment
through an urban forestry program. The project involves a partnership of
students, educators, businesses, and government scientists in a cooperative
grant effort to implement the urban forestry curriculum. Along with urban
forestry, GIS and GPS skills are taught to enhance learning with maps,
databases, and querying capabilities. Students conduct field inventories to
learn about trees, management of their urban forest, and the environment.
Theresa Foster
Institute of Higher Learning
3825 Ridgewood Road
Jackson, MS 39211-6453
Telephone: 601-982-6549
Fax: 601-987-5587
E-mail:
theresa@supernova.ihl.state.ms.us
The Bald Eagle Nesting Project: ArcView GIS, Voyageurs National Park,
and the World Wide Web
http://www.ties.k12.mn.us/eagles/
The Bald Eagle Nesting Project was designed for middle school biology
students to use real-world GIS wildlife management files (supplied by
Voyageurs National Park), ArcView GIS, and the World Wide Web to learn about
the nesting habits of bald eagles. This presentation will discuss teacher
training, repurposing of national park GIS files for classroom use,
curriculum design, and use of the Internet for student research and
listserve-based communication.
Dick Carlstrom
TIES
1925 West County Road B-2
Roseville, MN 55113
Telephone: (612) 638-2357
Fax: (612) 631-7519
E-mail: carlst@ties.k12.mn.us
The Ligon GT Magnet Middle School Satellites, Computers, and Mapping
Course
http://www2.ncsu.edu/unity/lockers/project/midlinknc/gis/gis_intro.htm
Satellites, Computers, and Mapping is an interdisciplinary course that is
designed to show students how satellites and remote-sensing are used to
solve problems. A variety of tools, including the Internet, Geographic
Information Systems (GIS), and Global Positioning System (GPS), will be
explored as students analyze, interpret, and generate their own hypothesis
and use critical thinking skills to solve their problems.
Rita Hagevik or Ann Thompson
Ligon GT Magnet Middle School
706 E. Lenoir Street
Raleigh, North Carolina 27601
Mapping Our City
http://teaparty.terc.edu/MapCity/paper/aera_paper.html
Mapping Our City is a two-year project in which middle school teachers and
students in Boston explore the uses of Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
in project-based science, environmental education, and geography. The
project is funded by the National Science Foundation and developed by TERC.
The purpose of the project is to explore how computer-based GIS systems,
originally developed for use in industry and government, can enhance middle
school science education, particularly in urban school systems. A major part
of our work has been to modify the interface of ArcView, a commercial GIS
program developed by Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI) and to
assemble a library of local data into an ArcView project we call Explore
Boston.
Harold McWilliams:
harold_mcwilliams@terc.edu
Paul Rooney: paul_rooney@terc.edu
NCGIA Home Page
http://www.ncgia.ucsb.edu/education/ed.html
The National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis has several
projects that encourage the development of appropriate GIS instructional
materials in schools.
NCGIA CORE Curriculum for GIS
http://www.env.gov.bc.ca/gis/giscourse/ToC.html
A text based, comprehensive guide to GIS from The National Center for
Geographic Information and Analysis (NCGIA). The lesson is divided in to 75
short sections.
NCGIA Secondary Education Projects
http://www.ncgia.ucsb.edu/education/projects/SEP/sep.html
Teacher Resources on GIS.
Bringing GIS into the K-12 Education Environment: Collaboration with
Community Organizations as a Key to Success -The Chagrin Watershed Institute
http://cwi.us.edu/
University School is an independent preparatory school in Chagrin Falls,
Ohio. It was one of the first high schools to attempt to bring GIS into its
curriculum seven years ago. Bridges have been built with various agencies
and organizations that now look to the school as a credible collaborator in
GIS-based projects. Examples of these collaborative projects include a
project to digitize and build coverages of all the zoning maps of the
sixteen townships and villages in Geauga County, Ohio, for the County's
Auditor's Office and Planning Commission.
Reinhold Friebertshauser, University School
2785 SOM Center Road
Hunting Valley, OH 44022
Telephone: 216-831-2200 ext. 329 or 308
Fax: 216-292-7808
E-mail: friebo@us.edu
Bringing GIS to School: The Other Issues
Having a teacher or an administrator to champion the use of GIS in a K-12
school means more than just having the software. Other issues abound.
Teachers need to explore money issues, partnering, hardware (networks, data
storage, high vs. low-powered machines), careers, teacher training, and
student projects.
Kate Dailey, Bishop Dunne High School
3900 Rugged Drive,
Dallas, TX 75224
Telephone: 214 339 6561 ext. 222
Fax: 214 339 1438
E-mail: katectx@aol.com
The Development of a Prototype Municipal Government Information System by
High School Students Using GIS Technology
The Southern York County (Pennsylvania) School District, in cooperation with
the Southern York County Regional Planning Commission, is developing a
prototype information system for local government officials and private
citizens. Using ArcView GIS and other software components, high school
students, under the direction of a faculty member and a volunteer technical
advisor, are designing a GIS-based system that will aid local officials
within the region to deal with problems and issues related to planning,
zoning, infrastructure management, and so forth. The system will also
include provisions for public access to data by private citizens. World Wide
Web access is also being considered.
Steve Beck, KCI Technologies
10 North Park Drive, Hunt Valley, MD 21030
Telephone: 410-316-7818
Fax: 410-316-7817
E-mail: sbeck@kci.com
Fits, Starts, and Headway: The Implementation of ArcView GIS in Beginning
and Advanced High School Geography Courses
The incorporation of GIS technology and methods has been an intensive but
valuable component to new and preexisting lessons in the geography program
at Boulder High School, Boulder, Colorado. Enhanced learning in local and
international lessons resulted from making more variables available and from
increased inquiry. Important ingredients of success included the integration
of local and real-time data sets, networking with the USGS and the City of
Boulder, and applying GIS to lessons that had previously been tested. Other
key success elements included the participation and interest of the computer
laboratory manager and the tenacity of the content teacher.
Steve Wanner, Boulder High School
1604 Arapahoe Ave, Boulder, CO 80302
Telephone: 303.442.2430
Fax: 303.442.5317
E-mail: wanner@bvsd.k12.co.us
The Florida Geographic Data Library
http://www.geoplan.ufl.edu/projects/fgdlinfo.html
The Florida Geographic Data Library (FGDL) is a data distribution site for
GIS data within the State of Florida. The library distributes data,
metadata, projects, viewers, and tutorials on CD-ROM for 100 GIS geodata
sets in Florida. The FGDL has also developed middle and high school lesson
plans for the data.
Paul Zwick, UF GeoPlan Center
Room 431 Bldg. Arch.
Gainesville, FL 32611
Telephone: 352-392-0997
Fax: 352-392-3308
E-mail: paul@geoplan.ufl.edu
GEOTEKS: Using GIS and Multimedia Tools for Middle School Social Studies
Combining the strengths of GIS analysis and multimedia simulation, a project
called GEOTEKS represents a realistic method for student-centered,
problem-solving learning in social studies at the middle school. The
simulated space observation platform is aimed at assisting implementation of
the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills in social studies for the seventh
grade. The GIS technology investigated included ArcView GIS Version 3,
MapObjects, and ArcExplorer. The multimedia authoring package was Macromedia
Director 5.
Raymond L. Sanders, Jr., Sanders Instructional
2437 Bay Area Boulevard, Suite 211
Houston, TX
Telephone: 281-480-2580
E-mail: ray@blkbox.com
GIS - A Keystone Technology for Earth Science
http://geo.tjhsst.edu/
Demonstrations show the linking of point data to ArcView GIS software.
Earthquakes, volcanoes, and EPA data will be obtained from the Web, brought
into ArcView GIS, and analyzed. In addition to data found on the Web,
students can create their own databases and incorporate them in local GIS
data sets. This technology is a keystone technology in Fairfax County,
Virginia's new geosystems class taught at the junior/senior level.
Kathryn Keranen, FCPS
9100 Weant Drive
Great Falls, VA 22066
Telephone: 703-759-3460
Fax: 703-750-5010
E-mail: kkeranen@thor.tjhsst.edu
GIS Implementation Issues and Strategies in K-12 Education
Following a teacher's initial decision to integrate GIS into the curriculum
as a spatial learning tool, three important issues immediately arise.
Educators must first address several factors that significantly affect the
successful implementation of GIS technology. A second consideration is the
development of appropriate learning contexts for applying GIS in the
classroom. Lastly, effective instructional approaches must be adopted. We
have reviewed the findings of an educational research project supported by
the National Science Foundation that explored each of the above issues. A
second project that examined the applications of GIS in teacher preparation
programs will be discussed.
Richard H. Audet, Roger Williams University
One Old Ferry Road
Bristol, RI 02809
Telephone: 401-254-3357
Fax: 401-254-3286
E-mail: rha@alpha.rwu.edu
GIS Support for Project-Based Learning
The Learning Systems and Technologies Group at BBN/GTE Internetworking has
been working to integrate GIS tools and methods into secondary school
project-based learning activities in Department of Defense Dependent Schools
overseas, and then into its National School Network of 500 educational
institutions.
Beverly Hunter, BBN/GTE Internetworking
70 Fawcett Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
Telephone: 617 873-3468
Fax: 617 873-3783
E-mail: bhunter@bbn.com
GIS in the K-12 Classroom: Staff Development and Instructional Materials
for Inquiry-Based Learning
ArcView GIS is a powerful tool that can offer students many opportunities
for engaging in critical thinking and inquiry. GIS, by its very nature, has
the ability to support educational reform of the kind advocated by leading
systemic change researchers (Means, 1994). Because ArcView GIS is a tool, as
opposed to a multimedia package, there is a need for instructional materials
and professional development to help teachers incorporate this technology
into their classrooms. Using its experiences developing instructional
materials for a similar visualization tool, NIH Image, CIPE is developing
guided discovery lessons and professional development to help students and
teachers discover GIS.
Carla McAuliffe, Center for Image Processing in Education (CIPE)
P.O. Box 13750
Tucson, AZ 85732-3750
Telephone: (520) 322-0118
Fax: (520) 327-0175
E-mail: CarlaMcA@aol.com
Instructional Strategies for Environmental Education: The GIS Way
http://www.woodrow.org/teachers/esi/1997/02/
Meeting the challenge of teaching K-12 environmental science requires that
students develop a "sense of place." Without a sense of place children and
young adults cannot realistically see how their personal actions have
relevance on a global scale. Using a GIS approach is an effective means of
developing a sense of place. Discussion will cover use of GIS/ArcView GIS in
the K-12 setting, challenges, obstacles, and solutions. The development of
teacher training programs and examples of classroom projects emphasizing the
themes of water and earthquakes and their implications for human activities
will be highlighted.
MapObjects, ArcView GIS, and Visual Basic: Presenting Spatial Data to
Nontechnical Users
http://arl.cni.org/info/gis/index.html
The University of Arizona Library instituted a GIS service as part of the
Association of Research Libraries GIS Literacy Project. Teaching and
learning ArcView GIS made it difficult for nontechnical users to utilize
spatial data without one-on-one assistance. To remedy this situation, we
partnered with GIS campus experts to create a user-friendly GIS graphical
user interface. This interface integrates various geoprocessing functions
such as data capture, data management, and analytical techniques.
Christine Kollen, University of Arizona
P.O. Box 210055
Tucson, AZ 85720-0055
Telephone: (520) 621-4869
Fax: (520) 621-9733
E-mail:
kollen@bird.library.arizona.edu
A Project-Based K-12 GIS Dialog
http://www.bgrg.com/geodesy/geogproj.jpgpage.htm
BGRG is collaborating with the Aquatic Outreach Institute's Kids in Creeks
Curriculum Program, the AEGIS Laboratory at University of California
Berkeley, and Half Moon Bay High School under the USGS's Federal Geographic
Data Committee CCAP to further develop a project-based GIS module for
students and teachers to follow an environmental education curriculum to
study real-world issues and problems. The forms-based interface will take
users through a series of interactive dialog screens to create, load, and
display data collected in the local community and to build metadata of their
data sets. These data can then be viewed and studied along with data already
studied, as well as with data gathered from outside sources via the Internet
through the National Spatial Data Infrastructure (NSDI) Clearinghouse. In
addition, a metadata node will be established on the NSDI Clearinghouse to
pool geospatial data generated by students working on similar environmental
monitoring projects worldwide.
Susan Radke, Berkeley Geo-Research Group
51 Crest View Drive, Orinda, CA 94563
Telephone: 510-254-0951
Fax: 510-254-0955
E-mail: slradke@bgrg.com
A Proposed National Prototype for GIS Integration into the Secondary
School
http://www.dgl.salemstate.edu/DGL/abt_dgl
The Chelsea Public High School (CHS) has developed a national model for GIS
integration into secondary schools by building upon a partnership with the
federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the National Oceanographic
and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), City personnel, and Salem State
College, Salem, Massachusetts. The model employs federally developed GIS
software and ArcView GIS coupled with right-to-know legislation to enable
the integration of a School-wide GIS curriculum. Over 200 students are
currently enrolled in the program at CHS and the curriculum is now
integrated into seven school systems.
William L. Hamilton, Salem State College
Salem, MA 01970
Telephone: (508) 741-6228
Fax: (508) 740-7113
E-mail: Wolf@dgl.salem.mass.edu
School Planner Provides Student Enrollment and Redistricting Custom
Reports and Maps: Examples from the Field
http://www.theomegagroup.com/schlplan.htm
The Omega Group, an ESRI business partner, has developed School Planner, a
new geographic analysis product tailored specifically for school district
GIS applications. School Planner facilitates the accomplishment of both
simple and complex enrollment analyses, facility planning tasks, and
redistricting within the ArcView GIS environment. Automated tasks include
student reporting by various standard and user-defined geographies and
custom report and map creation. School Planner provides solutions to complex
resource allocation problems. Enrollment projections are performed in the
module Enrollment Forecaster, which produces residing and attending
enrollment projections with various report formats. Potential users include
school districts, planners, and demographers.
Bruce Silva, The Omega Group
12707 High Bluff Drive
San Diego, CA 92130
Telephone: 619 4813119
Fax: 619 4819051
E-mail: omegagroup@aol.com
Spatial Access to Minnesota's Digital Orthophotoquads
http://www-map.lib.umn.edu/
The University of Minnesota's John R. Borchert Map Library is undertaking a
project to provide, over the World Wide Web, spatial access to Minnesota's
DOQs using ArcView Internet Map Server, ArcView StreetMap extension, and
MrSid image compression software.
Brent Allison, John R. Borchert Map Library
309 19th Street Avenue S., University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, MN 55455-0414
Telephone: 612-624-0306
Fax: 612-626-9353
E-mail: b-alli@umn.edu
State-wide Implementation of GIS in Fifth Through Twelfth Grade Schools
in Wyoming: Teaching Teachers To Use GIS
http://www.sdvc.uwyo.edu/survey/education.html
In the State of Wyoming the University of Wyoming has been leading a
State-wide effort to bring geographic information systems into fifth through
twelfth grade classrooms. Educators and scientists have worked together to
create a Wyoming spatial database CD-ROM with GIS data sets and a customized
and simplified ArcView GIS Version 3.0 interface. The project was tested
with the Earth System Science Internet Project and is continuing with a
series of workshops targeted at teachers State-wide.
Holly Lerner, University of Wyoming
PO Box 3992, Laramie, WY 82071
Telephone: 307-766-2013
E-mail: hlerner@uwyo.edu
Corvallis High School GIS: The Riparian Monitoring Project
http://www.corvallis.k12.mt.us/gis/default.htm
The main focus of the stream monitoring program is a method of
orchestration, on a meaningful level, of many disciplines of science. This
orchestration includes monitoring a stream twice per year for a number of
years, using many levels of High School students, and whenever possible
other public agencies. To make the project scientifically meaningful one
might choose an area with a sampling site above and below a site of human
impact. A rancher's livestock grazing area along a stream is an example. The
impacts can then be gauged and restoration or sampling a broader sense of
environmental issues can be gained. ArcView GIS is used to compile and
analyze data on chemical, biological and physical properties of the rivers.
The Harlem Environmental Access Project (HEAP)
http://www.edf.org/heap/
HEAP is dedicated to using computers to raise the environmental awareness of
schoolchildren in the five schools and a library in the Harlem section of
New York City. HEAP seeks to empower them to take action and find solutions
to local and global environmental issues. The primary goals of HEAP are
four-fold: (1) to engage students in learning about environmental issues
that are relevant to their lives and their community; (2) to encourage
students to investigate their local environment and work for positive
community change; (3) to provide students with new technologies and new
sources of information to assist them in addressing local environmental
concerns; and (4) to expose students to the possibilities of careers in
environmental science, management, and law. The environment may be the
single most important area of scientific and policy activity for the coming
century, and among the students in Harlem's schools today are many of our
future environmental scientists, engineers, managers, and political leaders.
For more info email:
school_coordinator@edf.org.
Homesteader Interdisciplinary Unit
http://www.montana.com/chs/gis/lewis&cl/default.htm
The homesteader interdisciplinary unit is meant to be a culmination activity
for the study of the Montana homestead era. The unit will require students
to use skills in mapping and map-making, mathematical calculation of scale,
measurement, plotting, research, creative writing, typing, and working
cooperatively. The unit will also require students to utilize
previously-learned facts from Montana's homestead era. Students will follow
the Wild and Scenic portion of the Missouri River across the Highline of
Northern Montana. The Wild and Scenic Missouri is an area rich in history.
Lewis and Clark made their historic voyage through this area on their
journey across the Louisiana Purchase. As westward expansion continued,
numerous homesteads dotted the banks of the river. Their remains can still
be found today throughout this region.
Free Access Maps and Map Query Sites Available on the Internet
ESRI World Thematic Data
http://www.esri.com/data/online/esri/wothphysic.html
ArcData Online allows you to browse a wide variety of geographic data to
create maps of your areas of interest. Here you can access thematic data to
create atlas maps of information about the earth including its people,
plants, and environment. Select the type of data and area of interest to
create your custom map.
Newsweek World Thematic Data
http://www.esri.com/data/online/newsweek/index.html
This site contains a variety of recent demographic and socioeconomic data
for 165 countries/areas, such as life expectancy, years in school, and human
development. Information comes from the Newsweek Education Program. Select
the type of data available to create your custom map.
ESRI USA Thematic Map Display
http://www.esri.com/data/online/esri/usthselect.html
ArcData Online allows you to browse a wide variety of geographic data to
create maps of your areas of interest. Here you can access thematic data to
create atlas maps of information about the United States of America (USA)
and its people. This database allows you to create thematic maps of selected
U.S. Census demographic data and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) crime
data at the state and county level.
Interrain Pacific's Bioregional Information System
http://www.inforain.org/ctnoframe.htm
Interrain Pacific's mission is to promote conservation-based development by
enhancing understanding of social and ecological patterns of change. The
organization focuses on the coastal temperate rain forest that stretches
from Northern California to the Alaskan panhandle. Four basic categories of
geographic information are available through this site: GIS data layers;
Satellite imagery; On-line mapping; and Animated "fly by's." The information
is organized by geographic area and categorized as mentioned above.
The Kentucky Breeding Bird Atlas
http://www2.ag.ohio-state.edu/~waternet/find/index.html
The Kentucky Breeding Bird Atlas lets you view maps of abundance and
breeding of individual bird species. You can also perform life-history
analysis for a particular breeding bird species, as well as State-wide/quad
analyses for State-wide survey maps and quad-level species lists.
The Wyoming Internet Map
http://wims.sdvc.uwyo.edu/
The Wyoming Internet Map server is an experimental Web site that lets users
query bibliographic and mineral databases, find a feature by typing in its
name or attribute, look at a map of the entire State of Wyoming, and more.
You can also query individual geothermal sites as well as oil shale wells by
selecting either theme and clicking the query tool.
USGS Dynamic Hazard Maps
http://ghtmaps01.cr.usgs.gov/atlas1/gismaps/faults.html
The faults displayed in the maps are the western states subset of faults
that are used by the seismic hazards mapping project for computing seismic
risk.
CARES Watershed Information Clearinghouse
http://www.cares.missouri.edu/cwic/
Provides a host of maps pertaining to various watersheds across the state of
Missouri.
IFREMER Sillage Group
http://www.ifremer.fr/cgi-bin/sillage/demo.pl
This site shows how GIS, remote sensing, and image processing are being used
to manage and control coastal zones. This site offers interactive ArcView
GIS demos that give the user on-the-fly visualization of selected data.
Information Center for the Environment (ICE)
http://ice.ucdavis.edu/
The Information Center for the Environment is a cooperative effort of
environmental scientists at the University of California, Davis, and
collaborators at more than 30 private, state, federal, and international
organizations interested in environmental protection. This site offers a
number of projects and tutorials dealing with ARC/INFO and ArcView GIS.
Select the "ICE MAPS" option from the "Projects" list.
Site Investigation and Restoration Program in Delaware: Contaminated Site
Mapping System
http://sirb.awm.dnrec.state.de.us/
This site provides information on a Geographical Information System of
Contaminated Sites whereby users can view the sites in the Contaminated
Sites Database on a map of Delaware. This is particularly useful for those
performing Phase I or Phase II studies of properties and wish to determine
if the property is on or near potential contaminated sites.
Montana State Library Natural Resource Information System
http://nris.mt.gov/gis/gis.html
The Montana Natural Resource Information System (NRIS) Geographic
Information System (GIS) acts as a clearinghouse for GIS databases and
provides services to State, Federal, Private, Non-Profit, and Public groups
or individuals needing access to GIS technology. This site, "Montana Maps
Interactive," lets you create detailed and attractive thematic maps of the
State of Montana based on user-selected criteria.
Sabine River (Texas) Basin WebMap
http://nris.mt.gov/gis/gis.html
This site provides viewing, access to attribute tables, and downloading of
the water quality and related data comprising the Sabine River Basin Data
Clearinghouse for Watershed Inventory.
Tobyhanna Army Depot
http://www.tyad-emd.army.mil/gis/index.htm
The Environmental Management Division at Tobyhanna has put together several
different maps of the site for topography and watersheds.
West Virginia Division of Environmental Protection
http://www.dep.state.wv.us/form/frame-1.html
This service is designed to provide public access to street, road, stream,
and other topographic feature maps and related environmental data for any
part of West Virginia.
Superior National Forest - University of Minnesota
http://www.gis.umn.edu/snf/info/brochures/maps.html
This site offers the Superior National Forest Map Server, which lets you
create custom graphics based on GIS databases. You can specify criteria and
where in the database you would like to browse. This site features a
mapserver to aid in trip planning and information discovery. The mapserver
is accessed in a number of places throughout the server such as the
summaries for entry points and Forest campgrounds.
U.S. Geological Survey Map-It: A Form-Based Simple Map Generator
http://crusty.er.usgs.gov/mapit/
This form takes longitude/latitude pairs as input and plops them on a
Mercator projection map along with land/sea and political boundaries. The
map bounds will be about 10% larger than the bounds of the entered data
points.
Mapping Technologies International ArcView IMS
http://www.mapsrus.com/MTI/sample.htm
Sample map of the Delaware Valley.
Nelson and Wallery, Ltd./Nursing Home INFO
http://www.nursinghomeinfo.com/
Nelson and Wallery, Ltd., is a small firm that provides technology and
information solutions to the nursing home industry. With the help of ESRI,
the company has created this MapObjects IMS application that allows you to
find a nursing home based on location, religious affiliation, medical
specialization, language skills, operator, and other database navigational
aids. You can create a map of your vicinity--then generate a list of nearby
nursing homes. The site includes a comprehensive nationwide listing of more
than 18,000 nursing home locations in the United States.
Cabarrus County, North Carolina
http://www.co.cabarrus.nc.us/pages/maphelp.html
Cabarrus County GIS Public Access of Cabarrus County, North Carolina, was
created using MapObjects Internet Map Server (IMS) technology to make GIS
data available to governmental agencies and the public.
DVRPC Regional Information Network (DE)
http://www.dvrpc.org/arcview/rin3/dvrpc.html
The Regional Information Network contains features and data for the
nine-county Philadelphia metropolitan area. With this system, you can
interactively view geographic features, create your own custom map and
access information about certain features.
Massachusetts Electronic Atlas
http://icg.harvard.edu/~maps/maatlas.htm
This prototype project provides Web-based display and query access to
information about the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
Metropolitan Dade County
http://gisims.metro-dade.com/scripts/esrimap.dll?name=CountyServices&Cmd=Map
Metropolitan Dade County, Florida, used MapObjects IMS to create this site,
which lets users enter an address in the County and retrieve and map various
types of community services information.
The San Diego Geographic Information Source (SanGIS)
http://www.sangis.org/
Providing public access to over 30 map layers, SanGIS offers links to FEMA
flood plain information and to elected officials based on the user's click
on the map. Future plans include migration to use of SDE and a polling place
locator for the November elections.
Village of Prairie du Sac, Wisconsin
http://www.ramaker.com/gis/pds/pdsmapfrm.htm
Shown is a pilot project developed for the Village by Ramaker & Associates,
Inc. Ultimately the data from this site will be made current and fully
downloadable.
Geographical Information Systems Cooperative of Adelaide, Australia
http://www.gisca.adelaide.edu.au/cgi-bin/eco/ecogis
This University of Adelaide-hosted site, "Ecotourism Interactive GIS," is
designed for ecotourists and others interested in the forests, parks, and
vegetation of South-East-Central Australia.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) USA
http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/vents/coax/gis_www.html
This site offers a linked interactive GIS based on ArcView GIS (scroll to
the end of the page and follow the directions). There is also information on
GIS and ArcView GIS, ARC/INFO, and related projects.
National Ocean Service’s MapFinder
http://mapfinder.nos.noaa.gov/
The National Ocean Service's (NOS) MapFinder is a one-stop World Wide Web
service that provides direct Internet access to primary NOS imagery and data
holdings for coastal photography, nautical charts, coastal survey maps,
environmental sensitivity index maps, hydrographic surveys, water level
stations, and geodetic control points.
Environmental Protection Agency Envirofacts Warehouse
http://www.epa.gov/enviro/index_java.html
At this site, users can retrieve background information on both spatial and
regulatory aspects of regulated facilities as well as other spatial data.
Users can query regulated facilities, generate maps and reports, and search
for more information on past and present activities.
Computer Research Lab at MIT - Examples in Planning Support Systems
http://gis.mit.edu/projects/
This site contains information on a few experimental WWW projects including:
- Tools to Facilitate Networked Access to Digital Orthophotos
- National Spatial Data Infrastructure Clearinghouse effort.
- experimenting with Multimedia Representational Aids for Transportation
Planners
- Online Guide to Information Technologies and Tools for Planning
- Boston's Waterfront Development & The Central Artery
- Washington, DC Site Planning Aid
- Visions for the South Boston Seaport
- Transit Commuting to the South Boston Seaport
- Rapid Transit Trip Planning Application
City of Boulder Colorado, Open Space Interactive Mapper
http://openspace.ci.boulder.co.us/gis/
The Open Space GIS Lab home page provides maps and descriptions of how they
are applying geographic information technologies to the conservation and
management of an open space system within a complex matrix of natural,
agricultural, and urban lands.
The Weather Channel Interactive Weather Site
http://www.weather.com/weather/maps/index.html
The Weather Channel's site provides users with exclusive current weather
maps, for the nation and local regions. The maps are updated as frequently
as every 30 minutes. There is also information on Doppler radar, satellite
pictures, and the location and intensity of precipitation from the U.S. down
to local cities. Time lapse loops show the movement of precipitation during
the most recent few hours.
Maps On Us
http://www.mapsonus.com/
This site will generate maps and plan travel routes based on user-entered
address and/or destination information.
The New York State GIS Clearinghouse
http://unix2.nysed.gov/gis/
Terraserver
http://www.terraserver.microsoft.com/
A site to view aerial photographs and satellite images of a range of sites
worldwide.
The Green Map System
http://www.greenmap.com/green.map.html#top
The Green Map System is assisting local teams as they design and produce
their own community's Green Map of environmentally significant places. Each
of the resulting Maps introduces the city's "green sites" -- outstanding
places of natural beauty, farmers markets and greenbusinesses,
ecologically-designed buildings, environmental centers, bike paths and solar
sites, and more, even the infrastructure and the toxic hot spots.
Socioeconomic Data and Applications Center
http://plue.sedac.ciesin.org/
SEDAC's mission is to develop and deliver information products and services
that integrate social and natural science data in ways useful for decision
making. You can make your own maps at by clicking on "Applications."
Other Interesting
Sites with GIS Information
The GIS Dictionary
http://www.geo.ed.ac.uk/agidict/welcome.html
This on-line dictionary of GIS terms is brought to you by the Association
for Geographic Information and the University Of Edinburgh Department of
Geography. The dictionary includes definitions for 980 terms compiled from a
variety of sources which either relate directly to GIS or which GIS users
may come across in the course of their work. The dictionary is also
supplemented by 52 diagrams.
Geography Links for K-12 Education
http://www.macalester.edu/~geograph/apgeog/links.html
A great jump station site with information on a range of geographic topics
including, Environment and Society, Human Systems, GIS and Mapping
Resources, Physical Systems, Oceanography, Weather/Climate,
Soils/Vegetation, and Places and Regions.
Great GIS Sites Home Page
http://www.hdm.com/gis3.htm
Another jump station with lots of links in a variety of categories,
including: GIS Books, GIS Conferences, Breaking GIS News, Classic GIS Sites,
The Best Web Resource Lists, Online GIS, GIS WWW Resources, GIS Data and
Software Library, GIS Jobs, Worldwide Government Agencies, U.S. Federal
Government Agencies, State / Provincial Government Agencies, Municipal /
Local Government Agencies, GIS Software Companies, GIS / Mapping Companies,
GIS Services, Non-Governmental Organizations, GPS / Remote Sensing / Space,
GIS Related Sites, and Colleges, Universities and Research Institutes.
GIS Guide to Good Practice
http://home.netscape.com/home/internet-white-pages.html
This document is designed specifically to provide guidance for individuals
and organizations involved in the creation, maintenance, use and long-term
preservation of GIS-based digital resources. Although the overall emphasis
is upon data, the information presented has much wider disciplinary
implications.
Ecoregions of the United States--USFS
http://www.fs.fed.us/land/ecosysmgmt/ecoreg1_home.html
Ecological Subregions of the United States--USFS
http://www.fs.fed.us/land/pubs/ecoregions/
The electronic (interactive) version of a 1994 publication by the US
Forest Service (USFS), these companion sites are based on the National
Hierarchical Framework of Ecological Units, designed to provide "a
standardized method for classifying, mapping, and describing ecological
units" in the US. The first site, "Ecoregions of the United States,"
contains three simple color maps of the United States (including
Alaska,Hawaii and Puerto Rico) showing generalized ecological boundaries. At
the coarsest spatial scale, the Ecosystem Domains map delineates Dry, Humid
Temperate, and Humid Tropical Domains. At the intermediate scale, an
Ecosystem Divisions map delineates more than a dozen ecosystem types,
ranging from tundra to rainforest. At the finest scale, over 50 Ecosystem
Provinces are delineated. By clicking on a color type for any map (i.e., an
ecosystem type), users may access further information on the abiotic and
biotic characteristics within that ecosystem. A companion site, Ecological
Subregions of the United States, contains the biophysical descriptions for
the color-coded maps. This is a solid resource for anyone seeking broad
ecosystem classifications for the United States.
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