Geomatics
Geodesy | ||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fundamentals | ||||||||||||||||
Concepts | ||||||||||||||||
Technologies | ||||||||||||||||
Standards | ||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
History | ||||||||||||||||
Geomatics, also known as geospatial technology, geomatics engineering, or geomatic engineering is the discipline of gathering, storing, processing, and delivering geographic information, or spatially referenced information. In other words, it "consists of products, services and tools involved in the collection, integration and management of geographic data".[1]
Overview and etymology
Michel Paradis, a French-Canadian surveyor, introduced geomatics as a new scientific term in an article published in 1981 in The Canadian Surveyor and in a keynote address at the centennial congress of the Canadian Institute of Surveying in April 1982. He claimed that at the end of the 20th century the needs for geographical information would reach a scope without precedent in history and in order to address these needs, it was necessary to integrate in a new discipline both the traditional disciplines of land surveying and the new tools and techniques of data capture, manipulation, storage and diffusion.[2]
Geomatics includes the tools and techniques used in land surveying, remote sensing, cartography, geographic information systems (GIS), global-navigation satellite systems (GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, Compass), photogrammetry, geophysics, geography, and related forms of earth mapping. The term was originally used in Canada, because it is similar in origin to both French and English, but has since been adopted by the International Organization for Standardization, the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, and many other international authorities, although some (especially in the United States) have shown a preference for the term geospatial technology.
The related field of hydrogeomatics covers the area associated with surveying work carried out on, above or below the surface of the sea or other areas of water. The older term of hydrographics was considered too specific to the preparation of marine charts, and failed to include the broader concept of positioning or measurements in all marine environments.
A geospatial network is a network of collaborating resources for sharing and coordinating geographical data and data tied to geographical references. One example of such a network is the Open Geospatial Consortium's efforts to provide ready global access to geographic information. A number of university departments which were once titled "surveying", "survey engineering" or "topographic science" have re-titled themselves using the terms "geomatics" or "geomatic engineering".
The rapid progress and increased visibility of geomatics since the 1990s has been made possible by advances in computer hardware, computer science, and software engineering, as well as by airborne and space observation remote-sensing technologies.
The science of deriving information about an object using a sensor without physically contacting it is called remote sensing, which is a part of geomatics.
Applications
Application areas include:
- Aeromagnetic surveys
- Airborne geophysics
- Air navigation services
- Archaeological excavation and survey for GIS applications
- Coastal zone management and mapping
- Disaster informatics for disaster risk reduction and response
- The environment
- Infrastructure management
- Land management and reform
- Natural resource monitoring and development
- Seismic Interpretation
- Subdivision planning
- Urban planning
- Oceanography
- Meteorology
- Parks
- Resource Management
- Climate Change/Environmental Monitoring
See also
- Geodesy
- Cartography
- Geographic information systems
- Geoinformatics
- Land Surveying
- LIDAR
- Digital terrain modelling
- RICS
References
- ↑ Applied Geomatics Research Laboratory, University of Waterloo
- ↑ Paradis, Michel (September 1981). "De l'arpentage à la géomatique". Le géomètre canadien (in French) 35 (3): 262.
Further reading
- Geomatics Canada Ottawa: Natural Resources Canada ISSN 1491-5480
- Dermanis, Athanasios; Grün, Armin; Sansò, Fernando (2000). Geomatic Methods for the Analysis of Data in the Earth Sciences. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-67476-4.
- Kavanagh, Barry F. (2003). Geomatics. Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-130-32289-0.
- Yvan Bédard, "Geomatics" in Karen Kemp (2008), Encyclopedia of Geographic Information Science, Sage.
- Gomarasca, Mario A. (2009). Basics of Geomatics. Springer. ISBN 978-1-402-09014-1.
- "Geomatics", sec. 1.3 in Mathias Lemmens (2011), Geo-information: Technologies, Applications and the Environment, Springer.
External links
- Bachelor of Science in Geomatics at Nicholls State University
- Geomatics program at the University of Florida
- Canada's Northwest Territories Centre for Geomatics
- UK's Environment Agency Geomatics Group
- GIM International Lemmer, the Netherlands: Geodetical Information & Trading Centre ISSN 1566-9076
- Geomatics at DMOZ