Academic literature on the topic 'Cartographic conventions'

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Journal articles on the topic "Cartographic conventions"

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Skopeliti, Andriani, and Leda Stamou. "Online Map Services: Contemporary Cartography or a New Cartographic Culture?" ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information 8, no. 5 (2019): 215. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijgi8050215.

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In this paper, online map services are reviewed from a cartographic point of view. The most popular online map services are selected based on worldwide website traffic data, provided by specialized sites, such as Similarweb, in terms of global coverage and popularity among users. Online map services are commented based on cartographic principles, conventions and traditional practices addressing topics, such as: Cartographic projection, orientation, scale, marginalia, content (thematic layers), symbology, generalization, annotation, color use and overall map design. Color schemes utilized in we
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Vanhaelen, Angela. "Mapping Angels in Early Modern Amsterdam." Journal of Early Modern History 23, no. 2-3 (2019): 227–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700658-12342632.

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Abstract The angel was a recurrent marginal embellishment on hundreds of maps made in seventeenth-century Amsterdam, whose innovative commercial mapmaking dominated the international market. This essay explores how the mapmakers adapted pervasive conventions of cartographic angelology as a means to explore the expanding possibilities as well as the limitations of their own practice. The peculiar pictorial partnership between cartographers and their guardian spirits was a means to delineate cartography as inspired work. However, an interrogation of the implications of this spiritual service tra
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Gravon, Danielle. "‘Candy is Now Flanders’." Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 95, no. 2 (2019): 43–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.7227/bjrl.95.2.3.

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This article examines the various layered concepts of foreignness constructed by ‘t Historiael Journael, a travel account of the first Dutch envoy to Ceylon from 1602 to 1604. It focuses on a map of Ceylon included in the account and positions it in relation to other cartographic projects commissioned by leaders of the early Dutch Republic. It is argued that the Dutch conceived of religious and cartographic images as opposing types of representation and used the stylistic conventions and ideological concepts underpinning these different modes of picturing to construct divergent religious and p
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Kurnick, Sarah, and David Rogoff. "Maya cartographies: Two maps of Punta Laguna, Yucatan, Mexico." Journal of Social Archaeology 20, no. 2 (2020): 119–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1469605320914105.

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It is common to view maps as simple reflections of the world. Maps, however, are more complex and dynamic. They are a potent form of spatial imagination and a powerful means of producing space. This article encourages archaeologists to experiment with, and to produce a multiplicity of, maps and other spatial images. As an example, this article juxtaposes two previously unpublished maps of Punta Laguna, Yucatan, Mexico: a site map created using traditional archaeological conventions and a visual cartographic history created using Indigenous Maya spatial ontologies. Because they depict space rel
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Helmke, Christophe, Jesper Nielsen, and Ángel Iván Rivera Guzmán. "The origins and development of the cartographic tradition in the central Mexican highlands." Contributions in New World Archaeology 12 (December 31, 2019): 55–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.33547/cnwa.12.02.

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More than four decades ago H.B. Nicholson compared the so-called Palace Stone from Xochicalco to a page in a Mesoamerican codex. Showing numerous calendrical dates and toponymic signs connected by a path marked by footprints the monument readily recalls the cartographic tradition that is well-known for the central Mexican highlands at the time of the Spanish conquest. In this paper we explore the Epiclassic evidence of this tradition, discussing not only central features of the Palace Stone, but also additional monuments from Xochicalco and sites in the vicinity, such as the recently discovere
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Vereshchaka, Tamara V., Marina Y. Bakanova, and A. L. Stepanchenko. "Cartographic support of design, construction and operation of underground gas storage in rock salt." Abstracts of the ICA 1 (July 15, 2019): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/ica-abs-1-382-2019.

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<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> Investigated the directions of use of topographic maps and requirements for them at different stages of design, construction and operation of underground gas storages in rock salt – one of the most important parts of Russia's Unified gas supply system. The specificity, complexity and diversity of cartographic support of this industry emphasized. A new type of topographic map is proposed, the content of which is subjected specially to the purpose of creating underground gas storage with the display of information about the objects of the entire co
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Fish, Carolyn S., and Kirby Calvert. "An Analysis of Interactive Solar Energy Web Maps for Urban Energy Sustainability." Cartographic Perspectives, no. 85 (July 11, 2017): 5–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.14714/cp85.1372.

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Maps and geographic information systems (GIS) have become vital tools for decision-making, communication, and outreach in the domain of urban energy sustainability. One emerging example involves interactive online maps that allow users to assess rooftop solar energy potential on a building of interest. These maps are interesting in two ways: they are new forms of technology in and of themselves, and they have only become relevant with the changes in renewable energy technologies that allow individuals to participate in this new economy of energy production. The purpose of this study is to desc
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Gillet, A. "AS17-148-22727 – Face à la Terre." Geographica Helvetica 70, no. 1 (2015): 27–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/gh-70-27-2015.

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Abstract. Taken by the Apollo 17 crew on 7 December 1972, AS-17-148-22727 is one of the most famous photographs ever taken. Its iconic status has been commented on by many writers. In an article entitled "Contested Global Visions" (1994), Denis Cosgrove showed the huge impact it had on the way we think and depict the world and our presence in it. However, his analysis did not address the question of its prior reorientation and reframing, which are in essence cartographic operations. Our object therefore is to focus on the difference between zenithal and horizontal viewpoints, and eventually fr
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Du Verger, Jean. "Geographical, Cartographical and Cosmographical Echoes in Teofilo Folengo’s Baldus (1517)." Moreana 51 (Number 197-, no. 3-4 (2014): 12–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/more.2014.51.3-4.5.

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While exploring Teofilo Folengo’s Baldus (Venice, 1517) my paper draws on the Lipsian view that the practice of reading and travelling during the Renaissance were closely interwoven. In the same way the traveler walks through strange and foreign landscapes, the movement of the reader’s eye explores the text as it slowly merges into a map. In the present paper, I will first examine how Folengo uses cartographic metaphors and conventions in his Liber Macaronicus, to create a world in which geographical reality and fiction are meshed. I will then try to uncover the textual sources which are embed
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MacDonald, Gavin. "Bodies Moving and Being Moved: Mapping affect in Christian Nold's Bio Mapping." Somatechnics 4, no. 1 (2014): 108–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/soma.2014.0115.

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In A History of Spaces (2004), John Pickles observes that one of the less well-known representational norms of mapping is its focus on ‘natural and physical objects rather than developing universal conventions dealing with symbol, affect and movement.’ New media artist Christian Nold's work has dealt explicitly with two of these cartographic blindspots, grafting new and old technologies that both, in different ways, create bodily traces – the GPS trace of movement and the GSR (galvanic skin response) trace of arousal, often taken as an index of emotional response. Although Nold's socially enga
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Cartographic conventions"

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Abdel, Hamid Iman. "Chromo-stereoscopic visualisation for dynamic marine operations." Thesis, University of Plymouth, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/1240.

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Chromo stereoscopy (CS) is a simple and cost effective 3D system that can easily deliver geospatial information. CS has been used in several scientific data presentations, including remote sensing, physical modelling and hydrographic applications. In some of these applications the 3D effect was solely CS-related, while others integrated CS with other methods of implementing 3D. CS was mainly used in static visualisation, but no dynamic applications were found. Also, the restricted use of colour was acknowledged as a limitation for CS suggesting its unsuitability for applications where colour c
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Lawson-Drackey, Soley. "Un renouvellement du cadre d’analyse de la valeur des brevets : une approche par la cartographie cognitive." Thesis, Lyon 2, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013LYO22002/document.

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Bien que l’usage des méthodes d’évaluation financière des brevets semble aujourd’hui stabilisé, les procédures d’évaluation extra-financière, précédent essentiel à l’évaluation financière, restent à ce jour floues. Pour que ces méthodes soient opérationnellement fiables et permettent, a minima, une comparabilité entre les différents actifs, il est indispensable de stabiliser un cadre d’évaluation de référence explorant en profondeur les indicateurs clefs de performance des brevets. A travers l’analyse des cartes cognitives d’experts de l’évaluation, nos travaux examinent les conventions de qua
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Holzer, Nicolai. "Development of an interface for the conversion of geodata in a NetCDF data model and publication of this data by the use of the web application DChart, related to the CEOP-AEGIS project." Master's thesis, Saechsische Landesbibliothek- Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Dresden, 2011. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-qucosa-71492.

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The Tibetan Plateau with an extent of about 2,5 million square kilometers at an average altitude higher than 4,700 meters has a significant impact on the Asian monsoon and regulates with its snow and ice reserves the upstream headwaters of seven major south-east Asian rivers. Upon the water supply of these rivers depend over 1,4 billion people, the agriculture, the economics, and the entire ecosystem in this region. As the increasing number of floods and droughts show, these seasonal water reserves however are likely to be influenced by climate change, with negative effects for the downstream
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Books on the topic "Cartographic conventions"

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ASPRS-ACSM, Convention (1993 New Orleans La ). 1993 ACSM/ASPRS Annual Convention & Exposition: Technical papers, New Orleans. American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing and American Congress on Surveying and Mapping, 1993.

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ACSM/ASPRS Convention & Exposition (1994 Reno, Nevada). ASPRS technical papers: 1994 ASPRS/ACSM Annual Convention & Exposition : Reno, Nevada. American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, 1994.

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ASPRS-ACSM Fall Convention (1987 Reno, Nevada). Prospecting new horizons: 1987 ASPRS-ACSM Fall Convention, Reno, Nevada, October 4-9 : ASPRS technical papers. American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, 1987.

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ASPRS-ACSM Fall Convention (1986 Anchorage, Alaska). New frontiers: 1986 ASPRS-ACSM Fall Convention, Anchorage, Alaska, September 28-October 3 : ACSM technical papers. American Congress on Surveying and Mapping, 1986.

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Auto-Carto. (11th 1993 Minneapolis, Mn). Auto-Carto 11: Proceedings, 30 October-1 November 1993, Minneapolis Convention Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota. American Congress on Surveying and Mapping and American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, 1993.

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American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing., American Congress on Surveying and Mapping., American Congress on Surveying and Mapping. Meeting, and ASPRS Meeting (52nd : 1986 : Washington, D.C.), eds. Technical papers: 1986 ACSM-ASPRS Annual Convention, Washington, D.C., March 16-21 : ACSM 46th Annual Meeting, ASPRS 52nd Annual Meeting. American Congress on Surveying and Mapping and American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, 1986.

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ASPRS-ACSM, Convention (1989 Baltimore Md ). Technical papers: 1989 ASPRS/ACSM Annual Convention : Baltimore, Maryland, April 2-7 : ASPRS 55th Annual Meeting, ACSM 49th Annual Meeting. --. American Congress on Surveying and Mapping and American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, 1989.

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ASPRS-ACSM Convention (1987 Baltimore, Md.). Technical papers: 1987 ASPRS-ACSM Annual Convention : Baltimore, Maryland, March 29-April 3 : ASPRS 53rd Annual Meeting, ACSM 47th Annual Meeting. American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, 1987.

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ASPRS-ACSM, Convention (1988 St Louis Mo). Technical papers: 1988 ACSM-ASPRS annual convention :St. Louis, Missouri, March 13-18 : ACSM 48th Annual Meeting, ASPRS 54th Annual Meeting. American Congress on Surveying and Mapping and American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, 1988.

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Turkey) Teaching conventional and digital map production lines (Seminar) (1994 Istanbul. Proceedings of the seminar on teaching conventional and digital map production lines: Held at Istanbul Technical University, Istanbul, Turkey, April 11-15, 1994. International Cartographic Association/ Association Cartographique Internationale, Cartography Department, Utrecht University, 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "Cartographic conventions"

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Purcell, Kate. "Projecting Change." In Geographical Change and the Law of the Sea. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198743644.003.0008.

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This chapter looks at debates over whether the charted or ‘actual’ low-water line constitutes the normal baseline in commentary considering the implications of climate-related coastal change for maritime jurisdiction. It suggests that there has been some conflation of legal lines with the geographical objects by reference to which they are constructed or described. This seems to have encouraged the attribution of the natural variability of features of the coastal environment to both cartographic constructs and legal limits. The chapter revisits the text and drafting history of UNCLOS and the 1958 Conventions to explain why the identification of natural objects and qualities with either or both cartographic and legal constructs misunderstands the role of charted geographical features in the law.
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"cartographic convention." In Dictionary Geotechnical Engineering/Wörterbuch GeoTechnik. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-41714-6_30644.

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Leuenberger, Christine, and Izhak Schnell. "Maps with a Mission Post-1967." In The Politics of Maps. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190076238.003.0006.

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Post-1967, the “peace camp,” what are considered left-wing peace and human rights organizations, also actively used maps to put forth their geopolitical visions of an Israeli territory delimited by international law, while drawing on scientific cartographic conventions. Maps produced by the “peace camp” are informed by a range of very different discourses, which include concerns about Israel’s occupation strategies, its compliance or non-compliance with international law, its demography, the need for the recognition of Palestinians’ human rights and historical presence in the region, and the feasibility of particular territorial solutions. Organizations such as Peace Now, B’Tselem, the Geneva Initiative, and Zochrot (Remembering) used various visual and textual signifiers to communicate concerns in regard to territorial annexation, to propose territorial compromises for possible peace negotiations, and to challenge Hebrew topography by retracing alternative Arab topography in the search for historical justice. Such maps tended to invoke legal as well as scientific standards to give the maps authority and persuasive power in the attempt to increase the legitimacy of the geopolitical visions put forth.
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Smith, Jason W. "The Common Highway." In To Master the Boundless Sea. University of North Carolina Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469640440.003.0004.

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This chapter examines the hydrographic work of the U.S. Naval Observatory and Hydrographical Office under the leadership of Lieutenant Matthew Fontaine Maury, 1842-1861, a tenure in which Maury brought the Navy to the forefront of antebellum American applied and theoretical science and embarked upon revolutionary new cartographic conventions in his Wind and Current Charts series. Maury pushed and considerably expanded the boundaries of the hydrographic chart to include wind speed, ocean temperature, ship tracks, and whales, among other things, creating a partnership with American and foreign mariners to collect and systematize data about the marine environment thereby significantly shortening the length of voyages under sail, and breaking down the rule-of-thumb navigational methods deeply-rooted in maritime culture. With Maury’s publication of The Physical Geography of the Sea in 1855, he became the intellectual and political rival and sometime enemy of key leaders in the American civilian scientific community. Nevertheless, this chapter argues that at a time when the U.S. Navy, the American maritime community, and civilian science were diverging, Maury was just the sort of figure who could bridge increasingly widening intellectual, cultural, and institutional gaps between them.
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Brückner, Martin. "Cartographic Transfers." In Social Life of Maps in America, 1750-1860. University of North Carolina Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469632605.003.0008.

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Before maps arrived in American homes, their social life was regulated by institutional agendas set by government agencies as well as voluntary associations. But, as this chapter shows, the path that led small, ambulatory maps into the domestic lives of ordinary citizens most frequently was created and maintained by the nation’s emerging school system. After the Revolution, an educational consumer demand, spurred by the introduction of the monitorial teaching method and homework assignments in primary and secondary education, was responsible for turning plain, conventional maps into formative experiences of lasting cognitive and social consequence. Examining the synergetic relationship between “mappery,” a form of cartographic instruction, and the emerging pedagogic theory of “object teaching,” the final chapter delineates how educators established maps as a powerful social media, linking schools and homes, elementary education and adult learning, cognitive theories and communal socialization, including the creation of a map-based national imagination.
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"Combining Conventional & C-A Cartography." In Basic Cartography: For Students and Technicians. Elsevier, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-1-4832-5712-9.50067-5.

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Hawthorne, Timothy L. "Communities, Cartography and GIS." In Geographic Information Systems. IGI Global, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-2038-4.ch110.

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This paper discusses an introductory cartography and GIS service learning course. The service learning experience, highlighted by a final mapping project and community presentation, resulted in 3,000 student-designed maps being distributed to community residents, a website of downloadable student maps, multiple student speaking engagements, and a sustained community-university collaboration. The course demonstrates the importance of applied geography in local communities and highlights the benefits of community-university partnerships for addressing social change. Such an applied geography experience offers an important twist on the conventional, introductory cartography course where students engage in pre-packaged lectures and labs, and are then asked to complete a final mapping project. Unlike the conventional approach, this service learning class experience allows students to use their creativity to demonstrate knowledge learned in the course and allows students to apply and present their geographic knowledge in a real-world setting to community members.
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"Beyond Conventional Curriculum Cartography Via a Global Sense of Place." In Landscapes and Learning. Brill | Sense, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789460910838_014.

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Taşçıoğlu, Mertcan, and Dursun Yener. "The Value and Scope of GIS in Marketing and Tourism Management." In Environmental Information Systems. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-7033-2.ch030.

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Geographical information systems (GIS) are the systems that store location-based data and analyze them. GIS originated from the conventional cartographic techniques of simply drawing maps with a pencil and board. Following the adoption of computer technology, GIS further evolved as a geo-referenced dynamic information system, which can today be considered as a multi-disciplinary instrument that links different disciplines like geography, computer science, remote sensing, civil engineering, statistics, marketing, and other social and behavioral sciences. In this chapter, GIS is defined and its importance and functions are described in detail. Usage of GIS in marketing is explained, especially its development in marketing theory. Also, the value and scope of GIS in tourism management with a view to understand the spread of GIS applications in tourism is explored.
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Taşçıoğlu, Mertcan, and Dursun Yener. "The Value and Scope of GIS in Marketing and Tourism Management." In GIS Applications in the Tourism and Hospitality Industry. IGI Global, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-5088-4.ch009.

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Geographical information systems (GIS) are the systems that store location-based data and analyze them. GIS originated from the conventional cartographic techniques of simply drawing maps with a pencil and board. Following the adoption of computer technology, GIS further evolved as a geo-referenced dynamic information system, which can today be considered as a multi-disciplinary instrument that links different disciplines like geography, computer science, remote sensing, civil engineering, statistics, marketing, and other social and behavioral sciences. In this chapter, GIS is defined and its importance and functions are described in detail. Usage of GIS in marketing is explained, especially its development in marketing theory. Also, the value and scope of GIS in tourism management with a view to understand the spread of GIS applications in tourism is explored.
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Conference papers on the topic "Cartographic conventions"

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Pukowiec-Kurda, Katarzyna, and Urszula Myga-Piatek. "Application of New Methods of Environment Analysis and Assessment in Landscape Audits – Case Studies of Urban Areas Like Czestochowa, Poland." In Environmental Engineering. VGTU Technika, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.3846/enviro.2017.116.

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Following the 2000 European Landscape Convention, a new act strengthening landscape protection instruments has been in force since 2015. It sets forth legal aspects of landscape shaping (Dziennik Ustaw 2015, poz. 774) and introduces landscape audits at the province level. A landscape audit consists in identification and characterization of selected landscapes, assessment of their value, selection of so-called priority landscapes and identification of threats for preservation of their value. An audit complies with GIS standards. Analyses use source materials, i.e. digital maps of physical-geogr
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Santo-Tomás Muro, Rocío, Eva Juana Rodríguez Romero, and Carlota Sáenz de Tejada Granados. "Perceptive approaches to the morphological characterization of the urban contour: The case of the peri-urban landscape of Madrid." In 24th ISUF 2017 - City and Territory in the Globalization Age. Universitat Politècnica València, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/isuf2017.2017.5345.

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Perceptive approaches to the morphological characterization of the urban contour: The case of the peri-urban landscape of Madrid Eva J. Rodríguez Romero¹, Carlota Sáenz de Tejada Granados², Rocío Santo-Tomás Muro3 1, 2,3 Departamento de Arquitectura y Diseño. Universidad CEU San Pablo. Escuela Politécnica Superior, Campus de Montepríncipe. 28668 Boadilla del Monte, Madrid. E-mail: rodrom@ceu.es, carlota.saenztejada@ceu.es, rocio.santotomasmuro@beca.ceu.es Keywords: perceptive analysis, proximity landscape, landscape character, urban form, Madrid Conference topics and scale: Tools of analysis i
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