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WHAT IS GIS?
A Geographic Information System (GIS) is a computer system
(hardware, software, data, and operator) that can store and
analyze geographic data. Features on the earth (such as roads,
buildings, vegetation, soil types, slope, etc.) are represented
as points, lines or polygons and each feature has a database
record attached to it. For example, a building in a GIS data
layer might have information about its roof material, siding,
the year it was built, what its present function is,
how many windows it has, and so on. A polygon on a soil map
might have information on the type of soil, slope, permeability,
suitability for agriculture, suitability for septic systems,
etc.
With GIS, maps are easy to
update and can be re-printed as information changes. The power
of GIS, though, is really in its ability to easily and
quickly analyze information which would, using paper maps,
be tedious and difficult. Using GIS, you could easily calculate,
for instance, the area of wetlands within the park boundary
by overlaying the two data layerswetlands and park boundary.
You could use a GIS data layer of property boundaries (tax
maps) to quickly generate an abutters notification list.
GIS can also be used to model such things as the spread of
fire or determine where to site a new trail or radio tower
to reduce visual and environmental impact.
GIS AT ACADIA NATIONAL
PARK
The park has been building
a Geographic Information System (GIS) since the 1980s. We
have good basic data for the park and surroundings and research
in the park is adding more geographically related data every
year. Maps and analyses are routinely made for reports, presentation,
fieldwork, and planning by park staff and researchers. The
park GIS Specialist updates and operates the computer system,
maintains the data, produces maps and analyses, helps people
understand and use data we have gathered, and develops or
acquires new data needed by the park.
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