New Prospects in Territorial Resource Management: The Semantic Web GIS

Author(s):  
Ernesto Marcheggiani ◽  
Michele Nucci ◽  
Andrea Galli
Author(s):  
P. Pallavi ◽  
Shaik Salam

Water is an important, but often ignored element in sustainable development by now it has been clear that urgent action is needed to avoid global water crisis. Water resource management is the activity of planning, developing, distributing and managing the optimum use of water resources. Successful management of water resources requires accurate knowledge of their resource distribution to meet up the competing demands and mechanisms to make good decisions using advanced recent technologies.Towards evolving comprehensive management plan in suitable conservation and utilization of water resources space technology plays a crucial role in managing country’s available water resources. Systematic approaches involving judicious combination of conventional server side scripting programming and remote sensing techniques pave way for achieving optimum planning and operational of water resources projects.   new methodologies and 24/7 accessible system need to be built, these by reducing the dependency on complex infrastructure an specialist domain Open source web GIS systems have proven their rich in application of server side scripting and easy to use client application tools. Present study and implementation aims to provide wizard based or easily driven tools online for command area management practices. In this large endeavour modules for handling remote sensing data, online raster processing, statistics and indices generation will be developed.


2014 ◽  
Vol 69 (2) ◽  
pp. 955-975 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saeed Javanmardi ◽  
Mohammad Shojafar ◽  
Shahdad Shariatmadari ◽  
Jemal H. Abawajy ◽  
Mukesh Singhal

2007 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 353 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Soldatos ◽  
Kostas Stamatis ◽  
Siamak Azodolmolky ◽  
Ippokratis Pandis ◽  
Lazaros Polymenakos

2011 ◽  
Vol 403-408 ◽  
pp. 2188-2191
Author(s):  
He Chang ◽  
Jian Guo Gao ◽  
Ping Pan ◽  
Xin Kai Liu

With the increasing geographic information system development, more technology about GIS was introduced to the mineral industry. Because of the promotion and implementation of "Digital Mine", many mining companies and research institutes started to build large mineral resources management information system. Mineral data has complicated and diversified characteristics, it include Two-Dimensional, Three-Dimensional spatial data, production statements, mining point of information, sampling results etc. This paper introduces a kind of design method that spatial database associated with the attributive data(maps, text, tables, video, etc.) in the server, to establish an systematic mineral resource management information system including GIS functions, mineral data management functions, Web GIS functions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 753
Author(s):  
Alexandra Rowland ◽  
Erwin Folmer ◽  
Wouter Beek

The field of geographic information science has grown exponentially over the last few decades and, particularly within the context of the pervasiveness of the internet, bears witness to a rapid transition of its associated technologies from stand-alone systems to increasingly networked and distributed systems as geospatial information becomes increasingly available online. With its long-standing history for innovation, the field has adopted many disruptive technologies from the fields of computer and information sciences through this transition towards web geographic information systems (GIS); most interestingly in the context of this research is the limited uptake of semantic web technologies by the field and its associated technologies, the lack of which has resulted in a technological disjoint between these fields. As the field seeks to make geospatial information more accessible to more users and in more contexts through ‘self-service’ applications, the use of these technologies is imperative to support the interoperability between distributed data sources. This paper aims to provide insight into what linked data tooling already exists, and based on the features of these, what may be possible for the achievement of self-service GIS. Findings include what visualisation, interactivity, analytics and usability features could be included in the realisation of self-service GIS, pointing to the opportunities that exist in bringing GIS technologies closer to the user.


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