Journal Article10.1179/0008704041165284
Recent Literature - Bookcase
Jonathan Rowell,Rebecca Miles +1 more
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Abstract: Andrew, P. G. (2003). Cataloguing sheet maps, the Basics, Haworth Information Press, New York. ISBN 0789014831. Buckley, A. (2003). ‘Atlas mapping in the 21st century’, Cartography and Geographic Information Science, 30, 149–58. Comenetz, J. (2003). ‘Cartography and population geography as current events: A case study’, Journal of Geography, 102, 58–66. Countryside Agency. (2003). A Guide to Definitive Maps and Changes to Public Rights of Way. Countryside Agency, Cheltenham, Great Britain. Enemark, S. (2003). ‘Surveying the surveying profession’, Survey Review, 37, 137–44. Findley, J. (2003). ‘Geographic analysis and monitoring at the United States Geological Survey’, Cartography and Geographic Information Science, 30, 203–10. Frye, C. (2003). ‘The 1:24,000-Scale topographic base map data model’, Cartography and Geographic Information Science, 30, 163–68. Hall, G. K. (2003). Bibliographic Guide to Maps and Atlases: 2002, G. K. Hall & Co., Woodbridge (US). ISBN 0783898193. Kasum, J. (2003). ‘Updating sea charts and navigational publications’, Journal of Navigation, 56, 497–505. Kelmelis, J. (2003). ‘To the National Map and beyond’, Cartography and Geographic Information Science, 30, 185–98. Koster, E. A. (2003). ‘Multi-scale cartographic systems and morphology’, Urban Morphology, 7, 38–39. Lee, K. D. and Shumakov, A. (2003). ‘Access to geospatial data in 2003: A global survey to public policy and technological factors’, Cartography and Geographic Information Science, 30, 225–30. Mangan, E. (2003). Cartographic Materials: A Manual of Interpretation for AACR2, Library Association Publishing, London. ISBN: 1856045161. Millar, C. (2003). The Atlas of US and Canadian Environmental History, Routledge, London. ISBN 0415937817. Motta, G. and Pizzigoni, A. (2003). ‘Cartography in urban design’, Urban Morphology, 7, 37–50. Nusser, S. M. and Klaas, E. E. (2003). ‘Survey methods for assessing land cover map accuracy’, Environmental and Ecological Statistics, 10, 309–31. Olomo, R. O. (2003). ‘The current trend of mapping in Nigeria’, Cartography, 32, 39–51. Ovenden, M. (2003). Metro Maps of the World, Capital Transport Publishing, Harrow Weald, Middlesex. ISBN 1854142720. Perkins, C. (2003). ‘Cartography: Mapping theory’, Progress in Human Geography, 27, 341–51. Roth, K. (2003). ‘Initial implementation of The National Map’, Cartography and Geographic Information Science, 30, 199–202. Sahr, K., White, D. and Kimerling, A. J. (2003). ‘Geodesic discrete global grid systems’, Cartography and Geographic Information Science, 30, 121–34. Slocum, T. A., McMaster, R. B., Kessler, F. C. and Howard, H. H. (2004). Introduction to Thematic Cartography, Prentice Hall, New Jersey. ISBN 0130351237. Sriskandarajah, D. (2003). ‘Long underwear on a line? The Peters projection and thirty years of carto-controversy’, Geography, 88, 236–44. Trainor, T. (2003). ‘U.S. Census Bureau geographic support: A response to changing technology and improved data’, Cartography and Geographic Information Science, 30, 217–23. Williamson, I. P., Rajabifard, A. and Feeney, M. F. (2003). Developing Spatial Data Infrastructures: From Concept to Reality, Taylor & Francis, London. ISBN 041530265X.
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Integrated Geospatial Technologies: a guide to GPS, GIS and data logging
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss Cartography, Mapping, and Map Serving in the context of Global Positioning Systems (GPS) and Geodetics and Visualization.
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References
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GPS satellite surveying
Alfred Leick
- 01 Jan 1990
TL;DR: Elements of Satellite Surveying The Global Positioning System Adjustment Computations Least Squares Adjustment Examples Links to Physical Observations The Three-Dimensional Geodetic Model GPS Observables Propagation Media, Multipath, and Phase Center Processing GPS Carrier Phases Network Adjustments Ellipsoidal and Conformal Mapping Models Useful Transformations Datums, Standards, and Specifications Appendices References Abbreviations for Frequently Used References Indexes as discussed by the authors.
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Geographic Information Analysis
David O'Sullivan,David J. Unwin +1 more
- 15 Nov 2002
TL;DR: The Second Edition of this book discusses Geographic Information Analysis and Spatial Data, a meta-modelling framework for solving the problem of how to model and analyze spatial data in a discrete-time manner.
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Feminist Visualization: Re-envisioning GIS as a Method in Feminist Geographic Research
TL;DR: This paper explored the possibilities for critical engagement through revisiting some of the central arguments in the critical discourse from feminist perspectives, and examined whether GIS methods are inherently incompatible with feminist epistemologies through interrogating their connection with positivist scientific practices and visualization technologies.
The New Nature of Maps: Essays in the History of Cartography
Abstract: Focusing on historical examples and the practises of modern cartography, J.B. Harley (1932-1991) offers an alternative to the dominant view that Western cartography since the Renaissance has been a progressive technological, scientific and objective trajectory of development. This traditional view asserts that maps produce an accurate relational model of terrain and, as such, epitomize representational modernism, which is rooted in the project of the Enlightenment; in sum, maps banish subjectivity from the image. Accordingly, cartographers have promoted a standard scientific model for their discipline, one in which a mirror of nature can be projected through geometry and measurement. Cartographers often mistakenly assess early maps by this modern yardstick, excising from the accepted canon of mapping not only maps from the premodern era but also those from other cultures that do not match Western notions of accuracy. In these essays, Harley draws on ideas in art history, literature, philosophy, and the study of visual culture to subvert the traditional, "positivist" model of cartography, replacing it with one that is grounded in an iconological and semiotic theory of the nature of maps. He defines a map as a "social construction" and argues that maps are not simple representations of reality but exert profound influences upon the way space is conceptualized and organized. A central theme is the way in which power - whether military, political, religious or economic - becomes inscribed on the land through cartography. In this reading of maps and map making, Harley undertakes a surprising journey into the nature of the social and political unconscious.
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Geodesic Discrete Global Grid Systems
TL;DR: Geodesic Discrete Global Grid Systems as discussed by the authors can be constructed by specifying five substantially independent design choices: a base regular polyhedron, a fixed orientation of the base regular polygons relative to the Earth, a hierarchical spatial partitioning method defined symmetrically on a face (or set of faces), a method for transforming that planar partition to the corresponding spherical/ellipsoidal surface, and a method of assigning point representations to grid cells.