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    and oceans, most of this generation knows nothing about geography. Even sometimes these simple concepts are unreachable for students and many young adults making them geo-illiterate. Geographic Literacy, as described by Dr. Daniel C. Edelson, has three key concepts; understanding human and natural systems, geographic reasoning and systematic decision making. He describes a geo-literate student as not only one who understands geography, but one who understands that the Earth is interconnected and the

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    A Geographic Information System (GIS) stores and links non-graphic attributes of geographically referenced data with graphic map features allowing for a wide range of information processing and display operations, as well as map production, analysis, and modeling. A working GIS is composed of hardware, software, data, people, and a set of methods. Using these components a GIS is capable of storing, manipulating, and managing data, then subsequently analyzing, visualizing, and modeling the data. GIS

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    National Geographic Society

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    National Geographic Society The Problem Essay Position Statement The key managerial problem which John Fahey is facing is to decide as to whom the e-commerce head should report, in the current organizational structure of NGS, so that the new position gives him enough freedom to leverage the growth opportunities of the e-commerce platform efficiently. How much span of control for the new head is required to cope with declining print media sales and build the right balance between allocating investments

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    Geographic Information Science: It is the general term for mapping technologies which was used by different sectors and it was the foundation for Geographic Information Systems. It spatial data in the form of  Digital Maps  Digital Aerial Photos  Remotely sensed Imagery  Global positioning system Coordinates. These helps assess, plan and control many facets of society. Some Important characteristics Geographic Information. 1. It is often relatively static. • Natural features and many human features

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    Geographic Information Systems (GIS) has had one of the biggest impacts on the discipline of modern day geography. Roger Tomlinson coined the term GIS in the early 1960s in Canada. Tomlinson defined GIS in its early days as a computer application designed to perform certain specific functions (Coppock et al; 1991). GIS is interdisciplinary in nature, having a distinctive role in geography. The application created for the Canada GIS department was designed to summarize and tabulate land inventory

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    The geographic information system is also used in finding clusters. This is done using multiple algorithms to come with a group of unrelated regions that match the theme of interest. The cluster contains points that meet the criterion required for the theme. For instance, members of a cluster could be points where the distance between them is less than a particular threshold or points whose population density is above a particular range. The process requires many levels of iteration before the choice

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    National Geographic Society (NGS) was founded in 1888, and remains one of the largest non-profit educational and scientific institutions in the world. In its 128 years, the organization has evolved considerably, adapting to an expanding customer base, unpredictable economic environments, and inevitable digital convergence. In order to remain aligned with its financial goals, the organizational structure and mission statement of NGS have changed, and continue to do so, considering the creation of

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    Joseph Crain GPHY 384 Term Paper 04/19/2016 Geographic information science and systems can be an extremely powerful tool when properly applied to real world situations. GIS is commonly thought of as map making because it deals with spatial analysis, but data can be managed and manipulated to create a vast array of different outputs including charts and graphs. There are several software programs capable of dealing with GIS synthesis and analysis. The focus of this paper applies to use of ArcMap

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    The term Geographic Information Systems (GIS) is a term used to refer to a system installed in a computer capable of manipulating, assembling, displaying and storing information that has been geographically referenced. Large volumes of data are mapped, analyzed and modeled using a single database depending on their locations. In short, the software gives one power to create maps. Information such latitudes, longitudes, elevations and ZIP codes are fed into the system and the results can be used to

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    of a short green crop (grass/alfalfa), completely shading the ground, of uniform height and with adequate water status in the soil profile. Analysis of potential evapotranspiration (PET) is essential in irrigation water management and planning. Geographic Information Systems (GIS) has been used in the analysis of PET in agricultural fields such as soybean and corn fields; and mapping of the extent of irrigation throughout the growing period of such crops. In order to investigate the extent to which

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