fbpx
Wikipedia

Geographical feature

A feature (also called an object or entity), in the context of geography and geographic information science, is something that exists at a moderate to global scale at a location in the space and scale of relevance to geography; that is, at or near the surface of Earth.[1]: 62  It is an item of geographic information, and may be represented in maps, geographic information systems, remote sensing imagery, statistics, and other forms of geographic discourse. Such representations of features consist of descriptions of their inherent nature, their spatial form and location, and their characteristics or properties.[2]

Terminology edit

The term "feature" is broad and inclusive, and includes both natural and human-constructed objects. The term covers things which exist physically (e.g. a building) as well as those that are conceptual or social creations (e.g. a neighbourhood). Formally, the term is generally restricted to things which endure over a period. A feature is also discrete, meaning that it has a clear identity and location distinct from other objects, and is defined as a whole, defined more or less precisely by the boundary of its geographical extent. This differentiates features from geographic processes and events, which are perdurants that only exist in time[clarification needed]; and from geographic masses and fields, which are continuous in that they are not conceptualized as a distinct whole.[3]

In geographic information science, the terms feature, object, and entity are generally used as roughly synonymous. In the 1992 Spatial Data Transfer Standard (SDTS), one of the first public standard models of geographic information, an attempt was made to formally distinguish them: an entity as the real-world phenomenon, an object as a representation thereof (e.g. on paper or digital), and a feature as the combination of both entity and representation objects.[4] Although this distinction is often cited in textbooks, it has not gained lasting nor widespread usage. In the ISO 19101 Geographic Information Reference Model[5] and Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) Simple Features Specification,[6] international standards that form the basis for most modern geospatial technologies, a feature is defined as "an abstraction of a real-world phenomenon", essentially the object in SDTS.

Despite these attempts at formalization, the broadly interchangeable use of these English terms has persisted.

Types of features edit

Natural features edit

A natural feature is an object on the planet that was not created by humans, but is a part of the natural world.[7]

Ecosystems edit

There are two different terms to describe habitats: ecosystem and biome. An ecosystem is a community of organisms.[8] In contrast, biomes occupy large areas of the globe and often encompass many different kinds of geographical features, including mountain ranges.[9]

Biotic diversity within an ecosystem is the variability among living organisms from all sources, including inter alia, terrestrial, marine and other aquatic ecosystems.[10] Living organisms are continually engaged in a set of relationships with every other element constituting the environment in which they exist, and ecosystem describes any situation where there is relationship between organisms and their environment.

Biomes represent large areas of ecologically similar communities of plants, animals, and soil organisms.[11] Biomes are defined based on factors such as plant structures (such as trees, shrubs, and grasses), leaf types (such as broadleaf and needleleaf), plant spacing (forest, woodland, savanna), and climate. Unlike biogeographic realms, biomes are not defined by genetic, taxonomic, or historical similarities. Biomes are often identified with particular patterns of ecological succession and climax vegetation.

Water bodies edit

A body of water is any significant and reasonably long-lasting accumulation of water, usually covering the land. The term "body of water" most often refers to oceans, seas, and lakes, but it may also include smaller pools of water such as ponds, creeks or wetlands. Rivers, streams, canals, and other geographical features where water moves from one place to another are not always considered bodies of water, but they are included as geographical formations featuring water.

Some of these are easily recognizable as distinct real-world entities (e.g. an isolated lake), while others are at least partially based on human conceptualizations. Examples of the latter are a branching stream network in which one of the branches has been arbitrarily designated as the continuation of the primary named stream; or a gulf or bay of a body of water (e.g. a lake or an ocean), which has no meaningful dividing line separatingt it from the rest of the lake or ocean.

Landforms edit

A landform comprises a geomorphological unit and is largely defined by its surface form and location in the landscape, as part of the terrain, and as such is typically an element of topography. Landforms are categorized by features such as elevation, slope, orientation, stratification, rock exposure, and soil type. They include berms, mounds, hills, cliffs, valleys, rivers, and numerous other elements. Oceans and continents are the highest-order landforms.

Artificial features edit

Settlements edit

A settlement is a permanent or temporary community in which people live. Settlements range in components from a small number of dwellings grouped together to the largest of cities with surrounding urbanized areas. Other landscape features such as roads, enclosures, field systems, boundary banks and ditches, ponds, parks and woods, mills, manor houses, moats, and churches may be considered part of a settlement.[12]

Administrative regions and other constructs edit

These include social constructions that are created to administer and organize the land, people, and other spatially-relevant resources.[13] Examples are governmental units such as a state, cadastral land parcels, mining claims, zoning partitions of a city, and church parishes. There are also more informal social features, such as city neighbourhoods and other vernacular regions. These are purely conceptual entities established by edict or practice, although they may align with visible features (e.g. a river boundary), and may be subsequently manifested on the ground, such as by survey markers or fences.

Engineered constructs edit

Engineered geographic features include highways, bridges, airports, railroads, buildings, dams, and reservoirs, and are part of the anthroposphere because they are man-made geographic features.

Cartographic features edit

Cartographic features are types of abstract geographical features, which appear on maps but not on the planet itself, even though they are located on the planet. For example, grid lines, latitudes, longitudes, the Equator, the prime meridian, and many types of boundary, are shown on maps of Earth, but do not physically exist. They are theoretical lines used for reference, navigation, and measurement.

Features and Geographic Information edit

In GIS, maps, statistics, databases, and other information systems, a geographic feature is represented by a set of descriptors of its various characteristics. A common classification of those characteristics has emerged based on developments by Peuquet,[14] Mennis,[2] and others, including the following :

  • Identity, the fact that a feature is unique and distinct from all other features. This does not have an inherent description, but humans have created many systems for attempting to express identity, such as names and identification numbers/codes.
  • Existence, the fact that a feature exists in the world. At first, this may seem trivial, but complex situations are common, such as features that are proposed or planned, abstract concepts (e.g., the Equator), under construction, or that no longer exist.
  • Kind (also known as class, type, or category), one or more groups to which a feature belongs, typically focused on those that are most fundamental to its existence.[15] It thus completes the sentence "This is a _________." These are generally in the form of common nouns (tree, dog, building, county, etc.), which may be isolated or part of a taxonomic hierarchy.
  • Relationships to other features. These may be inherent if they are crucial to the existence and identity of the feature, or incidental if they are not crucial, but "just happen to be." These may be of at least three types:
    • Spatial relations, those that can be visualized and measured in space. For example, the fact that the Potomac River is adjacent to Maryland is an inherent spatial relation because the river is part of the definition of the boundary of Maryland, but the overlap relation between Maryland and the Delmarva Peninsula is incidental, as each would exist unproblematically without the other.
    • Meronomic relations (also known as partonomy), in which a feature may exist as a part of a larger whole, or may exist as a collection of parts. For example, the relationship between Maryland and the United States is a meronomic relation; one is not just spatially within the boundaries of the other, but is a component part of the other that in part defines the existence of both.
    • Genealogical relations (also known as parent-child), which tie a feature to others that existed previously and created it (or from which it was formed by another agent), and in turn to any features it has created. For example, if a county were created by the subdivision of two existing counties, they would be considered its parents.[16]
  • Location, a description of where the feature exists, often including the shape of its extent.[17] While a feature has an inherent location, measuring it for the purpose of representation as data can be a complex process, such as requiring the invention of abstract spatial reference systems, and the necessary employment of cartographic generalization, including an expedient choice of dimension (e.g., a city could be represented as a region or as a point, depending on scale and need).
  • Attributes, characteristics of a feature other than location, often expressed as text or numbers; for example, the population of a city.[18] In geography, the levels of measurement developed by Stanley Smith Stevens (and further extended by others) is a common system for understanding and using attribute data.
  • Time is fundamental to the representation of a feature, although it does not have independent temporal descriptions.[19] Instead, expressions of time are attached to other characteristics, describing how they change (thus, they are analogous to adverbs in common discourse). Any of the above characteristics is mutable, with the possible exception of identity. For example, the lifespan of a feature could be considered as the temporal extent of its existence. The location of a city can change over time as annexations expand its extent. The resident population of a country changes frequently due to immigration, emigration, birth, and death.

The descriptions of features (i.e., the measured values of each of the above characteristics) are typically collected in Geographic databases, such as GIS datasets, based on a variety of data models and file formats, often based on the vector logical model.[20]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Longley, Paul A.; Goodchild, Michael F.; Maguire, David J.; Rhind, David W. (2015). Geographic Information Systems & Science (4th ed.). Wiley.
  2. ^ a b Mennis, Jeremy; Peuquet, Donna J.; Qian, L. (2000). "A geographical database representation". International Journal of Geographical Information Science. 14 (6): 501–520. doi:10.1080/136588100415710. S2CID 7458359.
  3. ^ Plewe, Brandon (2019). "A Case for Geographic Masses". In Timpf, S.; Schlieder, C.; Kattenbeck, M.; Ludwig, B.; Stewart, K. (eds.). 14th International Conference on Spatial Information Theory (COSIT 2019). Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs). Vol. 142. Schloss Dagstuhl-Leibniz-Zentrum fuer Informatik. pp. 14:1–14. doi:10.4230/LIPIcs.COSIT.2019.14. ISBN 9783959771153.
  4. ^ Fegeas, Robin G.; Cascio, Janette L.; Lazar, Robert A. (1992). "An Overview of FIPS 173, The Spatial Data Transfer Standard". Cartography and Geographic Information Systems. 19 (5): 278–293. Bibcode:1992CGISy..19..278F. doi:10.1559/152304092783762209.
  5. ^ International Standards Organization. "ISO 19101-1:2014, Geographic Information-Reference Model-Part 1: Fundamentals". ISO Standards.
  6. ^ Open Geospatial Consortium. "Simple Feature Access - Part 1: Common Architecture". OGC Standards.
  7. ^ There has been some metaphysical debate over whether such features are "real", independent of the human mind (a realist stance), whether they are purely human conceptualizations of continuous natural phenomena (a constructivist stance), or a hybrid of discrete natural phenomena that highly motivate, but are simplified by human concepts (a experientialist stance). It is also possible that individual features may be of any of these three types. Frank, Andrew U. (2003). "Ontology for Spatio-Temporal Databases". In Sellis, Timos (ed.). Spatio-Temporal Databases: The Chorochronos Approach. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. V.2520. Springer-Verlag. pp. 9–77. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-45081-8_2.
  8. ^ Odum, Eugene P.; Odum, Howard T. (1971). Fundamentals of Ecology (3rd ed.). Saunders. ISBN 9780721669410.
  9. ^ Botkin, Daniel B.; Keller, Edward A. (1995). Environmental Science: Earth as a Living Planet. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Canada. ISBN 9780471545484.
  10. ^ "Convention Text — Article 2. Use of Terms". www.CBD.int. Convention on Biological Diversity. 2 November 2006. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  11. ^ Basak, Anindita (2009). Environmental Studies. Dorling Kindersley. p. 288. ISBN 978-81-317-2118-6. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  12. ^ "MSRG Policy Statement". Medieval-Settlement.com. Medieval Settlement Research Group. 2014-05-11. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  13. ^ Montello, Daniel R. (2003). "Regions in geography: Process and content". In Duckham, Matthew; Goodchild, Michael F.; Worboys, Michael (eds.). Foundations of geographic information science. Taylor & Francis. pp. 173–189.
  14. ^ Peuquet, Donna J. (1994). "It's about time: a conceptual framework for the representation of temporal dynamics in geographic information systems". Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 84 (3): 441–461. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8306.1994.tb01869.x.
  15. ^ Mark, David M.; Smith, Barry; Tversky, Barbara (1999). "Ontology and Geographic Objects: an empirical study of cognitive categorization". In Freksa, Christian; Mark, Davis M. (eds.). Spatial Information Theory: A Theoretical Basis for GIS (COSIT '99), Lecture Notes in Computer Science #1661. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. pp. 283–298. doi:10.1007/3-540-48384-5_19. ISBN 978-3-540-48384-7.
  16. ^ Hornsby, Kathleen; Egenhofer, Max J. (2000). "Identity-based change: a foundation for spatio-temporal knowledge representation". International Journal of Geographical Information Science. 14 (3): 207–224. Bibcode:2000IJGIS..14..207H. doi:10.1080/136588100240813. S2CID 52861923.
  17. ^ Huisman, Otto; de By, Rolf A. (2009). "2.2.4 Geographic objects". Principles of Geographic Information Systems (PDF). Enschede, The Netherlands: ITC. p. 77. ISBN 9789061642695.
  18. ^ de Smith, Michael J.; Goodchild, Michael F.; Longley, Paul A. (2018). "Attributes". Geospatial Analysis: A Comprehensive Guide to Principles, Techniques, and Software Tools (6th ed.).
  19. ^ Song, Y. "FC-08 - Time". GIS&T Body of Knowledge. UCGIS. Retrieved 5 January 2023.
  20. ^ Campbell, Jonathan; Shin, Michael (2011). "3.1 Data and Information". Essentials of Geographic Information Systems. Saylor Foundation. ISBN 9781453321966. Retrieved 5 January 2023.

geographical, feature, feature, also, called, object, entity, context, geography, geographic, information, science, something, that, exists, moderate, global, scale, location, space, scale, relevance, geography, that, near, surface, earth, item, geographic, in. A feature also called an object or entity in the context of geography and geographic information science is something that exists at a moderate to global scale at a location in the space and scale of relevance to geography that is at or near the surface of Earth 1 62 It is an item of geographic information and may be represented in maps geographic information systems remote sensing imagery statistics and other forms of geographic discourse Such representations of features consist of descriptions of their inherent nature their spatial form and location and their characteristics or properties 2 Contents 1 Terminology 2 Types of features 2 1 Natural features 2 1 1 Ecosystems 2 1 2 Water bodies 2 1 3 Landforms 2 2 Artificial features 2 2 1 Settlements 2 2 2 Administrative regions and other constructs 2 2 3 Engineered constructs 2 3 Cartographic features 3 Features and Geographic Information 4 See also 5 ReferencesTerminology editThe term feature is broad and inclusive and includes both natural and human constructed objects The term covers things which exist physically e g a building as well as those that are conceptual or social creations e g a neighbourhood Formally the term is generally restricted to things which endure over a period A feature is also discrete meaning that it has a clear identity and location distinct from other objects and is defined as a whole defined more or less precisely by the boundary of its geographical extent This differentiates features from geographic processes and events which are perdurants that only exist in time clarification needed and from geographic masses and fields which are continuous in that they are not conceptualized as a distinct whole 3 In geographic information science the terms feature object and entity are generally used as roughly synonymous In the 1992 Spatial Data Transfer Standard SDTS one of the first public standard models of geographic information an attempt was made to formally distinguish them an entity as the real world phenomenon an object as a representation thereof e g on paper or digital and a feature as the combination of both entity and representation objects 4 Although this distinction is often cited in textbooks it has not gained lasting nor widespread usage In the ISO 19101 Geographic Information Reference Model 5 and Open Geospatial Consortium OGC Simple Features Specification 6 international standards that form the basis for most modern geospatial technologies a feature is defined as an abstraction of a real world phenomenon essentially the object in SDTS Despite these attempts at formalization the broadly interchangeable use of these English terms has persisted Types of features editNatural features edit A natural feature is an object on the planet that was not created by humans but is a part of the natural world 7 Ecosystems edit Main article Ecosystem There are two different terms to describe habitats ecosystem and biome An ecosystem is a community of organisms 8 In contrast biomes occupy large areas of the globe and often encompass many different kinds of geographical features including mountain ranges 9 Biotic diversity within an ecosystem is the variability among living organisms from all sources including inter alia terrestrial marine and other aquatic ecosystems 10 Living organisms are continually engaged in a set of relationships with every other element constituting the environment in which they exist and ecosystem describes any situation where there is relationship between organisms and their environment Biomes represent large areas of ecologically similar communities of plants animals and soil organisms 11 Biomes are defined based on factors such as plant structures such as trees shrubs and grasses leaf types such as broadleaf and needleleaf plant spacing forest woodland savanna and climate Unlike biogeographic realms biomes are not defined by genetic taxonomic or historical similarities Biomes are often identified with particular patterns of ecological succession and climax vegetation Water bodies edit Main article Hydrology A body of water is any significant and reasonably long lasting accumulation of water usually covering the land The term body of water most often refers to oceans seas and lakes but it may also include smaller pools of water such as ponds creeks or wetlands Rivers streams canals and other geographical features where water moves from one place to another are not always considered bodies of water but they are included as geographical formations featuring water Some of these are easily recognizable as distinct real world entities e g an isolated lake while others are at least partially based on human conceptualizations Examples of the latter are a branching stream network in which one of the branches has been arbitrarily designated as the continuation of the primary named stream or a gulf or bay of a body of water e g a lake or an ocean which has no meaningful dividing line separatingt it from the rest of the lake or ocean Landforms edit Main article Landform A landform comprises a geomorphological unit and is largely defined by its surface form and location in the landscape as part of the terrain and as such is typically an element of topography Landforms are categorized by features such as elevation slope orientation stratification rock exposure and soil type They include berms mounds hills cliffs valleys rivers and numerous other elements Oceans and continents are the highest order landforms Artificial features edit Settlements edit Main article Human settlement A settlement is a permanent or temporary community in which people live Settlements range in components from a small number of dwellings grouped together to the largest of cities with surrounding urbanized areas Other landscape features such as roads enclosures field systems boundary banks and ditches ponds parks and woods mills manor houses moats and churches may be considered part of a settlement 12 Administrative regions and other constructs edit These include social constructions that are created to administer and organize the land people and other spatially relevant resources 13 Examples are governmental units such as a state cadastral land parcels mining claims zoning partitions of a city and church parishes There are also more informal social features such as city neighbourhoods and other vernacular regions These are purely conceptual entities established by edict or practice although they may align with visible features e g a river boundary and may be subsequently manifested on the ground such as by survey markers or fences Engineered constructs edit Main articles Construction engineering Building and Nonbuilding structure See also Infrastructure Engineered geographic features include highways bridges airports railroads buildings dams and reservoirs and are part of the anthroposphere because they are man made geographic features Cartographic features edit Main articles Cartography and Map Cartographic features are types of abstract geographical features which appear on maps but not on the planet itself even though they are located on the planet For example grid lines latitudes longitudes the Equator the prime meridian and many types of boundary are shown on maps of Earth but do not physically exist They are theoretical lines used for reference navigation and measurement Features and Geographic Information editSee also Data model GIS In GIS maps statistics databases and other information systems a geographic feature is represented by a set of descriptors of its various characteristics A common classification of those characteristics has emerged based on developments by Peuquet 14 Mennis 2 and others including the following Identity the fact that a feature is unique and distinct from all other features This does not have an inherent description but humans have created many systems for attempting to express identity such as names and identification numbers codes Existence the fact that a feature exists in the world At first this may seem trivial but complex situations are common such as features that are proposed or planned abstract concepts e g the Equator under construction or that no longer exist Kind also known as class type or category one or more groups to which a feature belongs typically focused on those that are most fundamental to its existence 15 It thus completes the sentence This is a These are generally in the form of common nouns tree dog building county etc which may be isolated or part of a taxonomic hierarchy Relationships to other features These may be inherent if they are crucial to the existence and identity of the feature or incidental if they are not crucial but just happen to be These may be of at least three types Spatial relations those that can be visualized and measured in space For example the fact that the Potomac River is adjacent to Maryland is an inherent spatial relation because the river is part of the definition of the boundary of Maryland but the overlap relation between Maryland and the Delmarva Peninsula is incidental as each would exist unproblematically without the other Meronomic relations also known as partonomy in which a feature may exist as a part of a larger whole or may exist as a collection of parts For example the relationship between Maryland and the United States is a meronomic relation one is not just spatially within the boundaries of the other but is a component part of the other that in part defines the existence of both Genealogical relations also known as parent child which tie a feature to others that existed previously and created it or from which it was formed by another agent and in turn to any features it has created For example if a county were created by the subdivision of two existing counties they would be considered its parents 16 Location a description of where the feature exists often including the shape of its extent 17 While a feature has an inherent location measuring it for the purpose of representation as data can be a complex process such as requiring the invention of abstract spatial reference systems and the necessary employment of cartographic generalization including an expedient choice of dimension e g a city could be represented as a region or as a point depending on scale and need Attributes characteristics of a feature other than location often expressed as text or numbers for example the population of a city 18 In geography the levels of measurement developed by Stanley Smith Stevens and further extended by others is a common system for understanding and using attribute data Time is fundamental to the representation of a feature although it does not have independent temporal descriptions 19 Instead expressions of time are attached to other characteristics describing how they change thus they are analogous to adverbs in common discourse Any of the above characteristics is mutable with the possible exception of identity For example the lifespan of a feature could be considered as the temporal extent of its existence The location of a city can change over time as annexations expand its extent The resident population of a country changes frequently due to immigration emigration birth and death The descriptions of features i e the measured values of each of the above characteristics are typically collected in Geographic databases such as GIS datasets based on a variety of data models and file formats often based on the vector logical model 20 See also editGeographical field Geographical location Human geography Landscape Physical geography Simple FeaturesReferences edit Longley Paul A Goodchild Michael F Maguire David J Rhind David W 2015 Geographic Information Systems amp Science 4th ed Wiley a b Mennis Jeremy Peuquet Donna J Qian L 2000 A geographical database representation International Journal of Geographical Information Science 14 6 501 520 doi 10 1080 136588100415710 S2CID 7458359 Plewe Brandon 2019 A Case for Geographic Masses In Timpf S Schlieder C Kattenbeck M Ludwig B Stewart K eds 14th International Conference on Spatial Information Theory COSIT 2019 Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics LIPIcs Vol 142 Schloss Dagstuhl Leibniz Zentrum fuer Informatik pp 14 1 14 doi 10 4230 LIPIcs COSIT 2019 14 ISBN 9783959771153 Fegeas Robin G Cascio Janette L Lazar Robert A 1992 An Overview of FIPS 173 The Spatial Data Transfer Standard Cartography and Geographic Information Systems 19 5 278 293 Bibcode 1992CGISy 19 278F doi 10 1559 152304092783762209 International Standards Organization ISO 19101 1 2014 Geographic Information Reference Model Part 1 Fundamentals ISO Standards Open Geospatial Consortium Simple Feature Access Part 1 Common Architecture OGC Standards There has been some metaphysical debate over whether such features are real independent of the human mind a realist stance whether they are purely human conceptualizations of continuous natural phenomena a constructivist stance or a hybrid of discrete natural phenomena that highly motivate but are simplified by human concepts a experientialist stance It is also possible that individual features may be of any of these three types Frank Andrew U 2003 Ontology for Spatio Temporal Databases In Sellis Timos ed Spatio Temporal Databases The Chorochronos Approach Lecture Notes in Computer Science Vol V 2520 Springer Verlag pp 9 77 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 45081 8 2 Odum Eugene P Odum Howard T 1971 Fundamentals of Ecology 3rd ed Saunders ISBN 9780721669410 Botkin Daniel B Keller Edward A 1995 Environmental Science Earth as a Living Planet John Wiley amp Sons Inc Canada ISBN 9780471545484 Convention Text Article 2 Use of Terms www CBD int Convention on Biological Diversity 2 November 2006 Retrieved 13 September 2015 Basak Anindita 2009 Environmental Studies Dorling Kindersley p 288 ISBN 978 81 317 2118 6 Retrieved 13 September 2015 MSRG Policy Statement Medieval Settlement com Medieval Settlement Research Group 2014 05 11 Retrieved 13 September 2015 Montello Daniel R 2003 Regions in geography Process and content In Duckham Matthew Goodchild Michael F Worboys Michael eds Foundations of geographic information science Taylor amp Francis pp 173 189 Peuquet Donna J 1994 It s about time a conceptual framework for the representation of temporal dynamics in geographic information systems Annals of the Association of American Geographers 84 3 441 461 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8306 1994 tb01869 x Mark David M Smith Barry Tversky Barbara 1999 Ontology and Geographic Objects an empirical study of cognitive categorization In Freksa Christian Mark Davis M eds Spatial Information Theory A Theoretical Basis for GIS COSIT 99 Lecture Notes in Computer Science 1661 Berlin Springer Verlag pp 283 298 doi 10 1007 3 540 48384 5 19 ISBN 978 3 540 48384 7 Hornsby Kathleen Egenhofer Max J 2000 Identity based change a foundation for spatio temporal knowledge representation International Journal of Geographical Information Science 14 3 207 224 Bibcode 2000IJGIS 14 207H doi 10 1080 136588100240813 S2CID 52861923 Huisman Otto de By Rolf A 2009 2 2 4 Geographic objects Principles of Geographic Information Systems PDF Enschede The Netherlands ITC p 77 ISBN 9789061642695 de Smith Michael J Goodchild Michael F Longley Paul A 2018 Attributes Geospatial Analysis A Comprehensive Guide to Principles Techniques and Software Tools 6th ed Song Y FC 08 Time GIS amp T Body of Knowledge UCGIS Retrieved 5 January 2023 Campbell Jonathan Shin Michael 2011 3 1 Data and Information Essentials of Geographic Information Systems Saylor Foundation ISBN 9781453321966 Retrieved 5 January 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Geographical feature amp oldid 1183970769, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.