Geoscience after IT : a view of the present and future impact of information technology on geoscience

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Bibliographic Information

Geoscience after IT : a view of the present and future impact of information technology on geoscience

T.V. Loudon

(Computer methods in the geosciences, v. 17)

Pergamon, 2000

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Previously published as a special issue of Computers & Geosciences, v. 26/3A, 2000 -- t.p. verso

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Most geoscientists are aware of recent IT developments, but cannot spend time on obscure technicalities. Few have considered their implications for the science as a whole. Yet the information industry is moving fast: electronic delivery of hyperlinked multimedia; standards to support interdisciplinary and geographic integration; new models to represent and visualize our concepts, and control and manage our activities; plummeting costs that force the pace. To stay on course, the scientist needs a broad appreciation of the complex and profound interactions of geoscience and IT, not previously reviewed in a single work. This book brings together ideas from many sources that bear on the geoscience information system.

Table of Contents

  • Defining information technology, its significance in geoscience and the aims of this publication
  • benefits for geoscience from information technology and an example from geological mapping of the need for a broad view
  • familiarization with IT applications to support the individual geoscientist
  • familiarization with IT applications to support the workgroup
  • familiarization with IT background
  • familiarization with quantitative analysis
  • familiarization with spatial analysis
  • familiarization with managing the information base
  • a view of the conventional geoscience information system
  • human requirements that shape the evolving geoscience information system
  • coping with changing ideas - defining the user requirement for a future information system
  • adjusting the emerging information system to new technology
  • business requirements drive the information system, and provide coherent frameworks.

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