FEMA GIS supports the emergency management community with world-class geospatial information, services, and technologies to prepare for, protect against, respond to, recover from and mitigate against all hazards.
MyGeodata Converter - Convert and transform GIS/CAD data to various formats and coordinate systems, like SHP, KML, KMZ, TAB, CSV, GeoJSON, GML, DGN, DXF...
Course Description & Objectives This course is about different techniques used in assembling, managing, analysing and predicting using heterogeneous data sets in urban environments. These datasets are inherently messy and incomplete.
This document provides a high-level introduction to the Nilesoft Shell repository, which implements a Windows File Explorer context menu extender. It covers the core system architecture, key component
The National Flood Hazard Layer (NFHL) is a geospatial database that contains current effective flood hazard data. FEMA provides the flood hazard data to support the National Flood Insurance Program. You can use the information to better understand your level of flood risk and type of flooding.
Managing Geospatial Data with PostgreSQL and PostGIS: A Developer's Guide
Learn how to effectively manage and analyze geospatial data using PostgreSQL and PostGIS. This comprehensive guide covers spatial queries, performance optimization, advanced features, and integration with GIS tools. Perfect for developers working on location-based applications and GIS projects.
AI4SoilHealth is building a Soil Health Data Cube to aid the sustainable management of Europe’s soils by integrating crucial data on soil, climate, and
PostGIS is an extension to the PostgreSQL object-relational database system which allows GIS (Geographic Information Systems) objects to be stored in the database. PostGIS includes support for GiST-based R-Tree spatial indexes, and functions for analysis and processing of GIS objects. This is the manual for version 3.5.4dev This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License. Feel free to use this material any way you like, but we ask that you attribute credit to the PostGIS Project and wherever possible, a link back to https://postgis.net.
Design tips database design geodatabasesdesigning Geodatabase data models are designed to be used in practical application scenarios by a wide range of users. To ensure that each design is easy to understand and implement, each data model was built to support easy migration from existing data structures and has been designed to be flexible, extensible, and easily adapted by your organization. Here are a few final design tips to help you with your design implementation: Build on your existing GIS designs. Most existing database designs are suitable for moving forward. You can build on what has worked in the past and find new geodatabase capabilities that