ABSTRACT

Geographic Information Systems mainly tend to be two dimensional, thus limiting the applications. As GIS are being developed, researchers and practioners are finding new ways of making GIS three dimensional, even four dimensional in some instances, increasing their usability. This book focuses on the way in which GIS could be made `multidimensional' based on the modelling limitations of current 2D GIS. It suggests extending GIS to incorporate the third and fourth dimensions, as well as time (spatio-temporal GIS), using a variety of programming techniques and discusses current examples of multidimensional GIS.

part I|202 pages

chapter CHAPTER 1|28 pages

The worldview of geographic information science

chapter CHAPTER 2|54 pages

Two-dimensional representations of space

chapter CHAPTER 3|36 pages

Multidimensional representations of space and time

chapter CHAPTER 4|52 pages

Multidimensional geo-representations for modelling

chapter CHAPTER 5|30 pages

Multidimensional geo-representations for exploration

part II|36 pages

chapter CHAPTER 6|6 pages

Hypermedia geo-representations for coastal management

chapter CHAPTER 7|6 pages

Geo-representation of dynamic coastal geo-phenomena

chapter CHAPTER 9|8 pages

Three-dimensional modelling of coastal landforms