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      • Table of Contents
      • How to Highlight and Take Notes
      • Acronyms
      • Figures
      • Glossary
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      • Footnotes and References
      • Supported Coordinate Systems
      • Chapter One Title Page
      • Section One - Introduction
      • Section Two - What is GIS?
      • Section Three - Why Do We Need A GIS?
      • Section Four - Putting it all Together: An Example
      • Section Five - Uses of GIS
      • Section Six - History of GIS
      • Chapter Two Title Page
      • Section One - Introduction
      • Section Two - Geodesy
      • Section Three - Mathematically Measuring the Earth
      • Section Four: Latitude and Longitude - One Example of a Geographic Grid
      • Section Five: Geodetic Datums: Combining Reference Ellipsoids and Geoids
      • Section Six: Geographic Coordinate Systems
      • Section Seven: Projection Methods
      • Section Eight- Projected Coordinate Systems
      • Section Nine: Just a Few Extras
      • Chapter Three Title Page
      • Section One - Introduction
      • Section Two - Vector Data
      • Section Three - Raster Data
      • Section Four - Discrete and Continuous Data
      • Section Five - Data Tables
      • Section Six - Introduction to Attribute Tables
      • Chapter Four Title Page
      • Section One - Introduction
      • Section Two - Data Models
      • Section Three - Meet ArcGIS Pro Catalog View
      • Section Four - Meet ArcGIS Pro Maps and Layouts
      • Section Five - What Are Relational Databases and Geodatabases
      • Chapter Five Title Page
      • Section One - Introduction
      • Section Two - Attribute Tables: An Overview
      • Section Three - Attribute Tables Basics
      • Section Four: Selecting Data in ArcMap - The Basics of Making Selections
      • Section Five: Using Selected Data
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Section Five - Uses of GIS

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  • Home
  • Introduction to GIS
  • Chapter One
  • Section Five - Uses of GIS

City planning is just one of hundreds of uses for GIS. Natural sciences, crime analysis, health services, emergency services, and even route planning for delivery vehicles, GIS is capable of enhancing almost every area of our lives. We use GIS to get to a new store on our smartphones and in-dash GPS units; the police (specifically, crime analysts) use GIS to find patterns in various crimes to determine when and where they should assign extra officers; health services use GIS to follow an outbreak of disease; biologists use GIS to find suitable habitat based upon all the factors that best suit a species; geologists use GIS to map soil formations and historic geologic events; and companies like UPS and FedEx use GIS to create a best-route scenario for their trucks to make deliveries using the least amount of gas and time and to drive their UAV delivery proposals.

Here is a list of GIS uses in the real world: 

https://gisgeography.com/gis-applications-uses/

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