CGRG Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology
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Author : Giroux, D.; and Belanger, J.R.
Date : 2004.
Title : An interactive map viewer for the urban geology of Ottawa (Canada): An example of web publishing.
Publication : European Geosciences Union. 1st General Assembly. Nice, France, 25 - 30 April 2004.
Issue : EGU04-A-00116.
Page(s) :
Abstract
Developed by the Terrain Sciences Division (TSD) of the Geological Survey of Canada (GSC), an interactive map viewer, called GEOSERV (www.geoserv.org), is now available on the Internet. The purpose of this viewer is to provide engineers, planners, decision makers, and the general public with the geoscience information required for sound regional planning in densely populated areas, such as Canada’s national capital, Ottawa (Ontario). Urban geology studies rely on diverse branches of earth sciences such ashydrology, engineering geology, geochemistry, stratigraphy, and geomorphology in order to build a three-dimensional model of the character of the land and to explain the geological processes involved in the dynamic equilibrium of the local environment. Over the past few years, TSD has compiled geoscientific information derived from various sources such as borehole logs, geological maps, hydrological reports and digital elevation models, compiled it in digital format and stored it in georeferenced databases in the form of point, linear, and polygonal data. This information constitutes thegeoscience knowledge base which is then processed by Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to integrate the various sources of information and produce derived graphics, maps and models describing the geological infrastructure and response of the geological environment to human activities.Urban Geology of Canada’s National Capital Area is a pilot project aiming at developing approaches, methodologies and standards that can be applied to other major urban centres of the country, while providing the geoscience knowledge required for sound regional planning and environmental protection of the National Capital Area. Based on two applications developed by ESRI (Environmental System Research Institute), namely ArcGIS and ArcIMS, theTSD has customized this web application to give free access to geoscience information of the Ottawa/Outaouais (Ontario/Quebec) area including geological history, subsurface database, stratigraphy, bedrock, surficial andhydrogeology maps, and a few others. At present, each layer of geospatial information in TSD’s interactive map viewer is connected to simple independent flat files (i.e. shapefiles), but it is also possible to connect GEOSERV to other types of (relational) databases (e.g. Microsoft SQL Server, Oracle). Frequent updating of shapefiles could be a cumbersome task, when new records are added, since we have to completely rebuild the updated shapefiles. However, new attributes can be added to existing shapefiles easily. At present, the updating process can not be done on-the-fly; we must stop and restart the updated MapService if one of its shapefiles is changed. The public can access seventeen MapServices that provide interactive tools that users can use to query, zoom, pan, select, and so on, or print the map displayed on their monitor. The map viewer is light-weight as it uses HTML and Javascript, so end users do not have to download and install any plug-ins. A free CD and a companion web site were also de veloped to give access to complementary information, like high resolution raster maps and reports. Some of the datasets are available free of charge, on-line.
Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology