front 1 LANDSCAPE ANALYSIS | back 1 The world landscape come from other Germanic words that refer to the condition of the land. |
front 2 Observation and Interpretation | back 2 The first part of landscape analysis is careful observation. |
front 3 Field observation | back 3 Used to refer to the act of physically visiting a location, place, or region and recording, firsthand, information there. |
front 4 Spatial data | back 4 All of the information that can be tied to specific locations. |
front 5 Developments in gathering data | back 5 Modern technology has increased the ways in which geographers can obtain spatial data. |
front 6 Remote sensing | back 6 gathers information from satellites that orbit the earth or other craft above the atmosphere. |
front 7 Aerial photography | back 7 professional images captured from planes within the atmosphere, is an important source of observed data available today. |
front 8 Interpreting data | back 8 once data has been gathered, it must be interpreted. |
front 9 GEOSPATIAL DATA | back 9 can be quantitative or qualitative and may be gathered by organizations or individuals. |
front 10 Obtaining geopatial data | back 10 geographers collect geospatial data by doing fieldwork. |
front 11 Fieldwork | back 11 observing and recording information on location, or in the field. |
front 12 Other sources of geospatial data | back 12 can come from government policy documents such as treaties or agreements, articles and videos from news media outlets, or photos of an area. |