
Sustained forests; sustained profits
Geographic Information System Dynamics within Lasting Forests
Staff of Lasting Forests has been active in developing and using geographic informations systems before the process and facilities became known by that phrase or its acronym of GIS.
Primary uses will be within The Trevey and the thrust of work will be to produce unusual, highly useful products for a profit. Data are expensive; hardware declines in price, and the important issues still lie (and will do so for the future) in very practical maps. We see these as pictures of the results of the mental processes of experts. We sell these maps for use on the land.
Some of the maps are beautiful and deserve treatment (and sale) as an art form. Others show the parts of decisions and are needed by decision makers as a type of decision aid or support.
Elevations have over 20 different uses and many maps can be made from observations of the land stored in a square grid matrix (the UTM coordinates) called a digital elevation model (DEM). Whether each of the following is a new map or a simple transformation of a single data set can be debated. We propose any use that seems to bear on improving a decision. A simple two-factor map can be created such a greater than 3000 feet elevation and less than that amount. It may be shown as one map. There may be the need for two maps (perhaps to use with other data. We propose to develop ease with boolean comparators (e.g., greater than x and less than y or less than q.) Three dimensional land surface appearance can be meaningful, especially as new staff become acquainted with an area.
Other GIS layers to be developed are:
- Slope
- Aspect
- Solar radiation
- Monthly temperatures (mean, max, and minimum)
- Precipitation (Other than snow)
- Fog drip
- Snow
- Evaporation
- Moisture ratio
- Evapotranspiration
- Runoff
- Precipitation
- Growing season length (with start and end dates)
- Ground water surface
- Surface water channels
- Soil depth
- Soil type
- Slope (% and angle in degrees)
- Aspect Type 1
- Aspect Type 2
- Flatland
- Probable depth to bedrock
- Groundwater (depth, detectable nitrogen, pH)
- Well locations
- Campsite locations
- Trails
- Trailheads
- Land cover
- Boundaries
- Public-ownership lands
- Species specific maps, probability of occurrence
Other plans are for sale of select GIS software. The primary work will be in sales of products such as those lested above. The Trevey products may consume all of the axtivities of the group but others may include:
- a state-wide corridor siting system to serve citizen groups
- a special package of services for realtors
- substantial work for The Fishery
- services directed at the leagal profession and court-room presentations
- a set of products and services for gardeners
- a series of services for TV stations.
In October, 1980, Giles used the following notes in a Virginia tech lecture:
Geobased Information Systems for
Health Systems Planning in Virginia
Abstract:
A lecture on the role of computerized goegraphic data systems in comprehensive city, county, and regional planning, particularly health components of such plans. The infromation or input component of a general systems theory is emphasized. An existing system is shown and its potential role in a Commonwealth Data Base (CDB then being proposed) discussed. Potential uses, with examples, are shown.
Introduction:
- Comprehensive plans (potential components)
- Denial of previous land-use emphasis and focus on a plan for a total system.
- The difficulty of goal-setting for large social systems
- The potential of one or more health parameters or indices as perforrr2ncc
measures for goal-achievement
- Computed resident group life expectancy
- An increase in a weighted set of about 50 health dimensions per unit cost
- People as the synthesizers, over time, of their sociological, economic, and ecological milieu
- The need for governmental or group action, to move the system down a desired course (where people set the destination and thus course, cost-effective of time, risks, energy, money, and available human and spatial resources.)
- The guidance mission, the managerial role is to so understand and manipulate the factors of the environment that the course can be predicted and modified, either to shape trends or respond to new events. The quest: health system cybernetics.
The Environmental Factors:
- Classic: Marsh and wetland "vapours"; the insect vector of disease
- Trauma: proximity to hospitals and treatment
- Heavy metals: the zone of influence beside roads
- Contaminated areas: pesticides in alfalfa grown on orchard lands and soybeans grown on cotton lands
- Epidemic spreads: foci and areas of involvement
- Bone weakness: soil-nutrient relations
- Radiation: cumulative whole body radioactivity dose
- Occupational zones: populations at risk related to radiation, asbestos, brown lung, black lung
- Autopollution
- Airpollution: crowding stress interactions ... and others.
(page 2 missing)
Uses and Applications
- Regression analyses of cancer and related phenomena (factoring out personal versus contnunlty control phenomena)
- Displays of home of all entrants to a trep1~ment center over time (a zone of influence display)
- Determination of gaps and justification for efforts directed at the people unserved by present systems
- Sub-region specific cost-computations of care delivery as a function of local characteristics of the population and distance, road, gasolln3, cost, and stressors for each type of disease (weighted by risk level, recovery probability, and perceived social Importance.)
- Isolation of areas where genetic medicine is appropriately applied.
- Isolation of areas for targeted educational and behavioral modiflcatloi programs
- Improved allocation of funds based on geographic needs (gasoline, roads, disease incidence, available resources, needed resources, not on a regional basis, per Se, but on a disease or problem or population basis.
- Correlations of energy (e.g. solar maps) with life expectancy; of radiation levels with infant mortality; of cancer with technology zones.
The Need:
A total health system with clearly articulated goals (objectives):
see Dynaplan chapter or
with a solid data base - the union of the present Va. Dept. of Health data base with the CDB (moving away, as quickly as possible, from disease and health-problem atlases, to decision-making capabilities and aids)
with computer models (using data) that
- describe and explain
- predict
- write readable reports for decision makers e.g. Dynaplan
- allow allocation of limited state or regional resources where probabilities of change are greatest
- that separate decision variables (e.g. smoking) from ecological variables (e.g. background levels of lead or radiation)
- that adjust for (or standardize) populations living under different conditions (e.g., minimum temperatures; mountains vs flat lands)
- that optimize the complex allocation strategy to achieve a well-articulated goal-set
with feedback at all levels to test, check, correct, improve, update, fire, reward, and transfer new system components into a vital, ctynamic system hungry for continual, adaptive Improvement
with feedforward, providing guidance so the system is wrong today, wrong In some future day, but most right over the longrun. This is a design concept that by many techniques keeps the system related to the furure and inevitable, rapid human population changes.
A special human health-related set of applications (suggestions prepared in 1985)
- Septic Field Suitability
- Crowding-Disease Relations
- Regional Maps - health districts, coverage areas, disease emphases, vaccination progress, school children needs
- Hospital and emergency unit Service Areas
- Health-Transportation Relations
- Trauma-To-Care Probability Maps
- Noise-Health Maps
- Accident frequency maps
- Air Pollution/Capita
- Water Quality Maps
- Mental Health-Environmental Factor Studies
- Future Maps (Projections of Trends and Interactions disease as a function of crowding, then predicted crowding, then new disease data)
See ESRI site for related GIS work.
See Ecostats.com for software and shape viewer.
Ideas and assistance may be available from Doug Johnson (Illinois).
Technology in Virginia
See Penn State, riparian forestry, via the Forestry Department.
See EPA maps on demand
See Tiger map server, US Census
See NOAA web site
North Carolina has a GIS CD ROM
Heuber, Va Dept Cons may have data on Mossy Creek in Augusta County
UVA Library has GIS data/maps
Cathy Smith (?State Forestry) has data on forest stands
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Notes
Raven maps and images, PO Box 850, Medford Oregon
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This Web site is maintained by R. H.
Giles, Jr.
Last revision May 3, 2001.