aerial triangulation The process of developing a network of horizontal and vertical position from a group of known positions using measurements taken from aerial photographs and mathematical computations.
attribute data Characteristic or descriptive information about a geographic feature (points, lines, or areas) stored in either tabular format or relational format.
base map A map containing geographic features, used typically for locational reference and for overlaying specific, discipline data.
coordinate system A system to measure horizontal and vertical distances so that a geographic feature true position can be established in relation to an accepted public reference system such as State Plane or Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) coordinate systems.
data formats The specific patterns into which data are systematically arranged for use by a computer or specific software. There are both proprietary data formats and public-domain data formats.
Geographic Information System (GIS) An organized collection of hardware, software, data, and personnel designed to input, analyze and display geographically referenced information.
GeoTIFF A binary digital image format commonly used by GIS software that is characterized by reference information embedded in the file header as opposed to an external file.
Global Positioning System (GPS) A satellite-based system for recording positional information and other data about a geographic feature. Ground positions are calculated by using signals from satellites orbiting the Earth.
ground control Physical points on the ground whose positions are known with respect to some horizontal coordinate system and/or vertical datum. When identifiable on both the ground and an aerial photograph, ground control can be used to establish the true position of the aerial photograph.
hydrography Geographic features that represent streams, lakes, reservoirs, rivers, and other drainage features.