USM President Richard Pattenaude's remarks are filmed by a local camera crew
prospective students
current students
faculty and staff
alumni and friends
visitors and community
academic programs
research
athletics
About USM
usm home page

News Releases

Students, Planners, Sociologists See New Patterns with GIS Technology

Editor's Note: Matthew Bampton, Associate Professor, Geography & Anthropology, can be reached at 780-5184

In a single morning at USM's Geographic Information Systems (GIS) lab in Gorham, USM Professor Matthew Bampton helped a town planner standardize tax records, traced a gas line for a local utility, helped a graduate student map an underwater fault line beneath the Bath-Brunswick coast, and reviewed a colleague's database of environmental changes in the region.

GIS technology, which combines a powerful database system with the three-dimensional graphics of computer-aided design (CAD), has jumped the boundaries of geography to become a major analytical tool for students, scientists, planners, businesses, environmentalists, and law enforcement alike.

The technology can find links between seemingly unrelated data, then quickly convert them into patterns on a map -- whether geographical or chart-based. Databases can be combined to create a high-powered overlay showing several layers of data at once. This kind of visually organized information can be critical for law enforcement officials mapping vulnerable infrastructure in their communities or for town planners monitoring growth.

"GIS is to the 21st century what the microscope was to the 17th century," says Bampton. "What we're discovering is that an ever-widening circle of people who are studying interesting things in nature and human society are turning to this kind of spatial analysis to find patterns and interconnectivity."

USM's lab is one of several hotbeds of GIS activity in the state, and one of only a handful to regularly open its doors to the public. Established in 1993 in Bailey Hall in Gorham, the lab was expanded in 2000 with funds from the National Science Foundation (NSF). There is public access to the lab Wednesday mornings from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m., with staff on hand to assist.

A state GIS consortium also operates out of USM that allows universities to share software with other Maine colleges and universities, among them, Bowdoin and Unity Colleges. Bampton's latest NSF grant, totaling $360,000, has helped equip GIS labs at UMaine campuses in Farmington, Fort Kent, Augusta and Machias, and has exposed more faculty to GIS capabilities.

At Fort Kent, for example, GIS science will be applied by Professor Dave Hobbins to forestry-related projects; Joe Szakas, an IT professor at UMA with research interest in criminology, is researching GIS applications; and at UMF, the technology will be used by Cathleen McAnneny, a medical geographer looking at environmental factors affecting disease.

GIS technology has become a regular tool for academic research for many students across the country, says Bampton. "You see it with geology students, of course, but also with social workers, business students, environmental science majors, sociologists."We had a graduate student in here the other day who was using GIS to map health care providers and hospitals in rural areas nationwide."

USM is the only place outside a traditional surveying school where undergraduates are able to work using GIS, Global Positioning Systems (GPS), and precision surveying equipment in scientific research projects. Aided by another NSF grant, Bampton and USM geology professor Mark Swanson loaded nine undergraduate students (six chosen from a national pool of applicants) into kayaks last summer to map minute and telling details of tectonic plates on the Maine coast.

"GIS allowed our students to map in a week what used to take a whole field season to do," says Bampton.

"USM is actively involved in putting GIS into the curricula and in training across disciplines," says Dan Walters, who heads the Maine Office of GIS in Augusta. "They provide services that directly benefit local government and citizens, with internships, training and project work."

It's a need that will continue to grow, says Walters, who helped get $2.5 million earmarked for GIS-related projects in the recently-approved environmental bond.

Those monies, if approved, would be used to create statewide digital aerial photography, helpful for accurately mapping "geography, streets, houses, telephone poles, fence lines, you name it," says Walters. "Very useful information for planning growth, or for planning for and responding to disasters."

To schedule an interview or tour of the GIS lab, contact Bob Caswell at the USM Media Relations Office, 207-780-4200.

>more news releases