Geographers investigate GIS

8 years ago
By Anthony Brino
Staff Writer
 
WANG2591 S 19133579Contributed photo/Chunzeng Wang
Andrew Dolley, a GIS student at the University of Maine Presque Isle, works with a drone at King Grove Cemetery in Mars Hill as a part of a community mapping project with the town. 
 

Students and professors with the University of Maine Presque Isle’s geographic information systems program have been getting acquainted with two new drones this fall.

In September, the GIS students at UMPI were using the DJI Phantom-4 drones in Mars Hill, taking aerial photos of the Kings Grove Cemetery that will be used to create a plot map for the town office. It’s one of a variety of practical applications offered by drones, also known as unmanned aerial vehicles, said Chunzeng Wang, a geology professor and head of the GIS lab.

“Drones are among the most important technological advances in remote sensing and GIS,” Wang said.

UMPI’s drones are the first UAVs being used by a college GIS program, and they were purchased through funding under the science and technology bond program approved by Maine voters in 2013, according to a media release from the university.

The small, lightweight drones wired with high-resolution cameras greatly improve and reduce the costs of aerial mapping, which have previously relied on satellite imagery or photography by plane, Wang said.

At the Mars Hill cemetery, the students took photographs that will be stitched together to show the plots.

“In just an hour we went out to Kings Grove Cemetery and gathered the data we needed,” said GIS student Andrew Dolley, in a media release. “This is something that could have taken days if done without a drone, or done with very poor quality if we were just using Google Earth to collect visual data.”

The GIS lab has also recently used the drone to create aerial maps of Presque Isle’s Mantle Lake Park and a cross country ski trail network at the UMPI campus.

The drones “can be easily piloted by remote and can take very detailed, highly accurate and very high-resolution aerial images,” and can be applied in agriculture, forestry, public utilities, environmental monitoring and other areas, Wang said.