| Titre : | 
					Disaster response : GIS for public safety | 
				 
					| Type de document :  | 
					texte imprimé | 
				 
					| Auteurs :  | 
					Amdahl, Gary, Auteur | 
				 
					| Editeur : | 
					Redlands, Calif. : ESRI Press | 
				 
					| Année de publication :  | 
					c2001 | 
				 
					| Importance :  | 
					v, 108 p. | 
				 
					| Présentation :  | 
					col. ill., col. maps | 
				 
					| Format :  | 
					19 x 23 cm. | 
				 
					| ISBN/ISSN/EAN :  | 
					978-1-879102-88-0 | 
				 
					| Langues : | 
					Anglais (eng) | 
				 
					| Catégories :  | 
					Disaster relief -- Data processing. Emergency management -- Data processing. Geographic information systems.
  | 
				 
					| Index. décimale :  | 
					HV 553  | 
				 
					| Résumé :  | 
					 	 
[Publisher-supplied data] Illustrates the best new strategies for mitigation, response, and recovery from both natural and human disasters using GIS technology. | 
				 
					| Note de contenu :  | 
					 	1 Forest Falls: A model of a mudslide: 3-D modeling illustrates the conditions that led to a lethal flood on a California mountain 5 -- 
2 Tualatin Valley Fire and Rescue: Answering the old questions of where to put firefighters and their equipment in a new way 15 -- 
3 Marin County: Mapping risk: Using GIS to analyze vegetation, fuel, weather, assets, and risks 23 -- 
4 E Team: Emergencies and the Internet: Real-time disaster management with just a PC and an Internet connection 33 -- 
5 Winston-Salem: Integrated Network Fire Operations: Hooking up a city, its people, and its emergency services 39 -- 
6 National Fire Protection Association: Firewise Communities: Prevention versus cure: Helping communities learn how to protect themselves 45 -- 
7 2015: A Montgomery County, Maryland, odyssey: Coping with rapid growth in an eastern seaboard power corridor 55 -- 
8 Extending the Pulaski: The disastrous fire season of Summer 2000 results in a nation-sized wildfire GIS 63 -- 
9 The Willow Incident: GPS and zero containment: Using helicopters, satellites, and GIS to stay on top of a 65,000-acre burn 71 -- 
10 Ouachita Civil Defense Agency: Project Impact and the disaster-resistant community: An award-winning grassroots approach to disaster preparedness 79 -- 
11 Los Angeles County Fire Department: Hospital closed!: Figuring out what to do when an emergency hospital is shut down 87 -- 
12 The Northridge quake: Picking up the pieces: A baptism of fire for GIS operations in the California Governor's Office of Emergency Services 99. | 
				  
 
					Disaster response : GIS for public safety [texte imprimé] /  Amdahl, Gary, Auteur . -  Redlands, Calif. : ESRI Press, c2001 . - v, 108 p. : col. ill., col. maps ; 19 x 23 cm. ISBN : 978-1-879102-88-0 Langues : Anglais ( eng) 
					| Catégories :  | 
					Disaster relief -- Data processing. Emergency management -- Data processing. Geographic information systems.
  | 
				 
					| Index. décimale :  | 
					HV 553  | 
				 
					| Résumé :  | 
					 	 
[Publisher-supplied data] Illustrates the best new strategies for mitigation, response, and recovery from both natural and human disasters using GIS technology. | 
				 
					| Note de contenu :  | 
					 	1 Forest Falls: A model of a mudslide: 3-D modeling illustrates the conditions that led to a lethal flood on a California mountain 5 -- 
2 Tualatin Valley Fire and Rescue: Answering the old questions of where to put firefighters and their equipment in a new way 15 -- 
3 Marin County: Mapping risk: Using GIS to analyze vegetation, fuel, weather, assets, and risks 23 -- 
4 E Team: Emergencies and the Internet: Real-time disaster management with just a PC and an Internet connection 33 -- 
5 Winston-Salem: Integrated Network Fire Operations: Hooking up a city, its people, and its emergency services 39 -- 
6 National Fire Protection Association: Firewise Communities: Prevention versus cure: Helping communities learn how to protect themselves 45 -- 
7 2015: A Montgomery County, Maryland, odyssey: Coping with rapid growth in an eastern seaboard power corridor 55 -- 
8 Extending the Pulaski: The disastrous fire season of Summer 2000 results in a nation-sized wildfire GIS 63 -- 
9 The Willow Incident: GPS and zero containment: Using helicopters, satellites, and GIS to stay on top of a 65,000-acre burn 71 -- 
10 Ouachita Civil Defense Agency: Project Impact and the disaster-resistant community: An award-winning grassroots approach to disaster preparedness 79 -- 
11 Los Angeles County Fire Department: Hospital closed!: Figuring out what to do when an emergency hospital is shut down 87 -- 
12 The Northridge quake: Picking up the pieces: A baptism of fire for GIS operations in the California Governor's Office of Emergency Services 99. | 
				 
  |   |