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What do you know, our local billionaire is in the Epstein files! #arcgis #esrin #gisday #esriuc

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„GIS fundamentem nowoczesnego miasta”. Relacja z konferencji GIS Day 2025 w Krakowie - Obserwatorium Polityki Miejskiej i Regionalnej IRMiR Tegoroczna edycja GIS Day w Krakowie odbyła się 26 listopada w siedzibie Klastra Innowacji Społeczno-Gospodarczych Zabłocie 20.22 pod hasłem „GIS – fundamentem nowoczesnego miasta”. Konferencję otworz...

✅ Dobra informacja dla wszystkich, którzy nie mogli pojawić się na tegorocznej edycji #GISDay w Krakowie – na naszej stronie i kanale YT dostępna jest już pełna transmisja z wydarzenia.

#GISDAY2025 #Kraków

obserwatorium.miasta.pl/gis-fundamen...

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I was delighted to introduce cartography to students from Central Gwinnett High School at City of #Lawrenceville #GISDay, using my LEGO maps to share the joy of mapmaking. It was my first time speaking to younger audiences. I hope the experience sparked their curiosity about geography and maps.✨

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Kolejna edycja #GISDay za nami! Dziękujemy serdecznie wszystkim współorganizatorom, prelegentkom i prelegentom, uczestnikom i uczestniczkom – mamy nadzieję, że spotkamy się ponownie za rok!

Fot. Sandra Skalmierska-Dańczura
#GISDay2025 #Kraków @stanislawmazur.bsky.social

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🔹 #GISDay w Krakowie już w najbliższą środę – zapraszamy do zapoznania się ze szczegółową agendą!

Więcej informacji:
👉 gisday.irmir.pl

#Kraków #GIS #GISDAY2025

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@stanstate.bsky.social #geography celebrated the Geography Awareness Week and GIS Day #geoweek & #gisday with speakers from @ucmerced.bsky.social @csusb.bsky.social and @ubuffalo.bsky.social

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Thank you to Stuart Paul with @muskokagis.bsky.social for joining us on #GISDay!

He showed us the many tools available on the Muskoka GeoHub, including one that shows you a historical view of Muskoka from 1879! You can even compare Muskoka then vs. now!

Check out the GeoHub: map.muskoka.on.ca

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Hoxe celebramos unha nova xornada divulgativa con motivo do #GISDay 🗺️

💡 Integrantes dos grupos #SusMobLab, #cartoLAB e #GEAMA presentaron diversas aplicacións dos Sistemas de Información Xeográfica en proxectos de I+D+i desenvolvidos no centro

#divulgación #UDC #FondosEuropeos @udc.gal

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My #GISDAY consisted of visiting Illinois State Geography department, speaking on the careers panel, and seeing two others from our graduating class of 2001. Only 1 Prof still teaching. Plus, I appreciate the diversity of activities that @illinoisstateu.bsky.social has for the room we used #GISChat

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Really hope this talk I'm watching on GIS and AI gets practical soon because so far the first 15 minutes are about how the project was only done because they got a ton of money from NVIDIA #gisday

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Am #GISDay ehren wir Dr. Gladys West, die geniale Mathematikerin, deren geodätische Erdmodellierung in den 1970er-80ern die GPS-Grundlage schuf. Ihre SEASAT- & GEOSAT-Arbeit lieferte präzise Geoid-Modelle für heutige #geospatial-Apps. #wow 😮 #WomenInSTEM

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GIS Day cupcakes at the Centre of Geographic Sciences (NSCC-COGS), sponsored by the Geomatics Association of Nova Scotia and enjoyed by students and staff

GIS Day cupcakes at the Centre of Geographic Sciences (NSCC-COGS), sponsored by the Geomatics Association of Nova Scotia and enjoyed by students and staff

Yesterday at noon, we enjoyed GIS Day cupcakes at the Centre of Geographic Sciences (NSCC-COGS).

Thank you to the Geomatics Association of Nova Scotia (GANS) for sponsoring these and to Patti for baking them!

Seen here with some of our Marine Geomatics students.

#GISDay #GANS #COGS

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Proudly showcasing my LEGO and natural disaster maps at the #UGA #GISDay, where I also served as a map poster judge. I was one of the student organizers (Chair of Logistic Committee) in the 1st campus-wide UGA GIS Day, and it's a true honor to return as an alumnus and witness its ten-year milestone!

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And now, to wrap up my #GISDay I celebrated by ensuring all of my PC’s are up to date with the latest version of #QGIS.

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The Visionaries (maquette)
Artist Barbara Paterson

While the statue presents a conversation between the two university founders about the location of the proposed university, there is a deeper, layered history that the statue overlooks. The map held by Rutherford depicts a section of land marked with the number 5, which would become the future home of the University of Alberta. This map illustrates the presence of Métis river lots and specifically marks River Lot 5, along the south bank of the North Saskatchewan River. River Lot 5 was also a place where the Laurent Garneau family lived, played and made a living. River lots were included in the 1882 Dominion of Canada Survey for the settlement of Edmonton, Northwest Territories. The statue, however, provides limited visual information on who was present on the land and suggests that it was uninhabited before the university’s establishment. The history of these lands, prior to European contact in western Canada, included Niitsitapi (Blackfoot), Dene, Néhiyaw (Cree) and Stoney Nakoda Nations. There would have been agreements or treaties in place between these Nations around sharing of the land. In essence, the statue simplifies the layered history of the land and points to the erasure of First Nations presence, of Treaty Six (signed in 1876) history, and the disenfranchisement of the Papaschase Cree Nation and their reserve (No. 136) lands.

Large statues such as “The Visionaries” serve to publicly affirm the history and authority of those who are portrayed in the work. Although intended to celebrate the institutional founding of the University of Alberta, the statue brings to light the importance of acknowledging Indigenous Peoples and lands, and the way complex and layered histories are remembered and commemorated on campus. This is the endeavour of the people who continue to work and study at the University of Alberta today. 

University of Alberta Art Collection
University of Alberta Museums

The Visionaries (maquette) Artist Barbara Paterson While the statue presents a conversation between the two university founders about the location of the proposed university, there is a deeper, layered history that the statue overlooks. The map held by Rutherford depicts a section of land marked with the number 5, which would become the future home of the University of Alberta. This map illustrates the presence of Métis river lots and specifically marks River Lot 5, along the south bank of the North Saskatchewan River. River Lot 5 was also a place where the Laurent Garneau family lived, played and made a living. River lots were included in the 1882 Dominion of Canada Survey for the settlement of Edmonton, Northwest Territories. The statue, however, provides limited visual information on who was present on the land and suggests that it was uninhabited before the university’s establishment. The history of these lands, prior to European contact in western Canada, included Niitsitapi (Blackfoot), Dene, Néhiyaw (Cree) and Stoney Nakoda Nations. There would have been agreements or treaties in place between these Nations around sharing of the land. In essence, the statue simplifies the layered history of the land and points to the erasure of First Nations presence, of Treaty Six (signed in 1876) history, and the disenfranchisement of the Papaschase Cree Nation and their reserve (No. 136) lands. Large statues such as “The Visionaries” serve to publicly affirm the history and authority of those who are portrayed in the work. Although intended to celebrate the institutional founding of the University of Alberta, the statue brings to light the importance of acknowledging Indigenous Peoples and lands, and the way complex and layered histories are remembered and commemorated on campus. This is the endeavour of the people who continue to work and study at the University of Alberta today. University of Alberta Art Collection University of Alberta Museums

https://www.ualberta.ca/en/museums/museum-collections/art-collection/the-visionaries.html

https://www.ualberta.ca/en/museums/museum-collections/art-collection/the-visionaries.html

#Terracotta #TrueScale #GISDay and the Visionaries #maquette dropped in for an orientation session.
www.ualberta.ca/en/museums/m...
#RiverLot5 #Treaty6

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Portrait of Dr. Gladys West, the mathematician whose decades of geodetic work made GPS possible. Pictured here in 2018 at age 88, she is smiling warmly at the camera. She is wearing glasses, a navy blazer, a colorful floral scarf in pinks and purples, and a stylish black hat. She holds a wooden cane with a light grip. The soft indoor background is blurred, keeping all focus on her dignified, joyful expression — the face behind the precise Earth modeling that powers every navigation app today.

Portrait of Dr. Gladys West, the mathematician whose decades of geodetic work made GPS possible. Pictured here in 2018 at age 88, she is smiling warmly at the camera. She is wearing glasses, a navy blazer, a colorful floral scarf in pinks and purples, and a stylish black hat. She holds a wooden cane with a light grip. The soft indoor background is blurred, keeping all focus on her dignified, joyful expression — the face behind the precise Earth modeling that powers every navigation app today.

On #GISDay, we honor Dr. Gladys West, the genius mathematician whose 1970s–80s geodetic modeling of the Earth laid the foundation for GPS. Her work on SEASAT & GEOSAT gave us the precise geoid that makes every #geospatial app reliable today. #wow 😮 #WomenInSTEM

hiddenheroes.netguru.com/gladys-west

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Oceanographer Dawn Wright poses for a photo while entering a deep sea submersible on July 11, 2022. The next day, she and Victor Vescovo used the submersible to descend to Challenger Deep, the deepest known spot on the planet.

Oceanographer Dawn Wright poses for a photo while entering a deep sea submersible on July 11, 2022. The next day, she and Victor Vescovo used the submersible to descend to Challenger Deep, the deepest known spot on the planet.

Wright is Chief Scientist of the Environmental Systems Research Institute (Esri).

On July 12, 2022, "Deepsea Dawn" became the first/only Black person to dive to Challenger Deep, the deepest point on Earth & to successfully operate a side scan sonar at full-ocean depth. #GISday #WomenInSTEM #GeoWeek

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Headshot of Dr. Dawn Wright, Chief Scientist of Esri and celebrated oceanographer. A Black woman with a bright, joyful smile looking directly at the camera. Her hair is pulled back loosely, and she wears a deep burgundy Esri-branded collared shirt. The background is softly blurred, keeping all focus on her radiant, confident expression.

Headshot of Dr. Dawn Wright, Chief Scientist of Esri and celebrated oceanographer. A Black woman with a bright, joyful smile looking directly at the camera. Her hair is pulled back loosely, and she wears a deep burgundy Esri-branded collared shirt. The background is softly blurred, keeping all focus on her radiant, confident expression.

Dr. Dawn Wright is a geographer, oceanographer & globally recognized expert in marine geographic information systems (GIS). She played a key role in creating the 1st #GIS data model for the oceans. 1/2 #GISday #WomenInSTEM #GeoWeek #oceanography

www.esri.com/about/newsro... @deepseadawn.bsky.social

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Had a great #GISDay open house event today. One of the best turnouts in years and this was without having to bribe data subscribers with the option to pick up our quarterly data release.
#gischat

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The Christina Lee Brown Envirome Institute’s Ray Yeager stands at a podium with his presentation projected on a large screen over his left shoulder as part of the University of Louisville’s Center for GIS-hosted GIS Day 2025.

The Christina Lee Brown Envirome Institute’s Ray Yeager stands at a podium with his presentation projected on a large screen over his left shoulder as part of the University of Louisville’s Center for GIS-hosted GIS Day 2025.

Yesterday, UofL's Center for GIS held #GISDay 2025: Seeing the Forest for the Trees - Mapping Health in an Urban Landscape  to showcase how GIS helps foster a deeper understanding of our world. Envirome's Ray Yeager & fellow panelists discussed local projects incl the Green Heart Louisville Project.

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Happy GIS Day! 🗺️ It is the perfect time to learn how to build a map for the web with JavaScript. No coding experience required.

Check out my beginner series on my channel to follow along:
www.youtube.com/playlist?lis...

#GISDay #GIS #ArcGIS #coding #JavaScript #maps

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Happy #GISDay! In celebration, the Loudoun County Office of Mapping and Geographic Information featured some of the great mapping tools available on loudoun.gov/GeoHub. #GISDay2025

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While using ArcGIS on his shitty 10 year old monitor with Windows XP on it, Honduras looks behind his chair and winks. Happy GIS Day!!!

While using ArcGIS on his shitty 10 year old monitor with Windows XP on it, Honduras looks behind his chair and winks. Happy GIS Day!!!

HAPPY GIS DAY!!!! #gisday

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#naughty #truestory #salty #bj #tease #wet #wildwednesdays #wetwednesdays #wednesdays #wednesday #GISDAY #oops #misinterpretation #gis #giz #genuinemistake

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BWSC’s GIS Team – Plotting away all day, so you don’t have to! A big thank you to our GIS Team for keeping Boston modern. #GISDAY

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𝗛𝗮𝗽𝗽𝘆 𝗚𝗜𝗦 𝗗𝗮𝘆 from your web mapping girlie! 🗺️

I'm spending the day in my Esri hoodie surrounded by maps, code, and my Coding Maps beginner series. 👩‍💻

Celebrate by building your first JavaScript map through my video playlist: www.youtube.com/playlist?lis...

#ArcGIS #GIS #maps #GISDay #Esri

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1/🌐 It’s #GISDay!

ONC is celebrating how geographic information systems show us parts of the planet that we can’t see—like the seafloor.

Check out this 3D-rendered bathymetric model of NEPTUNE observatory’s Main Endeavour Field site, created by ONC’s GIS team.

Echoes to insights 🌐 arcg.is/5WXnu

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Happy #GISDay! Day 3 #GeographyAwareness Week celebrates geospatial tools & resources. Check out Southern Journey, our digital companion site to Ed Ayers’ book, “Southern Journey: The Migrations of the American South, 1790–2020” built as an ArcGIS StoryMap
dsl.richmond.edu/southernjour...

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🌍🗺Happy #GISday to all who celebrate🗺🌏

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