Computer mapping evolved with the computer itself in the 1960s. However, the origin of the term GIS began with the Canadian Department of Forestry and Rural Development. Dr. Roger Tomlinson headed a team of 40 developers in an agreement with IBM to build the Canada Geographic Information System (CGIS). The CGIS tracked the natural resources of Canada and allowed the profiling of those features for further analysis. The CGIS stored each type of land cover as a different layer.
It also stored data in a Canadian-specific coordinate system, suitable for the entire country, which was devised for optimal area calculations. While the technology that was used was primitive by today's standards, the system had phenomenal capability at that time. The CGIS included software features that seem quite modern:
- Map projection switching
- The rubber sheeting of scanned images
- Map scale...