Respuesta :

1.Cartographer

As a cartographer you'll be involved with the scientific, technological and artistic aspects of developing and producing maps. You'll present complex information as diagrams, charts and spreadsheets, as well as in the form of conventional maps.

Maps and detailed geographical information are needed for a range of purposes, from everyday use by individuals to large-scale industrial development. Geographical information systems (GIS) and digital-mapping techniques now dominate the role.

2.Town Planner

As a town planner, or planner, you'll be involved in the management and development of cities, towns, villages and the countryside. Your aim will be to balance the conflicting demands of housing, industrial development, agriculture, recreation, transport and the environment, in order to allow appropriate development to take place.

Regeneration within towns and cities forms an important part of planning and the often competing views of local businesses and communities are taken into account.

If you work within a rural area, you'll need to ensure that development is sustainable and that the right balance of development is achieved to preserve the countryside. You will also aim to make a positive contribution towards tackling the effects of climate change.

3.Geographical information systems officer

Geographic information systems (GIS) are computerised systems used to collect, store, analyse, manipulate and present a range of complex geographical and spatial data. Data can come in a range of formats including cartographic, photographic, digital (for example, from satellites) and remote sensing, or in tables and spreadsheets.

Using GIS technology, a GIS officer can overlay all these types of data into one map, manipulating it so that all the sources have the same scales and allowing complex readings to be taken from the map.


Please give me "Brainliest Answer" I typed a lot ;;