Quote Originally Posted by Hai-Etlik View Post
There's a broadly similar basic concept. You are working with shapes as objects rather than a surface with colours applied to it. However Inkscape is a graphics editor, not a CAD tool; it is simply a graphics editor that works with shapes, rather than pixel surfaces. There are a lot of things CAD can do that it can't, and lots of things it can do that CAD can't.

Just as CAD tools are specialised for working with engineering data, there are similarly specialised tools for geographic data which are broadly called Geographic Information Systems or GIS. If you want, there are free GIS tools to play with but I'd suggest you consider it an advanced topic for later at best, and massive overkill to the point of being ridiculous at worst. I use them, but I'm already familiar with them.
I have seen GIS at my county's website when researching areas hit by storms. Do they use GIS for aerial mapping?

Thanks again for the insights.