Geotourism development in rural and mountainous regions requires an integrated understanding of how accessibility, scenic visibility, and digital awareness interact to shape visitor potential and spatial feasibility. This study presents a Geographic Information Systems (GIS)-based framework for assessing and optimizing georoutes in Ardahan Province, northeastern Türkiye—a region of outstanding geoheritage richness but limited infrastructural connectivity. Building upon the 2024 Ardahan Geopark Feasibility Report, seventy-three potential geosites were evaluated through spatial modelling that combined terrain impedance, network-based travel-time analysis, viewshed-based scenic visibility modelling, and digital representation metrics derived from Google Maps data. The normalized indicators were integrated into an Integrated Geoheritage Potential Index (IGPI) to quantify the relative significance of each geosite and support data-driven route design. Results reveal a pronounced spatial disparity: while most sites exhibit low to moderate accessibility and minimal digital visibility, a small cluster of geosites achieved high IGPI scores, forming a coherent “Çıldır–Kura Corridor” with strong geotourism potential. Route optimization, implemented through a network-based Traveling Salesman Problem (TSP) model, confirmed the feasibility of efficient one-day circuits linking high-priority sites, with total travel times ranging from 308 to 465 min. Additionally, a dedicated trekking route demonstrated the applicability of terrain-based modelling for adventure-oriented geotourism. The findings highlight that integrating spatial accessibility with scenic and digital visibility provides a powerful analytical tool for aligning geoheritage assessment with sustainable tourism and geopark planning. The proposed framework is replicable, transparent, and compatible with UNESCO Global Geopark principles, offering a transferable methodology for other rural regions seeking to transform dispersed geoheritage assets into connected and economically viable geotourism networks.
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Sultan Duran
Ardahan University
Merve Doğan
Bilecik University
Geoheritage
Istanbul University
Gelişim Üniversitesi
Ardahan University
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Duran et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a7613fc6e9836116a2efae — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12371-026-01270-1
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