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CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 6 b 1 Digital Map Sources I

Digital Map Sources I

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Digital Map Sources I. The first rule of building a GIS. Try to use somebody else’s data before you even think of generating your own. 1. Geographic data portals. Nat. Geospatial Data Clearinghouse. Composed of many federal agency reps. Developing the National Spatial Data Infra-structure - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Digital Map Sources I

CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 6b 1

Digital Map Sources I

Page 2: Digital Map Sources I

CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 6b 2

The first rule of building a GIS

Try to use somebody else’s data before you even think of

generating your own

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CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 6b 3

1. Geographic data portals

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Nat. Geospatial Data Clearinghouse

Composed of many federal agency reps.

Developing the National Spatial Data Infra-structure

Working with Office of Homeland Security

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USGS: National Mapping Info.

Primary responsibility for US mapping

Mapping standards and metadata

Topographic maps

GNIS

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US Bureau of the Census

Address and population data, tied to the census tract

TIGER maps

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NYS GIS Clearinghouse

Familiar site?

Statewide aerial photographs

DOT maps

Gateway to many USGS & NYS products

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University sites

Prominent GIS programs:

Cornell U.

U. Buffalo

U. Calif., SantaBarbara

U. Minnesota

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Commercial sites

ESRI’s site (nice move, licensing GIS.com!)

The GIS portal!~ 100 GIS links

GIS World

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2. Geographic exchange formats

De facto standard: a.k.a. “industry standard” based on market success of a particular software standard (ex. ArcView shapefile)

De jure standard: developed by professional organization, such as ANSI or ISO (ex. SDTS in US)

Regulatory standard: enforced by government (ex. cadastre maps for property/tax purposes)

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Value of digital exchange standards

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Examples of national standards

SDTS (US): Spatial Data Transfer Standard (now mandatory for all federal agencies)

CGIS (Canada): Canadian Geomatics Interchange Standard

NTS (UK): National Transfer Standard

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3. Raster data formats

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Remote sensing data sets

NASA’s EOS program

France’s SPOT

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov

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EOS 19 Feb news item:

Lack of Snow Drives Iditarod

North

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Digital Raster graphs (DRGs)

Scanned topographic maps at various scales

Resolution: 400 dpi typical

Projection and coordinate system: varies (read the metadata!)

Accuracy: roughly that of paper source maps

Layers: either 1 or 2. No full GIS capability

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Sources of DRGs

Commercial sources(e.g., Delorme, Silva)

1:24,000 or 1:100,000

~ $100/state

various tools, but one layer

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3-D renderings

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USGS DRGs

1:24,000 or 1:100,000

two layers - features - topography

feature classes can’t be separated

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DRG – viewing both layers

The contour layer covers the features layer!

What to do???