Title: GIS and Atmospheric Science: Why, What, How?
1GIS and Atmospheric ScienceWhy, What, How?
- Workshop on Satellite Data Applications
- August 20-21, 2003
- Sam Batzli, Environmental Remote Sensing Center,
The Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies,
University of Wisconsin-Madison
2Directives and Directions (why)
- NOAA 2008 Cross-Cutting Priorities
Integrated Environmental Observation and Data
Management System - NCAR 10 Year Plan NCAR as an IntegratorA
Geographic Information Systems Initiative - Recent Activities
- NCAR GIS in Weather, Climate and Impacts
Workshop 12-14 August 2002 Boulder, Colorado. - GIS Session at EGS-AGU-EUG Meeting 6-11 April
2003 Nice, France. - NESDIS Data Users Workshop 11-12 June 2003
Boulder, Colorado. - Unidata Workshop Expanding Horizons 22-27
June 2003 Boulder, Colorado.
3GIS Overview (what)
- What is GIS?
- Computer system capable of assembling, storing,
manipulating, and displaying geographically
referenced information - How it works
- Point, polygon, line, and raster layers
- Spatial relationships
- Visualization
- Applications of GIS
- Mapping, site selection, visualization, resource
inventory and management, and more - The future of GIS
- Enterprise networks
- Distributed relational
- Advanced modeling
- Web integration
4Some GIS Companies
- ESRI (Environmental Systems Research Institute
Inc.) makers of ArcINFO, ArcView, ArcGIS, etc.
http//www.esri.com - Intergraph, makers of GeoMedia http//imgs.intergr
aph.com - GRASS (Geographic Resources Analysis Support
System) Open Source, http//grass.baylor.edu - PCI Geomatics, makers of Geomatica.
http//www.pcigeomatics.com
Total GIS core-business revenue will grow 8 to
1.75 billion in 2003, by  Daratech's forecast.
This compares to a 2.4 growth (to 1.6 billion
in core-business revenues) in 2002 over the prior
year.
5Basic Info Data Sources
- GIS Overviews
- http//www.usgs.gov/research/gis/title.html
- http//www.esri.com/industries/k-12/basicgis.html
- http//www-agecon.ag.ohio-state.edu/programs/ComR
egEcon/gis/gisintro.htm - http//www.gis.com
- Data Sources
- http//www.geographynetwork.com (live global web
data) - http//data.geocomm.com/ (join and download)
- http//nsdi.usgs.gov/ or http//edc.usgs.gov/geoda
ta/ (US data) - http//glcfapp.umiacs.umd.edu8080/glcf/esdi?comma
ndhome(free Landsat imagery) - GIS Standards
- http//www.opengis.org (Open GIS Consortium
OGC)
6Integrative Applications
- Examples of ongoing NOAA work
- Exposing the U.S. Coastal Zone. (NGDC) Presented
by David Divins, Dan Metzger, John Campagnoli,
and Matt Kuhn (NESDIS Workshop 2003) - Enterprise GIS (NGDC) Presented by Ted Haberman,
Geospatial Data Services Group (NESDIS Workshop
2003) - Coral Reef Information System. (NODC) Presented
by Anthony Picciolo (NESDIS Workshop 2003) - Coastal Risk Atlas. (NCDDC) Presented by Russ
Beard (NESDIS Workshop 2003) - Workshop Summary Needs
- Increasing communication among researchers and
practitioners using GIS in meteorology and
climatology (consortia, workshops,
collaborations) - Developing organization-wide GIS infrastructure
(NetCDF API to OGC, XML standard for the
meteorological community) - Training atmospheric science researchers and
practitioners in use of GIS
7Environmental Remote Sensing Center
(http//www.ersc.wisc.edu)
- Lake Clarity
- Integration of Landsat imagery and DNR hydro
layer with volunteer ground truth data
(http//www.lakesat.org) - Land cover change
- Tornado damage measurement using before/after
change detection - Spatial Databases
- ArcSDE/Oracle
- Web Mapping
- MapServerhttp//www.lakesat.org/statewide.php
- ArcIMShttp//foliage.geo.msu.edu/wege/viewer.htm
- MODIS ImageServer
8Thoughts on Integration
- What if Severe Weather warnings included an
in-path risk index for population, landmarks,
land cover, and utility infrastructure? - What if urban heat sinks could be factored into
regional or micro-climate weather forecasts or
climate change? - What if GIS-based agricultural productivity
forecasts could link soil models with real-time
meteorological inputs? - How can long-term climate change modeling improve
land use planning at a statewide scale?
9Suggested Next Steps (how)
- Nuts and Bolts Issues
- GIS practitioners need to learn about things like
McIDAS, NetCDF, real-time data streaming, loop
structures, data archiving. - GIS and Weather/Climate folks need to trade data
sets and begin to forge crosswalks and linkages. - GIS and Weather/Climate folks need to identify
common area of interest and focused projects and
develop grant proposals.
10Discussion
11Browse the Sample Data
- Pick Pilot/Navigator
- Open ArcCatalog Start/All Programs/ArcGIS/ArcCata
log - Browse to CD-ROM
- Expand Catalog
- Pick a State
- Preview a blkgrp.shp file, zoom/pan
- Preview the Table
- Click Metadata, try different style sheets
12Build a Data Stack
- Open ArcMapStart/All Programs/ArcGIS/ArcMap
- Add Data
- Connect to Folder
- Pick a State
- Select the .shp files
- Add
13Explore the Data
- Turn the Layers On/Off
- Arrange Layers
- View Tables
- View Properties
- Symbology
- Definition Query
- Labels
14Add Additional Data
- Tabular Data
- x-y? (.dbf)
- Or Common field?
- ExampleUSHCN stations history
- Advanced stuff?
- SQL, clip, merge
15Quick Review
- Ok, what did we just do?
- Became acquainted with GIS
- Explored data
- Built a data stack with point, line, polygon,
and raster data - Mapped x-y and non-spatial data
- Whats next?
- Building thematic maps suitable for framing
- But first
1615 Minute Break
17Making Thematic Maps in GIS
- Switch Pilot/Navigator roles (if youre sharing a
computer) - Open your ArcMap document or start a new one
- Choose a theme to map examples
- State and National parks of the West
- Population density of Colorado
- Ethnicity of California by Census Block Group
- Be creative
- Add .lyr files to your map
- Switch to Map Layout view
- Choose an appropriate projection (i.e. state
standard, equal area, equidistant, for more info
see http//www.colorado.edu/geography/gcraft/notes
/mapproj/mapproj_f.html )
18Making it Pretty and Adding the Trimmings
- Use Layer Properties (symbology, and labels) to
adjust the look of your layers - Use the Insert menu to add title, text,
neatline, legend, north arrow, scale bar, etc. - Insert a new data frame to show map context
- Proof read
- Print your creation
- TIPS
- Simplify!
- Limit number and sizes and styles of fonts
- Choose colors carefully
- Nifty tool at www.colorbrewer.com