Title: Location, Location, Location or Where am I
1Location, Location, LocationorWhere am I?
2The Earth is
- 3000 BC Babylonians An oyster
- 600 BC Greeks Flat
- 500 BC a perfect shape A sphere
- 300 BC Circumference 25,000 miles,
- Dark ages Flat again
- 1492 Columbus A pear
- 1753 French Oblate ellipsoid
- Spheroid
- Geoid to describe the deviations from a spheroid
3How Erastosthenes computed the circumference of
the Earth
4Earth Shape Sphere and Ellipsoid
5Earth as Oblate Ellipsoid
Flatter, longer
Curved, shorter
6The Spheroid and Ellipsoid
- The sphere is about 40 million meters in
circumference. - An ellipsoid is an ellipse rotated in three
dimensions about its shorter axis. - The earth's ellipsoid is only 1/297 off from a
sphere. - Many ellipsoids have been measured, and maps
based on each. Examples are WGS84 and GRS80.
7Earth as Ellipsoid
8The Earth as a Geoid
9Geographic Coordinate System
- Parallels
- Meridians
- Great and Small Circles
10Geographic Coordinate System
GCS uses a 3-D spherical surface to define
locations on Earth. GCS includes an angular
unit of measure, a prime meridian and a datum.
11Locating yourself on a Sphere
- You need a frame of reference
- That is the purpose of Latitude and Longitude
- Defining these parameters
- Earth rotates on an imaginary axis North and
South Poles - Equator is a great circle that lies equidistant
between them.
12Great Circles
- ..are imaginary circles of the surface of the
earth whose plane passes through the center of
the earth. - Â
- The circumference of the earth is 25,000 miles or
40,000 km - "Great" because it is the largest possible circle
13Great Circles
- Cut the earth in half and each half is known as a
hemisphere - Are the circumference of the earth
- Provide the shortest routes of travel on the
earth's surface. - Planes travel in great circles.
- We were always taught a line is the shortest
distance between two points - Not True. - Small circles circles whose planes do not pass
through the center of the earth.
14Latitude
- Latitude is the angular distance north or south
of the equator. (0 90 degrees N or S) - 1 of latitude 40,000 km/ 360
- 1 degree 60 minutes
- 1 minute 60 seconds 3649'52" N
- ArcMap uses Decimal Degrees
- Sextant measures the angular distance between 2
points (sun horizon) - So its easy to determine latitude.
15Longitude
- Longitude no natural reference point
- In 1884 by International Agreement Greenwich
England was the chosen starting point. - This is called the prime meridian or zero
degrees. - Longitude is the angular distance east or west
from Greenwich, England - (0 180 degrees E or W)
16The Prime Meridian (1884)
17Geographic Coordinate System
- Longitude and Latitude
- Degrees, minutes, seconds
- 1o latitude 110.5 km (equator)
- 1o longitude cosine of the latitude
- 1 minute of latitude 1852 m
18How to convert from DMS to DD
- Example 373630
- Divide each value by the number of minutes or
seconds in a degree - 36 minutes .60 degrees (36/60)
- 30 seconds .00833 degree (30/3600)
- Add it all up
- 37 .60 .00833 37.60833 DD
19The global grid
- Parallels lines of latitude, only the equator is
a great circle all other parallels are small
circles (they never meet) - Meridians these are line of longitude and when
joined with its mate half way around the globe
form great circles - the distance between meridians will vary with
latitude
20How the Earth is Divided
- Hemispheres Northern, Southern, Eastern, Western
21Time Zones
- Solar noon most towns used this, defined as when
a vertical stake cast the shortest shadow. - By the 19th century transportation and
communications (namely railroads and telegraph)
connected towns and cities, the adopt of a
standard time was necessary.
22Time Zones (continued)
- 1884 at the International Meridian Conference 24
time zones were established. - Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) Universal time
Zulu time - 360/24 15 for each time zone, however for
convenience many time zones follow state and
country lines. - International Date Line where each new day
begins 180th meridian - Chronometer
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23Time Zones