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Making Maps With GIS

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What is a map? ... The Parts of a Map: Map Elements. The United States of America. Alaska ... on the dimension of the data to be shown in the map figure. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Making Maps With GIS


1
Making Maps With GIS
  • Getting Started with GIS
  • Chapter 7

2
Making Maps With GIS
  • 7.1 The Parts of a Map
  • 7.2 Choosing a Map Type
  • 7.3 Designing the Map

3
What is a map?
  • A graphic depiction of all or part of a
    geographic realm in which the real-world features
    have been replaced by symbols in their correct
    spatial location at a reduced scale.

power line
4
Map function in GIS
  • Storage
  • Temporary communication
  • Intermediate check of data
  • Final report
  • To be effective, must be correctly designed and
    constructed.

5
The Parts of a Map Map Elements
Border
Title
Neat line
The United States of America
Figure
Legend
Scale
Ground
Washington,D.C.
National Capital
Alaska
0
4
1
2
3
Hawaii
hundreds of
kilometers
0
Lambert Conformal Conic Projection
4
0
4
Source U.S. Dept. of State
Credits
Place name
Inset
North Arrow
6
The medium is the message
  • Paper
  • Film
  • Mylar
  • Monitor
  • Projection
  • Broadcast TV
  • THE DISPLAY IS PART OF THE
  • SYMBOLIZATION

7
Cartographic Elements
  • Medium
  • Figure
  • Ground
  • Reference information

8
Cartographic Elements (2)
  • Border
  • Neatline
  • Insets
  • Scale up
  • Scale down
  • Metadata e.g. index
  • Off-map references

9
Cartographic Elements (3)
  • Page coordinates
  • Ground elements
  • Graticule/Grid
  • North arrow

10
Cartographic Elements (4)
  • Figure
  • Point/Line/Area symbols
  • Text
  • Place Names
  • Title

11
Cartographic Elements (5)
  • Reference Information
  • Scale
  • Projection(s)
  • Sources (2)
  • Credits
  • Legend
  • Reliability

12
Map impact
  • Distribution of Employment by State 1996
  • USA Employment Distribution 1996
  • U.S. Employment 1996 Distribution
  • America at Work
  • Where the Jobs are Today

13
Text Selection and Placement
6
6

e
t
u
o
R

S
d
U
u
M
New York
e
k
2
a

L
CA
BM 232
NV
POINT
LINE
AREA
Figure 7.2
Some cartographic label placement conventions.
Points right and above preferred with no overlap.
Lines Following the direction of the line,
curved if a river. Text should read up on the
left of the map and
down on the right. Areas On a gently curved line
following the shape of the figure and upright.
14
Choosing Elements
  • Map research
  • Map compilation
  • Worksheet
  • Selection
  • Placement
  • Layout
  • Tools in GIS not ideal

15
Choosing a Map Type
  • Cartographers have designed hundreds of map
    types methods of cartographic representation.
  • Not all GISs allow all types.
  • Most have a set of basic types
  • Depends heavily on the dimension of the data to
    be shown in the map figure.

16
Choosing the Wrong Type
  • Fairly common GIS error.
  • Due to lack of knowledge about cartographic
    options.
  • Can still have perfect symbolization.
  • Possibility of misinformation
  • Definite reduction in communication effectiveness.

17
Map Types Point Data
  • Reference
  • Topographic
  • Dot
  • Picture Symbol
  • Graduated Symbol

18
Map Types Line Data
  • Network
  • Flow
  • Isopleth
  • Reference

19
Map Types Area Data
  • Choropleth
  • Area qualitative
  • Stepped surface
  • Hypsometric
  • Dasymetric
  • Reference

20
Map Types Volume Data
  • Isopleth, Stepped Surface, Hypsometric
  • Gridded fishnet
  • Realistic perspective
  • Hill-shaded
  • Image map

21
Map Types Time
  • Multiple views
  • Animation
  • Moving map
  • Fly thru
  • Fly by

22
Choosing Types
  • Check the data
  • Continuous
  • Discrete
  • Accuracy Precision
  • Reliability
  • Dimension (Point, Line, Area, Volume)
  • Scale of Measurment (Nominal etc.)
  • GIS capability
  • May need to supplement GIS software

23
Data Scaling (Stevens)
  • Nominal (Name of a place)
  • Ordinal (Small, med., large town)
  • Interval (Arbitrary zero e.g. Sea Level)
  • Ratio (Absolute zero e.g. dollars, densities)

24
Example Choropleth Mapping
  • Data should be AREA (e.g. States)
  • Data should not suffer from area effect.
  • Population?
  • Per capita Income?
  • Elevation? Temperature?
  • Boundaries unambiguous.
  • Areas non-overlapping.

25
Classification
  • Equal Interval
  • Natural groups
  • N-tiles
  • Equal or unequal?
  • Logarithmic? Linear? Discontinuous?
  • How many classes?
  • Non-overlapping, distinctive groups.

26
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27
The Need for Design
  • To appear professional and avoid errors, GIS maps
    should reflect cartographic knowledge about map
    design.
  • A map has a visual grammar or structure that must
    be understood and used if the best map design is
    desired.
  • Cartographic convention (e.g. forests should be
    green).

28
Map Design
  • A GIS map is designed in a process called the
    design loop.
  • Good map design requires that map elements be
    placed in a balanced arrangement within the neat
    line.

29
The Design Loop
  • Create map layout as macro
  • Draw on screen (proof plot)
  • Look
  • Edit macro
  • Repeat until happy
  • Make final plot

30
Graphic Editors
31
Graphic Editor Software
  • Vector
  • Adobe Illustrator
  • CorelDraw
  • Freehand
  • Raster
  • Photoshop
  • CorelPaint
  • Fractal Paint

32
Map Design (2)
  • Visual balance is affected by
  • the "weight" of the symbols
  • the visual hierarchy of the symbols and elements
  • the location of the elements with respect to each
    other and the visual center of the map.

33
Visual center
5 of height
5 of height
Portrait
Landscape
34
Visual Layout
Eye expects (1) balance and (2) allignment
35
Symbol weight
36
Color and Map Design
  • Color is a complex visual variable and in a GIS
    is specified by RGB or HSI values.
  • Red, Green, Blue are additive primaries.
  • Magenta, Cyan and Yellow are subtractive
    primaries.
  • Saturation and Intensity map better onto values
    than hue.

37
Dimensions of Color
HUE
INTENSITY
SATURATION
38
Simultaneous Contrast
39
Color Primaries
Additive color
Subtractive color
40
Text placement
Santa Barbara
Santa Barbara
Path right
Santa Barbara
P a t h D o w n
Santa Barbara
L a g o o n
41
Scale and Generalization
  • Smaller scale means fewer features.
  • Smaller scale means smoother features.
  • Smaller scale means combining features.
  • Smaller scale means displacing features.
  • Often scales are mixed or overgeneralized.

42
Map Design and GIS
  • When a GIS map is the result of a complex
    analytical or modeling process, good design is
    essential for understanding.
  • The map is what distinguishes GIS as a different
    approach to the management of information, so
    extra care should be taken to improve the final
    maps that a GIS generates in a GIS task.

43
Coming next
  • How to Pick a GIS.
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