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Title: What is Precision Agriculture??


1
Getting Started with ArcGIS Desktop Module 1
ESRI Virtual Campus Learning ArcGIS Desktop
Training Course
2
Course Introduction
  • You benefit from GIS software every day
  • Regular delivery of your morning newspaper
  • Synchronization of traffic lights
  • Convenient location of your favorite park
  • All over the world, organizations are using GIS
    to
  • Manage the environment
  • Work more efficiently
  • Provide better customer service
  • Save money

3
Course Introduction
  • This course introduces the fundamental concepts
    of GIS and the major functionality contained in
    ArcGIS Desktop software.
  • In the interactive course exercises, you will
    work with a variety of ArcGIS tools as you learn
    how to
  • create maps
  • find information
  • create and edit geographic data
  • solve a variety of geographic problems
  • By the end of this course, you should feel
    comfortable working with ArcGIS Desktop software
    on your own

4
Learning Objectives
  • Explore a GIS map and get information about map
    features
  • Preview geographic data and metadata
  • Add data to a map
  • Describe the structure of a GIS map
  • Explain how a GIS represents real-world objects
  • Change the way features are drawn on a map
  • Access feature information in different ways
  • Describe spatial relationships of map features
  • Describe how GIS can be used to solve problems

5
ArcGIS
  • In a GIS, data about real-world objects is linked
    to an onscreen map.
  • Geographic features are drawn quickly and can be
    displayed using different information in the
    database.
  • ArcGIS is the name of the family of ESRI's
    software solution programs.
  • While the depth of functionality in ArcGIS is
    tremendous, as you'll see, it takes a friendly
    approach to GIS with easy-to-use tools that help
    you through the most complicated of tasks.
  • This module provides an overview of basic GIS
    concepts and standard ArcGIS functions, while
    remaining modules provide more in-depth
    information.

6
Exploring a GIS Map
  • What's the difference between a GIS map and a
    static paper or electronic map?
  • GIS maps are dynamic.
  • While you can look at a static map and see where
    features are located and even measure approximate
    distances between them, you can't do much more
    than that.
  • With a GIS map, however, you are in charge.
  • You can zoom in and out to see different areas
    with more or less detail
  • You can decide what features you want to see and
    how they are symbolized
  • Most importantly, you can access a database of
    information about all the features shown on the
    map

7
Exploring ArcGIS Desktop
  • ArcGIS Desktop is a scalable product that
    includes three license levels
  • ArcView
  • ArcEditor
  • ArcInfo

8
Exploring ArcGIS Desktop
  • All three software products look and work the
    same
  • They differ only in how much they can do.
  • ArcEditor does more than ArcView, and ArcInfo
    does more than ArcEditor.
  • This course teaches ArcView, but
  • everything you learn applies to all three
    products
  • and you can complete all course exercises using
    any of the three.
  • All ArcGIS Desktop products can share the same
    map documents and data.

9
Exploring ArcGIS Desktop
  • Each ArcGIS Desktop product includes two
    applications ArcMap and ArcCatalog.
  • ArcMap
  • The application you work with to explore and
    analyze data and make maps
  • ArcCatalog
  • The application you work with to manage data
  • ArcToolbox
  • An integrated application that contains many
    tools for GIS tasks.
  • You can access ArcToolbox from both ArcMap and
    ArcCatalog.

10
Excercise
  • Plan a Trip to San Diego

11
How is a GIS Map Organized?
  • A GIS map consists of one or more data frames
  • A data frame contains a collection of thematic
    layers.
  • Layers, in turn, contain a collection of features
    that represent real-world objects.

12
How is a GIS Map Organized?
  • On a GIS map, features have a location, shape,
    and a symbol.
  • Features grouped into a layer have the same shape
    and characteristics and are located within the
    same geographic extent.
  • To make a GIS map, you can add as many layers as
    you want.

13
How is a GIS Map Organized?
  • These four layers might be used by a city
    government to create a GIS map.
  • The layers all contain features located within
    the city's boundaries, but each one represents a
    distinct "theme."
  • The layers are drawn on top of each other to
    create an informative GIS map.

14
Representing the Real World
  • In the real world, geographic objects have a wide
    variety of shapes.
  • In a GIS map, geographic objects are primarily
    represented as point, line, and polygon features.

15
Representing the Real World
  • In this map of South America
  • Countries are represented as polygons
  • Rivers are represented as lines
  • Cities are points
  • Each feature shape has its own unique set of
    characteristics.
  • The geometry type used to represent an object
    depends on the amount of detail that needs to be
    shown
  • The same object may be represented as a polygon
    in one layer and a point in another layer.

16
Points
  • Composed of one coordinate pair representing a
    specific location on the earth's surface.
  • Used for objects too small to be polygons, such
    as cities, trees, and hospitals.

17
Lines
  • A sequence of two or more coordinate pairs.
  • Has length, while polygons have two intrinsic
    values, perimeter and area.
  • Represent objects too narrow to be polygons, such
    as streets, rivers, and telephone lines.

18
Polygons
  • Composed of one or more lines whose starting and
    ending coordinate pairs are the same.
  • Have two intrinsic values
  • Perimeter
  • Area
  • Represent objects large enough to have
    boundaries, such as
  • Countries
  • Building footprints
  • Lakes

19
Linking Features to Information
  • On a GIS map, there's more to a feature than its
    location and shape.
  • There's all the information associated with that
    feature.
  • For a road, this might include its name, speed
    limit, and whether it's one-way or two-way.
  • For a city, this might include its population,
    demographic characteristics, number of schools,
    and average monthly temperatures.

20
Linking Features to Information
  • A particular type, or category, of information
    associated with a feature in a GIS is called an
    attribute.
  • For example, population can be an attribute of a
    city, country, continent, and other features.
  • Feature attributes are stored in an attribute
    table.
  • In an attribute table, each feature is a record
    (row) and each attribute is a column, or field.
  • The attributes for all the features in a layer
    are stored in the same attribute table.

21
Linking Features to Information
  • This attribute table for a layer of cities stores
    each feature's
  • ID number
  • Shape
  • Name
  • Country in which it's located
  • Status

22
Linking Feature to Information
  • A feature on a GIS map is linked to its record in
    the attribute table by a unique numerical
    identifier (ID).
  • Every feature in a layer has an identifier.

23
Linking Feature to Information
  • Because features on the map are linked to their
    records in the table
  • you can click a feature on the map and see the
    attributes stored for it in the table.
  • When you select a record in the table, the linked
    feature on the map is automatically selected as
    well.

24
Linking Feature to Information
  • In this map of India, the city of Bombay is
    selected.
  • Its record is also selected in the attribute
    table.
  • The unique identifier for Bombay is stored in the
    FID field.

25
Linking Feature to Information
  • Links between features and attributes make it
    possible to ask questions about the information
    stored in an attribute table and display the
    answer on the map.
  • This linkage makes GIS maps much more informative
    than static maps.

26
Understanding Map Scale
  • Scale is the relationship between the size of
    features on a map and the size of the
    corresponding objects in the real world.
  • Scale is commonly expressed as a ratio, or
    representative fraction, such as 124,000.
  • This scale means one unit on the map is equal to
    24,000 units on the earth.
  • Another way of thinking about it is that the
    objects on the earth are 24,000 times larger than
    the features on the map which represent them.

27
Understanding Map Scale
  • You will commonly see references to two types of
    maps
  • Large-scale
  • Covers a small area in more detail
  • i.e. a map of city streets or a building plan
  • Small-scale
  • Covers a large area in less detail
  • i.e a world map,.
  • GIS maps are dynamicyou can change the scale to
    see more or less detail as desired.

28
Understanding Map Scale
  • Map on the left
  • Large scale
  • A small area of the earth's surface (the city of
    San Diego, California)
  • Features such as roads are visible.
  • Map on the right
  • Small scale
  • Bigger area of the earth's surface (the
    continental U.S.)
  • But with less detail

29
ArcMap
  • Use ArcMap to
  • explore and edit geographic data
  • perform analysis
  • create professional-quality maps, graphs, and
    reports
  • When you work in ArcMap, you work with a map
    document file, which has the .mxd file extension.

30
ArcMap
  • ArcMap interface consists of
  • Table of contents
  • The map display area
  • A number of toolbars and menus for working with
    the map and its data.
  • The order of layers within the table of contents
    is important
  • the layers at the top of the table of contents
    draw on top of the layers below them.
  • Therefore, you should put the layers that form
    the background of your map, such as the ocean, at
    the bottom of the table of contents.

31
ArcMap
  • There are two views for working with data
  • data view
  • layout view.
  • In data view, you
  • explore
  • edit
  • query
  • analyze
  • symbolize data.
  • In data view, you can view only one data frame at
    a time.

32
ArcMap
  • Layout view
  • arrange data frames
  • add other map elements
  • scale bars
  • titles
  • legends
  • Create a map layout that can be published in
    print or digital form.
  • In layout view, you can view multiple data
    frames.

33
ArcCatalog
  • Designed for browsing, managing, and documenting
    geographic data.
  • A window into your GIS database.
  • From ArcCatalog you can access data stored on
    your computer's hard drives, local networks, and
    even the Internet.
  • To access data, you create a connection to its
    location
  • Collectively, the connections you create are
    called the Catalog.

34
ArcCatalog
  • The ArcCatalog interface consists of
  • Catalog tree on the left and
  • Preview pane on the right.
  • You use the Catalog tree to navigate and browse
    data.

35
ArcCatalog
  • Preview pane ?view
  • Contents of a folder
  • Geography (feature shapes)
  • Attributes stored with individual datasets
  • Metadata

36
Arc Catalog
  • ArcCatalog and ArcMap work together.
  • You can find and preview data in ArcCatalog
  • Then drag and drop the data into ArcMap to work
    with it.

37
ArcToolbox
  • Provides an organized collection of tools used
    for
  • GIS analysis
  • Data management
  • Data conversion
  • Accessible from both ArcMap and ArcCatalog.
  • The number of tools you have depends on your
    ArcGIS license
  • ArcView supports a core set of GIS tools
  • ArcEditor adds more
  • ArcInfo provides the most comprehensive set of
    tools

38
Metadata
  • Data about data
  • Information that describes, or documents, a
    geographic dataset
  • Real world example of unofficial metadata
  • Can be found almost everywhere
  • Handwriting on the back of a photograph

39
Metadata
  • Standardized metadata
  • Type of metadata used to describe data used in a
    GIS
  • Official
  • Government organizations create rules for
    standardizing metadata
  • Federal Geographic Data Committee
  • Organization for U.S.

40
Metadata
  • GIS metadata typically includes
  • information about why the data was collected (its
    purpose)
  • what geographic area the data covers (its
    geographic extent)
  • who collected the data
  • when the data was collected
  • what processes were performed on the data
  • who should be contacted for more details about
    the data

41
Metadata
  • You create and edit metadata in ArcCatalog.
  • ArcCatalog automatically derives and documents
    some data properties, such as the geographic
    extent.
  • Other properties, such as when and how the data
    was collected, must be documented by the data
    creator.

42
Metadata
  • ArcCatalog provides different style sheets for
    viewing metadata.
  • The FGDC ESRI style sheet consists of three tabs
  • Description
  • Spatial
  • Attributes

43
Description Tab
  • Displays
  • Thumbnail graphic of the data
  • Keywords
  • Abstract
  • Purpose statement
  • (not shown here).
  • Publication information

44
Spatial Tab
  • Displays the coordinates that define the data's
    geographic extent.

45
Attributes Tab
  • Where you find information about each attribute
    stored with a dataset.
  • Clicking an attribute name displays specific
    information about that attribute
  • such as its definition and data type

46
Metadata
  • Members of the GIS community like to share data
    and methods.
  • Metadata is critical for sharing datapeople who
    are thinking about using a dataset for a project
    first view its metadata in order to determine
    whether the dataset is appropriate for the
    project.
  • If a dataset lacks metadata, it may be used
    inappropriatelyand any analysis results or
    measurements made with the data may be
    inaccurate.

47
ArcGIS Desktop Help
  • Provides comprehensive explanations of
  • Procedures
  • Tools
  • Buttons
  • Commands
  • Access it from multiple locations within ArcMap
    and ArcCatalog
  • Context-sensitive Help
  • Click a tool or button and get information about
    it right there

48
ArcGIS Desktop Help
  • Four tabs that provide different ways of
    accessing information

49
Exercise
  • Calculate Tornado Damage

50
Using GIS to Solve Problems
  • Solving problems relies on good decision making.
  • Good decision making relies on accurate
    information.
  • In the real world, people make decisions, not
    computers.
  • Computers help people make decisions by providing
    useful and accurate information.
  • A GIS is a computer-based tool that helps us
    visualize information and see patterns and
    relationships that aren't otherwise apparent.
  • The ability to ask complex questions about data
    and analyze many features at once, then instantly
    see the results on a map makes GIS a powerful
    tool for creating information.

51
GIS A Tool to Solve Everyday Problems
  • Your alarm goes off at 600 a.m. You get up and
    turn on the lights.
  • Electric utility companies use GIS to manage
    their complex infrastructure, which consists of
    transmission and distribution lines and utility
    poles.
  • You make a pot of coffee.
  • The water the coffee is made with is provided by
    a water utility company.
  • The utility uses GIS for customer service,
    emergency response, water distribution,
    infrastructure maintenance, automated mapping,
    network tracing, flow analysis, and other aspects
    of engineering, operations, administration, and
    finance.

52
GIS A Tool to Solve Everyday Problems
  • You stop at the gas station on your way to work.
  • Oil companies use GIS for exploration, operation
    and maintenance, production, land lease
    management, and data management.
  • Before the oil becomes gasoline, pipelines move
    it from the oil fields to the processing plant.
  • The pipeline industry uses GIS for route planning
    and construction, operations, and supply market
    analysis.
  • You drive to work.
  • The community uses GIS for managing its
    transportation infrastructure.
  • More than 80 percent of the information used to
    manage road, rail, and port facilities has a
    geographic component.

53
GIS A Tool to Solve Everyday Problems
  • It's the day before a holiday weekend. You leave
    at noon and go to the beach.
  • GIS is used to help manage coastal resources,
    including shoreline, aquatic, and terrestrial
    habitats and biological resources, and the
    distribution of threatened and endangered
    species.
  • You enjoy a picnic lunch.
  • A GIS can produce maps that show farmers how to
    treat a given field, allowing for precise
    applications of fertilizer that produce optimal
    crop yields while protecting the environment.

54
GIS A Tool to Solve Everyday Problems
  • On the way home, you stop at a video store.
  • The store is at that particular location because
    GIS helped define the right store mix for the
    location's potential customers.
  • GIS integrates strategic sales volume models and
    demographic data to help businesses find suitable
    sites.
  • When you leave the video store, your car is still
    in the parking lot, right where you left it.
  • GIS is being used to reduce crime.
  • The vast majority of information used in law
    enforcement is map-based. Incidents can be
    displayed by beat, reporting district, or zone
    and law enforcement resources can be deployed in
    the areas where they're needed most.

55
GIS A Tool to Solve Everyday Problems
  • After a long day, you arrive home safe and sound.
    GIS has been there nearly every step of the way,
    helping make life more comfortable and safe.
  • Remember that GIS stands for geographic
    information system.
  • It's geography that makes GIS such a useful tool
    for solving problems.

56
Using Location to Get Information
  • All features can be related to other features
    based on their locations.
  • Spatial relationships
  • Relationships based on location
  • Spatial relationships provide a basis for making
    decisions and solving many problems.
  • Getting answers to questions that are based on
    spatial relationships is the reason people use a
    GIS.
  • Because a GIS stores feature coordinate
    locations, it can quickly find and select
    features that meet some spatial criteria.

57
Spatial Relationships
  • A GIS answers questions based on spatial
    relationships by selecting features on the map.
  • The map allows people to visualize information at
    a glance and detect patterns that aren't obvious
    in a written report or on a graph.
  • There are four basic types of spatial
    relationships
  • Distance
  • Containment
  • Intersection
  • Adjacency.

58
Distance
  • Points within a given distance of the red point
    are selected.
  • Which cities are located within 25 kilometers of
    a river?

59
Containment
  • Points contained by the red polygon are selected.
  • Which countries contain a lake completely within
    their borders?

60
Intersection
  • Lines that intersect the red line are selected.
  • Which countries have a river that intersects
    their border?

61
Adjacency
  • Polygons adjacent to the red polygon are
    selected.
  • Which countries share a border with Russia?

62
Using Location to Get Information
  • Questions that can be answered using feature
    spatial relationships are
  • How many houses are less than 1 mile from the
    airport?
  • Which parcels are contained by the contamination
    plume?
  • Which bridges intersect the fault line?
  • Which land uses are adjacent to the proposed
    subdivision?

63
A GIS performs 6 fundamental operations
  • Capture data
  • Add data from many sources to a GIS
  • Or create your own data from scratch
  • Store data
  • Can store and manage information about the real
    world in ways that make sense for your
    application
  • Query data
  • Ask complex questions about features based on
    their attributes or their location and get quick
    results

64
A GIS performs 6 fundamental operations
  • Analyze data
  • Integrate multiple datasets to find features that
    meet specific criteria and create information
    useful for problem solving.
  • Display data
  • Display features based on their attributes
  • Present data
  • Create and distribute high-quality maps, graphs,
    and reports to present your analysis results in a
    compelling way to your audience.

65
Geographic Inquiry Process
  • Provides necessary framework for solving problems
    with GIS
  • Consists of five steps

66
Geographic Inquiry Process
  • Process can be iterative
  • Depending on the type of problem
  • Last step of the process
  • Leads to more geographic questions
  • The whole process begins again

67
Exercise
  • Find potential sites for a youth center

68
Key Points to Remember
  • A GIS organizes and stores information about the
    world as a collection of thematic layers.
  • Each layer contains features with the same shape
    and attributes, all located within a common
    geographic area.
  • Each feature is assigned a unique numerical
    identifier and is characterized by a unique
    location in space and a corresponding record in a
    table.
  • Features can be stored in a GIS as three primary
    shapes points, lines, or polygons.
  • Features have spatial relationships with other
    features, and with a GIS you can find features
    based on their spatial relationships.
  • The geographic inquiry process provides a
    framework for solving problems with GIS.

69
Review Questions
  • How is a GIS map different from a static map?
  • What is one way you can get information about a
    feature using ArcGIS Desktop software?
  • What are the primary operations that a GIS can
    perform that make it a useful tool for solving
    problems?
  • What are the five steps in the geographic inquiry
    process?

70
Review Answers
  • The dynamic nature of a GIS map makes it
    different from a static map. In a GIS, map
    features are linked to a database of information.
    You can pan, zoom, get information about
    features, control feature display, and change how
    they're symbolized.
  • You can use the Identify tool to click a map
    feature and see its attributes. You can also open
    the attribute table to view a feature record.
  • A GIS can capture, store, query, analyze,
    display, and present data.
  • The five steps in the geographic inquiry process
    are 1) ask a geographic question, 2) acquire
    geographic data, 3) explore geographic data, 4)
    analyze geographic information, and 5) act on
    geographic knowledge.
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