Title: Collaborative Cartography Project Using Excel
1Collaborative Cartography Project Using Excel
- Jonathan F. Lewis
- Benedictine University
2Shaded relief can make contour lines difficult
to see
3Basic BW works well. Probably will need to blow
it up a bit
4Use a ruler to draw a grid
Put letters across the top and bottom and numbers
down both sides
5The numbering and lettering correspond to Excels
spreadsheet layout
6The procedure
- Students are assigned sets of lines (e.g. one
student does A, B, and C while the next does D,
E, and F) - They determine the elevation of the point where
lines intersect (A-1, A-2, A-3, etc) and enter
the value into the appropriate part of an Excel
spreadsheet - These are then combined to create a very large
data set
7Consider
- Might want students lines to overlap (first
student does A, B, and C, while second does C, D,
and E) as a check - Keep track of which sets of lines were assigned
each student (some forget while others enter the
data into the wrong part of the spreadsheet) - Points falling between contours
- Let them decide how to interpolate and ask them
later to explain the basis for their decisions,
or - Discuss it in class in order to ensure consistency
8Also
- Some students dont get this done in time,
leaving gaping holes in the data set - Another benefit of the overlapping lines
- Should probably have done the entire project
yourself first (a pain, but hey, thats part of
the job) - A surprising number of students have no idea how
to read contour maps, so devote some time to
explaining them
9Many students already understandthe principle
behind contour lines
- Make this more interesting to them in the context
of a presentation covering the various ways
cartographers have attempted to convey elevation
information
Shaded Relief
Hachuring
10Not surprisingly
- The greater the number of points
- The more detailed and accurate the information
and the cooler the final image (like surveying
everyone, not 1 of every 1,000 people) - The greater the effort older machines and earlier
versions of Excel will have to exert to create
the image. It will still work, but when you
later want to manipulate the image, it may take
some time to redraw
11Typical data files look like this
12Select all the cells, click on the chart wizard
tool, and select Surface
13Youre then given several options
such as labeling axes and titling the image
14Customizing the image
You can change the number of elevation levels
and their color
You can add a picture to the floor of the
image. This makes it possible to depict the
original contour map with the 3-D surface
hovering above it
15Like this
16Manipulating the image
Clicking once on a gray side creates boxes at the
corners. Click and hold the mouse button down,
then move the image.
Initially, the 3D surface may disappear until you
release the button, then the surface will be
redrawn from the new perspective
17In Office 2007, Excel works differently
This is the floor of Yosemite Valley as shown in
Excel 2007. Not a bad look, really.
18In Office 2007, the design tool permits selection
from color ranges. Image rotation works
differently, too.
19A background image makes it a little harder to
read but allows comparison with actual photograph
of the location
20Future possibilities
- I want to try this in conjunction with a
historical project the attack on Savannah,
Georgia during the American Civil War - Can utilize a map of the Savannah Rivers depths
created in the late 1850s - Students can use it to pass judgment on whether
or not a naval assault on the city was feasible - Theyll need to know seasonal variations in the
rivers depth, the draft of Union vessels,
location of defense emplacements, possibly lunar
phases