Title: On Some Fundamental Geographical Concepts
1On Some Fundamental Geographical Concepts
2Nystuen, J. D. (1963) Identification of some
fundamental spatial concepts
- Search for a common geographical terminology to
eliminate redundancy - Basics Distance, pattern, relative position,
site and accessibility - Advantages of abstract models and assumptions,
e.g. isotropic surface
3The mosque floor
4(No Transcript)
5Geographic primitives
- G g (x, y, z, s, A, t)
- x, y, z f(l, f, d)
- Geography also highly dependent upon model
6UCSBLat 34.4087 Lon -119.8447
7Projection, datum etc. for a 7.5 min quad
8GIS basic geometric functions
- A GIS package must be able to move between
- map projections
- coordinate systems
- datums
- Ellipsoids
- A GIS must be able to GEORECTIFY
- Not always a simple task!
9Orthorectification
10Georegistration Control
11Georectification
12Conflation
13Address matching
2123 South Main St. Anywhere CA 93901
4,312,205mN 623,864mE 15N
14Geographic information fundamentals
- Volume
- Dimensionality
- Continuity
15Volume
- 1 meter pixel
- 24 bit depth (8 bit R, 8 bit G, 8 bit B)
- California 3rd largest State A158,706 square
miles - A 411,046,653,039 square meters
- N9.865x1010 bytes
- 98 gigabyte image
16Volume Issues Tiles and Pyramids
17Dimensionality
- Simple geographic features can be used to build
more complex ones. - Areas are made up of lines which are made up of
points represented by their coordinates. - Areas Lines Points
18Areas are lines are points are coordinates
19Continuity
- Attributes of the earth fall into different
spatial behaviors over space and time - Many phenomena are best treated as continuous
fields - E.g. air temperature, atmospheric pressure,
population density - Others have distinct spatial extent or edges
- E.g. census tracts, buildings, roads
20Field vs. Feature (object)
21Fields are often rasters
22Air Photos
1929
Discontinuous irregular rasters resampling
23Features are often vectors
24(No Transcript)
25Properties of Features
- Size
- Distribution/density
- Shape
- Scale
- Orientation
26Size Resolution and Extent
10cm, 25cm, 50cm, 1m
27Resels Non-uniform Support
28Data structure conversion
29Distribution
30Geographical Clustering
31Clusters on points/networks
32Shape
33Shape vs. Support
34Shape measures/analysis
35Scale RF vs. Detail
Santa Barbara
36Scaling behavior
37Orientation Objects Frame
38Toblers First Law of Geography
- Everything is related to everything else but
near things are more related than distant things
(Tobler, 1970) - Variation of (x1 x0)2
- Spatial autocorrelation
- Violates assumptions of statistics
39Geographical relations
- Among features
- Contains/overlaps/intersects
- Contiguity/Adjacency
- Proximity
- Trajectory
- Within fields
- Neighborhood relation
- Pattern
- Process
40Vector polygon overlay
O
41Raster overlay
0
1
42Buffering
43Pattern
44Pattern (Fourier) Analysis
45Contiguity
http//www.clearproject.net/chapter10fig5.JPG
(Clear Lake, Iowa)
46Semivariogram
47Most important, process
t0
t1
t2
t3
48Strands
49Time-Space dynamics
50Dynamics
51Geography
- The study of the earth and its features and of
the distribution of life on the earth, including
human life and the effects of human activity.