Title: Introduction to GIS
1Introduction to GIS
- SGO 1910/4930
- September 19, 2006
2Announcements
- Review lecture on Thursday (21.09.06) 12.00 -
14.00 in 221HH). - Midterm quiz next week (26.09.06)
- 25 questions (multiple choice, true-false)
3Georeferencing
4Georeferencing
- Geographic information contains either an
explicit geographic reference (such as latitude
and longitude coordinates), or an implicit
reference such as an address, road name, or
postal code. - Geographic references allow you to locate
features for analysis.
5- Time is optional in a GIS, whereas location is
essential. - Without location, data are non-spatial or
aspatial and have little value within a GIS.
6Georeferencing
- Is essential in GIS, since all information must
be linked to the Earths surface - The method of georeferencing must be
- Unique, linking information to exactly one
location - Shared, so different users understand the meaning
of a georeference - Persistent through time, so todays georeferences
are still meaningful tomorrow
7Uniqueness
- A georeference may be unique only within a
defined domain, not globally - There are many instances of Storgatas in Norway,
but only one in any city - The meaning of a reference to Greenwich may
depend on context, since there are cities and
towns called Greenwich in several parts of the
world
8Georeferences as Measurements
- Some georeferences are metric
- They define location using measures of distance
from fixed places - E.g., distance from the Equator or from the
Greenwich Meridian - Others are based on ordering
- E.g. street addresses in most parts of the world
order houses along streets - Others are only nominal
- Placenames do not involve ordering or measuring
9Place names
- The earliest form of georeferencing
- And the most commonly used in everyday activities
- Many names of geographic features are universally
recognized - Others may be understood only by locals
- Names work at many different scales
- From continents to small villages and
neighborhoods
10Persistence through time
- Changes can lead to confusion (Peking to Beijing,
St. Petersburg to Leningrad) - Place names can be disassociated with location
over time (e.g., Atlantis, Camelot)
11Example South Africa
- Since the first democratic election in South
Africa in 1994, a number of changes have been
made to geographical names in the country. It can
get a bit confusing, as mapmakers struggle to
keep up, and roadsigns aren't immediately
changed. In many instances, the 'new' names were
existing ones used by parts of the population
others are new municipal entities. All name
changes have to be approved by the South African
Geographical Names Council, which is responsible
for standardising geographical names in South
Africa.
12Name changes in South Africa
- Redivision of the Provinces in South AfricaOne
of the first major changes was the redivision of
the country into eight provinces, rather than the
existing four (Cape Province, Orange Free State,
Transvaal, and Natal ). The Cape Province divided
into three (Western Cape, Eastern Cape, and
Northern Cape), the Orange Free State became the
Free State, Natal was renamed KwaZulu-Natal, and
the Transvaal was divided into Gauteng,
Mpumalanga (initially Eastern Transvaal),
Northwest Province, and Limpopo Province
(initially Northern Province). - Renamed Towns in South AfricaAmong the towns
renamed were some named after leaders significant
in Afrikaner history. So Pietersburg, Louis
Trichard, and Potgietersrust became,
respectively, Polokwane, Makhoda, and Mokopane
(the name of a king). Warmbaths changed to
Bela-Bela, a Sesotho word for hot spring. - Names Given to New Geographical EntitiesSeveral
new municipal and megacity boundaries have been
created. The City of Tshwane Metropolitan
Municipality covers cities such as Pretoria,
Centurion, Temba, and Hammanskraal. The Nelson
Mandela Metropole covers the East London/Port
Elizabeth area. - Colloquial City Names in South AfricaCape Town
is known as eKapa. Johannesburg is called eGoli,
literally meaning "the place of gold". Durban is
called eThekwini, which translates as "In the
Bay" (although some controversy was caused when
several eminent Zulu linguists claimed that the
name actually means "the one-testicled one"
referring to the shape of the bay). - Changes to Airport Names in South AfricaThe
names of all South African airports were changed
from politician's names to simply the city or
town they're located in. Cape Town International
Airport needs no explanation, whereas who but a
local would know where DF Malan Airport was?
Johannesburg International Airport may change to
O.R. Tambo International Airport.
13Postal Addresses and Postcodes
- Every dwelling and office is a potential
destination for mail - Dwellings and offices are arrayed along streets,
and numbered accordingly - Streets have names that are unique within local
areas - Local areas have names that are unique within
larger regions - If these assumptions are true, then a postal
address is a useful georeference
14Where Do Postal Addresses Fail as Georeferences?
- In rural areas
- Urban-style addresses have been extended recently
to many rural areas - For natural features
- Lakes, mountains, and rivers cannot be located
using postal addresses - When numbering on streets is not sequential
- E.g. in Japan
15Postcodes as Georeferences
- Defined in many countries
- E.g. ZIP codes in the US
- Hierarchically structured
- The first few characters define large areas
- Subsequent characters designate smaller areas
- Coarser spatial resolution than postal address
- Useful for mapping
16ZIP code boundaries are a convenient way to
summarize data in the US. The dots on the left
have been summarized as a density per square mile
on the right
17Linear Referencing
- A system for georeferencing positions on a road,
street, rail, or river network - Combines the name of the link with an offset
distance along the link from a fixed point, most
often an intersection
18Users of Linear Referencing
- Transportation authorities
- To keep track of pavement quality, signs, traffic
conditions on roads - Police
- To record the locations of accidents
19Problem Cases
- Locations in rural areas may be a long way from
an intersection or other suitable zero point - Pairs of streets may intersect more than once
- Measurements of distance along streets may be
inaccurate, depending on the measuring device,
e.g. a car odometer
20Cadasters
- Maps of land ownership, showing property
boundaries - The Public Land Survey System (PLSS) in the US
and similar systems in other countries provide a
method of georeferencing linked to the cadaster - In the Western US the PLSS is often used to
record locations of natural resources, e.g. oil
and gas wells
21Â
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Portion of the Township and Range system (Public
Lands Survey System) widely used in the western
US as the basis of land ownership. Townships are
laid out in six mile squares on either side of an
accurately surveyed Principal Meridian. The
offset shown between townships 16N and 17N is
needed to accommodate the Earths curvature
(shown much exaggerated). The square mile
sections within each township are numbered as
shown in (A) east of the Principal Meridian, and
reversed west of the Principal Meridian.
22Latitude and Longitude
- The most comprehensive and powerful method of
georeferencing - Metric, standard, stable, unique
- Uses a well-defined and fixed reference frame
- Based on the Earths rotation and center of mass,
and the Greenwich Meridian
23Geographic Coordinates
- Geographic coordinates are the earth's latitude
and longitude system, ranging from 90 degrees
south to 90 degrees north in latitude and 180
degrees west to 180 degrees east in longitude. - A line with a constant latitude running east to
west is called a parallel. - A line with constant longitude running from the
north pole to the south pole is called a
meridian. - The zero-longitude meridian is called the prime
meridian and passes through Greenwich, England. - A grid of parallels and meridians shown as lines
on a map is called a graticule.
24Geographic Coordinates
Prime Meridian
Equator
Prime Meridian
25Geographic Coordinates as Data
26Oslo, Norway
- 59o56 N. Latitude
- 10o45 E. Longitude
27Definition of longitude. The Earth is seen here
from above the North Pole, looking along the
Axis, with the Equator forming the outer circle.
The location of Greenwich defines the Prime
Meridian. The longitude of the point at the
center of the red cross is determined by drawing
a plane through it and the axis, and measuring
the angle between this plane and the Prime
Meridian.
28Definition of Latitude
- Requires a model of the Earths shape
- The Earth is somewhat elliptical
- The N-S diameter is roughly 1/300 less than the
E-W diameter - More accurately modeled as an ellipsoid than a
sphere - An ellipsoid is formed by rotating an ellipse
about its shorter axis (the Earths axis in this
case)
29Earth Shape Sphere and Ellipsoid
30The History of Ellipsoids
- Because the Earth is not shaped precisely as an
ellipsoid, initially each country felt free to
adopt its own Ellipsoid as the most accurate
approximation to its own part of the Earth - Today an international standard has been adopted
known as WGS 84 - Its US implementation is the North American Datum
of 1983 (NAD 83) - Many US maps and data sets still use the North
American Datum of 1927 (NAD 27) - Differences can be as much as 200 m
31Cartography and GIS
- Understanding the way maps are encoded to be used
in GIS requires knowledge of cartography. - Cartography is the science that deals with the
construction, use, and principles behind maps.
32Cartography
- How can a flat map be used to describe locations
on the earths curved surface?
33Projections and Coordinates
- There are many reasons for wanting to project the
Earths surface onto a plane, rather than deal
with the curved surface - The paper used to output GIS maps is flat
- Flat maps are scanned and digitized to create GIS
databases - Rasters are flat, its impossible to create a
raster on a curved surface - The Earth has to be projected to see all of it at
once - Its much easier to measure distance on a plane
34Distortions
- Any projection must distort the Earth in some way
- Two types of projections are important in GIS
- Conformal property Shapes of small features are
preserved anywhere on the projection the
distortion is the same in all directions - Equal area property Shapes are distorted, but
features have the correct area - Both types of projections will generally distort
distances
35Map Projections
- A transformation of the spherical or ellipsoidal
earth onto a flat map is called a map projection. - The map projection can be onto a flat surface or
a surface that can be made flat by cutting, such
as a cylinder or a cone. - If the globe, after scaling, cuts the surface,
the projection is called secant. Lines where the
cuts take place or where the surface touches the
globe have no projection distortion.
36Map Projections (ctd)
- Projections can be based on axes parallel to the
earth's rotation axis (equatorial), at 90 degrees
to it (transverse), or at any other angle
(oblique). - A projection that preserves the shape of features
across the map is called conformal. - A projection that preserves the area of a feature
across the map is called equal area or
equivalent. - No flat map can be both equivalent and conformal.
Most fall between the two as compromises. - To compare or edge-match maps in a GIS, both maps
MUST be in the same projection.
37no flat map can be both equivalent and
conformal.
38Cylindrical Projections
- Conceptualized as the result of wrapping a
cylinder of paper around the Earth - The Mercator projection is conformal
39Conic Projections
- Conceptualized as the result of wrapping a cone
of paper around the Earth - Standard Parallels occur where the cone
intersects the Earth
40The Unprojected Projection
- Assign latitude to the y axis and longitude to
the x axis - A type of cylindrical projection
- Is neither conformal nor equal area
- As latitude increases, lines of longitude are
much closer together on the Earth, but are the
same distance apart on the projection
- Also known as the Plate Carrée or Cylindrical
Equidistant Projection
41The Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) Projection
- A type of cylindrical projection
- Implemented as an internationally standard
coordinate system - Initially devised as a military standard
- Uses a system of 60 zones
- Maximum distortion is 0.04
- Transverse Mercator because the cylinder is
wrapped around the Poles, not the Equator
42Zones are each six degrees of longitude, numbered
as shown at the top, from W to E
43Implications of the Zone System
- Each zone defines a different projection
- Two maps of adjacent zones will not fit along
their common border - Jurisdictions that span two zones must make
special arrangements - Use only one of the two projections, and accept
the greater-than-normal distortions in the other
zone - Use a third projection spanning the jurisdiction
- E.g. Italy is spans UTM zones 32 and 33
44UTM Coordinates
- In the N Hemisphere define the Equator as 0 mN
- The central meridian of the zone is given a false
Easting of 500,000 mE - Eastings and northings are both in meters
allowing easy estimation of distance on the
projection - A UTM georeference consists of a zone number, a
six-digit easting and a seven-digit northing - E.g., 14, 468324E, 5362789N
45State Plane Coordinates
- Defined in the US by each state
- Some states use multiple zones
- Several different types of projections are used
by the system - Provides less distortion than UTM
- Preferred for applications needing very high
accuracy, such as surveying
46Converting Georeferences
- GIS applications often require conversion of
projections and ellipsoids - These are standard functions in popular GIS
packages - Street addresses must be converted to coordinates
for mapping and analysis - Using geocoding functions
- Placenames can be converted to coordinates using
gazetteers
47GIS Capability
- A GIS package should be able to move between
- map projections,
- coordinate systems,
- datums, and
- ellipsoids.
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49Data AcquisitionGetting the Map into the
Computer
50GIS maps are digital
- Real maps traditional paper maps that can be
touched - Virtual maps an arrangement of information
inside the computer the GIS can be used to
generate the map however and whenever necessary.
51GIS Data Conversion
- Traditionally the most time-consuming and
expensive part of a GIS project - Involves a one-time cost
- Digital maps can be reused and shared.
- Requires maintenance (eg. updating)
52GIS data can be
- Purchased.
- Found from existing sources in digital form.
- Captured from analog maps by GEOCODING.
53Finding Existing Map Data
- Map libraries
- Reference books
- State and local agencies
- Federal agencies
- Commercial data suppliers
54Existing Map Data
- Existing map data can be found through a map
library, via network searches, or on media such
as CD-ROM and disk. - Many major data providers make their data
available via the Internet.
55Statenskartverkhttp//ngis.statkart.no/katalog/ja
va/katalog.asp
- Rasterdata
- Temakart
- Vektordata
- Primærdata
- Prosjekter
-
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57Data Collection
- One of most expensive GIS activities
- Many diverse sources
- Two broad types of collection
- Data capture (direct collection)
- Data transfer
- Two broad capture methods
- Primary (direct measurement)
- Secondary (indirect derivation)
58Data Collection Techniques
59GEOCODING
- Geocoding is the conversion of spatial
information into digital form. - Geocoding involves capturing the map, and
sometimes also capturing the attributes.
60Primary Data Capture
- Capture specifically for GIS use
- Raster remote sensing
- e.g. SPOT and IKONOS satellites and aerial
photography - Passive and active sensors
- Resolution is key consideration
- Spatial
- Spectral
- Temporal
61Secondary Geographic Data Capture
- Data collected for other purposes can be
converted for use in GIS - Raster conversion
- Scanning of maps, aerial photographs, documents,
etc - Important scanning parameters are spatial and
spectral (bit depth) resolution
62Vector Primary Data Capture
- Surveying
- Locations of objects determines by angle and
distance measurements from known locations - Uses expensive field equipment and crews
- Most accurate method for large scale, small areas
- GPS
- Collection of satellites used to fix locations on
Earths surface - Differential GPS used to improve accuracy
63Vector Secondary Data Capture
- Collection of vector objects from maps,
photographs, plans, etc. - Digitizing
- Manual (table)
- Heads-up and vectorization
- Photogrammetry the science and technology of
making measurements from photographs, etc. - COGO Coordinate Geometry
64Managing Data Capture Projects
- Key principles
- Clear plan, adequate resources, appropriate
funding, and sufficient time - Fundamental tradeoff between
- Quality, speed and price
- Two strategies
- Incremental
- Blitzkrieg (all at once)
- Alternative resource options
- In house
- Specialist external agency
65Summary
- Data collection is very expensive,
time-consuming, tedious and error prone - Good procedures required for large scale
collection projects - Main techniques
- Primary
- Raster e.g. remote sensing
- Vector e.g. field survey
- Secondary
- Raster e.g. scanning
- Vector e.g. table digitizing
66Digitizing
- Captures map data by tracing lines from a map by
hand - Uses a cursor and an electronically-sensitive
tablet - Result is a string of points with (x, y) values
67Digitizer
68The Digitizing Tablet
69Digitizing
- Stable base map
- Fix to tablet
- Digitize control
- Determine coordinate transformation
- Trace features
- Proof plot
- Edit
- Clean and build
70Selecting points to digitize
71Scanner
72Scanning
- Places a map on a glass plate, and passes a light
beam over it - Measures the reflected light intensity
- Result is a grid of pixels
- Image size and resolution are important
- Features can drop out
73Scanning example
This section of map was scanned, resulting in a
file in TIF format that was bytes in size. This
was a file of color intensities between 0 and
255 for red, green, and blue in each of three
layers spaced on a grid 0.25 millimeter apart.
How much data would be necessary to capture the
features on your map as vectors? Would it be
more or less than the grid (raster) file?
74Field data collection
75Pen Portable PC and GPS
76Data Transfer
- Buy v build is an important question
- Many widely distributed sources of GI
- Key catalogs include
- US NSDI Clearinghouse network
- Geography Network
- Access technologies
- Translation
- Direct read
77Attribute data
- Logically can be thought of as in a flat file
- Table with rows and columns
- Attributes by records
- Entries called values.
78Database Management Systems
- Data definition module sets constraints on the
attribute values - Data entry module to enter and correct values
- Data management system for storage and retrieval
- Data definitions can be listed as a data
dictionary - Database manager checks values with this
dictionary, enforcing data validation.
79The Role of Error
- Map and attribute data errors are the data
producer's responsibility, but the GIS user must
understand error. - Accuracy and precision of map and attribute data
in a GIS affect all other operations, especially
when maps are compared across scales.
80Quick review
- Geographic information contains either an
explicit geographic reference (such as latitude
and longitude coordinates), or an implicit
reference such as an address, road name, or
postal code. - Geographic references allow you to locate
features for analysis.