Title: Surveying and Digitizing
1Surveying and Digitizing
2Primary Data Sources
- Measurements
- Field ? surveying
- Lab (not covered here)
- Remotely sensed data
- already secondary?
- Creating geometries
- Definitely in the realm of secondary data
- Digitizing
- Scanning
3Surveying
- Measurements and measurement techniques
- Distances
- Angles
- Position determination
- Applications
- Traversing and mapping
- Construction and earthwork
- Boundary surveys
4Definition of Surveying
- General
- To inspect, view, scrutinize, or examine
- To determine condition, situation, or value
- Specifically
- Science and art of determining relative positions
of points above, on, or beneath earth surface
5Uses of Surveying
- Engineering design
- Layout construction or engineering projects
- Verify performance
- Provide control
- Usually for location
6History of Surveying
- Early applications
- Boundary location
- Construction
- Mapping
- Early surveys limited by technology
- Crude and inconsistent methods
- Development of sighting devices, standards,
7History of Surveying (2)
- Industrial revolution improved surveying
- Advances in available materials
- Improvement in tools
- Electronics revolution ? fundamental advances
- Electronic distance and angle measurement
- Satellite surveying
- Enhanced processing
8Specific Types of Surveying
- Property (cadastral) surveying
- Control surveying
- Mapping surveying (planimetric or topographic)
- Photogrammetric surveying
- Construction (engineering) surveying
- Route surveying
- Hydrographic surveying
9Surveying Measurements
- Two quantities measured in surveying
- Lengths
- Angles
- All measurements are imperfect
- Errors
- Mistakes
10Measurement Errors
- Sources of errors
- Natural
- Instrumental
- Types of errors
- Systematic
- Random
- Terms used in describing errors
- Precision
- Accuracy
11Idea of Relative Position
- Question Have the points moved?
- Answer Relative to what?
- References
- Needed for expressing location of points, lines,
other objects - Datums provide references in surveying
- Horizontally
- Vertically
12Reference Ellipsoids Basic Concept
a semi-major axis
b semi-minor axis
13Example Reference Ellipsoids
Ellipsoid Equatorial Axis Polar Axis Association
Clarke, 1866 12,756,412.8 m 12,713,167.6 m NAD27 datum
GRS80 12,756,274 m 12,713,504.6 m NAD83 datum
WGS84 12,756,274 m 12,713,504.6 m GPS
ITRS 12,756,272.98 m 12,713,503.5 m ITRF
GRS Geodetic Reference System WGS World
Geodetic System ITRS International Terrestrial
Reference System
14Ignoring Earth Curvature
(? 5
miles
.006m
8000
0.25)
8000.000m (? 5 miles)
1000 km
? 998.95 km
15Ignoring Earth Curvature (2)
Horizontal plane
1 mile (1609 m)
8 inches (? 20 cm)
Level surface
16Ignoring Earth Curvature (3)
Sum of Interior Angles 180 00' 01"
75 mi2(48,000 acres)19,800 hectares
17Digitizing and Scanning
- Instruments
- Georeferencing
- The process and problems associated with it
- Automation
- Formats
18Why Do We Have To Digitize?
- Existing data sets are general purpose, so if you
want something specific you have to create it - In spite of 20 years of GIS, most stuff is still
in analog form - Chances are somebody else has digitized it
before but data sharing is not what it should be
19Digitizer
- Digitizing table10 x 10 to 80 x 6050 -
2,0001/100th inch accuracy - Stylus or puck with control buttons
20The Digitizing Procedure
- Affixing the map to the digitizer
- Registering the map
- Actual digitizing
- In point mode
- In stream mode
21Georeferencing
- at least 3 control pointsaka reference points or
tics - easily identifiable on the map
- exact coordinates need to be known
22Digitizing Modes
- Point mode
- most common
- selective choice of points digitized
- requires judgment
- for man-made features
- Stream mode
- large number of (redundant) points
- requires concentration
- For natural (irregular) features
23Problems With Digitizing
- Paper instability
- Humidity-induced shrinking of 2-3
- Cartographic distortion, aka displacement
- Overshoots, gaps, and spikes
- Curve sampling
24Errors From Digitizing
- Fatigue
- Map complexity
- ½ hour to 3 days for a single map sheet
- Sliver polygons
- Wrongly placed labels
25Digitizing Costs
- Rule of thumb one boundary per minute
ergoappr. 62 lines more than one hour
26Automated Data Input (Scanning)
- Work like a photocopier or fax machine
- Three types
- Flatbed scanners
- A4 or A3
- 600 to 2400 dpi optical resolution
- 50 to 2,000
- Drum scanner
- practically unlimited paper size
- 10k TO 50k
- Video line scanner
- producesvector data
27Requirements for Scanning
- Data capture is fast but preparation is tedious
- Computers cannot distinguish smudges
- Lines should be at least 0.1 of a mm wide
- Text and preferably color separation
- AI techniques dont work (yet?)
- Symbols such as ? are too variable for automatic
detection and interpretation
28Semi-automatic Data Input(Heads-up Digitizing)
- Reasonable compromise between traditional
digitizing and scanning - Much less tedious
- Incorporating your intelligence
29Criteria for Choosing Input Mode
- Images without easily detectable line work should
be left in raster format - Really dense line work should be left as
background image - unless it is really needed for automatic GIS
analysis in which case you would have to bite
the bullet
30Conversion from Other Databases
- Autocad .dxf and dBASE .dbf are de facto
standards for GIS data exchange - In the raster domain there is no equivalent .tif
comes closest to a standard - In any case merging data that originate from
different scales is problematic in the best of
all worlds there is no automatic generalization
routine