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From Topographic Maps to Digital Elevation Models Daniel Sheehan DUE Office of Educational Innovation & Technology Anne Graham MIT Libraries.

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Presentation on theme: "From Topographic Maps to Digital Elevation Models Daniel Sheehan DUE Office of Educational Innovation & Technology Anne Graham MIT Libraries."— Presentation transcript:

1 From Topographic Maps to Digital Elevation Models Daniel Sheehan DUE Office of Educational Innovation & Technology Anne Graham MIT Libraries

2 Which Way Does the Water Flow?

3 A topographic map shows the relief features or surface configuration of an area.

4 A hill is represented by lines of equal elevation above mean sea level. Contours never cross.

5 Elevation values are printed in several places along these lines.

6 Contours that are very close together represent steep slopes.

7 Widely spaced contours or an absence of contours means that the ground slope is relatively level.

8 The elevation difference between adjacent contour lines, called the contour interval, is selected to best show the general shape of the terrain. A map of a relatively flat area may have a contour interval of 10 feet or less.

9 Maps in mountainous areas may have contour intervals of 100 feet or more.

10 A city can be overlain on a topographic map.

11 A bench mark is a surveyed elevation point.

12 Contour lines point up stream.

13 United States Geological Survey Topographic Map Symbols Explained http://erg.usgs.gov/isb/pubs/booklets/symbols /

14

15 Digital Elevation Models Using elevation data in raster format in a GIS

16 What is a Digital Elevation Model (DEM)?  Digital representation of topography  Cell based with a single elevation representing the entire area of the cell

17 Basic storage of data 340335330340345 337332330335340 330328320330335 328326310320328 320318305312315 DEM as matrix of elevations with a uniform cell size

18 Adding geography to data 340335330340345 337332330335340 330328320330335 328326310320328 320318305312315 Xmin, Ymin – XY are in projected units Xmax, Ymax Cell index number x cell size defines position relative to Xmin, Ymin and Xmax, Ymax and infers An exact location

19 Uses of DEMs  Determine characteristics of terrain  Slope, aspect  Watersheds  drainage networks, stream channels

20 Scale in DEMs  Scale determines resolution (cell size)  Depends on source data  Resolution determines use of DEM and what spatial features are visible

21 Estimating slopes in a DEM  Slopes are calculated locally using a neighborhood function, based on a moving 3*3 window  Distances are different in horizontal and vertical directions vs diagonal  Only steepest slopes are used 1.41…1 101 1 * cell size

22 Slopes 340335330 337332330 328320 (elevations) 8/42.473/302/42.47 5/300-2/30 -2/42.47-2/30-12/42.47 (difference/distance)

23 Flow Direction  Useful for finding drainage networks and drainage divides  Direction is determined by the elevation of surrounding cells  Water can flow only into one cell  Water is assumed to flow into one other cell, unless there is a sink  GIS model assumes no sinks

24 Flow direction in a DEM 340335330340345 337332325335340 330328320330335 328326310320328 320318305312315 Flow directions for individual cells

25 3264128 16 Source Cell 1 842

26 Finding watersheds …  Begin at a source cell of a flow direction database, derived from a DEM (not from the DEM itself  Find all cells that flow into the source cell  Find all cells that flow into those cells.  Repeat …  All of these cells comprises the watershed  The resulting watershed is generalized, based on the cell size of the DEM

27 Watersheds … Contour lines (brown) Drainage (blue) Watershed boundary (red) Once done manually …

28 Flow accumulation  The number of cells, or area, which contribute to runoff of a given cell  The accumulation function determines the area of a watershed that contributes runoff to any given cell

29 Flow accumulation in a DEM 00000 01310 01810 011310 022420 Flow accumulation for individual cells

30 Flow direction in a DEM 340335330340345 337332325335340 330328320330335 328326310320328 320318305312315 Flow directions for individual cells

31 Flow accumulation as drainage network Drainage network as defined by cells above threshold value for region.

32 Things to do before the exercise: In Windows, create a new folder under your username on the F:\Usertemp folder. In Arcgis Desktop, click on tools then Extension. Check the box for Spatial Analyst and close the window. Again click on tools and then Customize. Again, check the box for the Spatial Analyst toolbox and close the window.


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