Coordinate Systems Global Coordinate System – Latitude, Longitude and elevation UTM – eastings and northings, reference points are the equator and the.

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Presentation transcript:

Coordinate Systems Global Coordinate System – Latitude, Longitude and elevation UTM – eastings and northings, reference points are the equator and the central meridians (60 of them for 60 zones) Extends from 84° N to 80 °S State Plane – State specific, northings and eastings NAD 27 is based on feet, NAD 83 is based on meters. There are many many more.

Reference Ellipsoids and Datums Clark 1866 spheroid – NAD 27 (Sometimes Clark 1880?) GRS 80 spheroid – NAD 83 WGS 84 spheriod – NAD 83 Sphere – for world projections Many many more.

Types of Projections with examples Planar (Azimuthal) - North Polar Stereographic Conic – Lambert Conformal Conic, Albers Equal Area, Polyconic Cylindrical – Mercator and Transverse Mercator

GIS is composed of layers Layers –land/water –roads –urban areas –pollution levels Data can be represented by VECTORS, or Data can be represented by RASTERS

Vector GIS Every object is given a location Database consists of points, lines and polygons

Raster GIS Every location given an object Grid –Cells or pixels

Creating A Raster Overlay grid on real world give each cell a value

Cell Values Assume only one value per cell in any given layer How do you decide what value to give the cell? –Value of greatest proportion? –Value of the most important feature? –Some systems allow for percent composition, edge effect

Cell Values Integer Real Numbers Alphabetic Interpret using legend

Characteristics of a Raster Resolution –smallest unit discernible –often grid size, but not always Orientation –angle that grid makes with true north Value –information stored in cell

Characteristics of a Raster Zones –areas of continuous values e.g. county, land parcels, etc. Class - term used to describe all the zones of same value in a layer

Characteristics of a Raster Location –each cell has a unique location often defined by bottom left corner X, Y coordinate

Storing the Information Full length encoding –store every single cell’s value individually

Storing the Information Run Length encoding –compress data

Storing the Information Quadtree Encoding – compress data

Sources of Raster Data Scanned Images –Aerial photographs –maps Satellite images Many packages work on RECTIFYING these images –photograph’s scale is not constant across image

Vector GIS Every object is given a location Database consists of points, lines and polygons

Creating a Vector GIS Define Points –fundamental property of a vector GIS –no dimensions, but they have a location –can have attributes associated with it –used for utility poles, sampling points, wells etc.

Creating a Vector GIS Define Arcs (lines) –line that joins points –also called chains and edges –has length and direction –attributes can include what is on right and left side –used to represent road, utility lines, rivers, etc.

Creating a Vector GIS Two Methods of Defining Polygons –Polygon Storage –Arc Storage –Used to represent lakes, landuse categories, forest stands, etc.

Polygon Storage Store Polygon as series of points, starting and ending at same point Each line encoded twice Difficult to dissolve boundary

Polygon Storage - Use Arcs (more common) Every arc stored as a sequence of points Every polygon stored as series of arcs Boundaries only stored once Nodes are points where arcs meet or end

Topology The geometric relationship between objects located in space. –Adjacency –Containment –Connectivity

Raster and Vector Summary Vectors have advantage of accuracy but not good with continuous fields Vectors were used first - digitizing Earliest include ASCII (x,y coordinates but got too large) then binary took over. Raster not good with lines or points but good with continuous coverage areas. Raster has the mixed pixel problem.

Raster Advantages: Simple data structure Compatible with remotely sensed or scanned data Simple spatial analysis procedures Raster Disadvantages: Requires greater storage space on computer Depending on pixel size, graphical output may be less pleasing Projection transformations are more difficult More difficult to represent topological relationships

Vector Advantages Requires less disk storage space Topological relationships are readily maintained Graphical output more closely resembles hand- drawn maps Vector Disadvantages More complex data structure Not as compatible with remotely sensed data Software and hardware are often more expensive Some spatial analysis procedures may be more difficult Overlaying multiple vector maps is often time consuming

Maps as numbers Binary –Eight bits in a row are termed a byte –256 conbinations or 0 to 255 ASCII text- American Standard Code for Information Interchange standard meanings for the values that fall into one byte. (letters, numbers, special characters)

Vector Data Formats DXF Digital Exchange Format (Autocad) ASCIIw/binary code mantains layers ArcView Shapefiles 9 (.shp) HPGL Hewlett-Packard Graphics Language –A device-specific but industry standard language for defining vector graphics in page coordinates (ASCII) - no topology Adobe PostScript ASCII

Vector Data Formats DLG Digital Line Graph - USGS (1:100,000 & 1:24,000) ASCII UTM TIGER U.S. Census Bureau (Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing) –Geocoded block address-matching –Topology correct, but accuracy problems

Raster Data Formats DRG Digital Raster Graph TIF Tagged Interchange Format GIF Graphics Interchange Format JPEG Joint Photographic Experts Group GeoTiff – Geographical referenced TIF Files