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Published byAdrian Farmer Modified over 9 years ago
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Creating Historical Digital Census Boundary Maps for Canada - a pilot project Andrey Petrov, Laine Ruus, Data and GIS Services, University of Toronto Presented at CAPDU & IASSIST 2007 (r 3 ) May 16, 2007
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Outline Background The project The result
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Background The basic building block of all larger census geographic areas in Canada has until recently (1996) been the enumeration area (EA) EAs are defined as the geographic area canvassed by one census enumerator during the population census EAs have not been geostatistically stable over time.
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Bg contd EAs are stackable, therefore can cover >100% of the land area EAs are the smallest geographic area for which census statistics have been released since 1961 The number of EAs changes from census to census
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Bg contd EA-level aggregate statistics have been produced and disseminated by Statistics Canada since 1961
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Availability of census boundary files & reference maps Reference maps (raster/print) at the EA-level are available for the following census: 1971, 1981, 1986, 1991, 1996, 2001, 2006 STC scanned to tiff: 1971-1996 (EAs and urban CTs) Boundary files (vector files) at the EA-level are available for the following census: 1981 (at STC, some lost), 1986, 1991, 1996, 2001, 2006 Canadian Land Inventory EA boundaries from 1971 & 1976
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Bg contd Demand for historical census data revitalized with release of each new census
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bg contd STC has previously done tests of: Calgary – 1981 census Kitchener-Waterloo – 1981 census Québec – 1981 census
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Our project Create a historical digital census boundary files for province of Saskatchewan at EA level for 1976 & 1981 (projected to NAD83) Why Saskatchewan? simple geometry, only 2 CMA/CAs modest census-to-census boundary changes no changes to Representation Order (Federal electoral district boundaries)
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Proj contd Objectives Test alternative methods of re-creating historical EA boundary files Assess problems and advantages of each method Evaluate feasibility of extending the project to create a national coverage of historic census maps
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Proj contd Resources used: Canadian Land Inventory boundary files for 1976 (rural boundaries only) STC digital boundary files of Regina & Saskatoon Geography attribute files 1976 & 1981 EA conversion file 1976-1981 Area master file/road network files Scanned raster/analog maps of EA boundaries for Regina, Saskatoon, and rest of Saskatchewan, 1976 & 1981
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Proj contd Design requirements Use only existing data available for the entire country Develop a repeatable, time & resource efficient method Miminize manual components Provide GIS-ready digital output Ensure compatibility with other STC datasets (1996 geographic base)
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And the result Vectorizing from raster maps proved not feasible Project successfully produced EA boundary files for 1976 and 1981 for Regina and Saskatoon CMAs Remainder of the province: 58 CSDs missing in 1976 78 CSDs missing in 1981
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Inadequate and varying quality of scans Cluttered with secondary features (lines, labels, grid, etc.) Dashed lines All made successful automated vectorization extremely difficult
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Scope of changes: 1976-1981
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Extent of changes in Regina and Saskatoon 1976-1981
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Resources required Hardware: minimum 3.4 GHZ processor, 2GB RAM, 80 GV hard drive, 256 MB multi- port video card Software: ArcGIS 9.x or higher, full package Wetware: 155 hours, intermediate to advanced GIS skills (average 3.0 to 5.0 minutes per EA)
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Where does the project go from here? Whatever Paula Hurtubise said this morning………..
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Project materials Report: http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~datalib/hurtubise/Report Statcanr2_060331.doc Zip file of all project files, including outputs: http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~datalib/hurtubise/Saskatc hewan_EA_projectr.zip
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