GIS Lecture 5 Importing Spatial and Attribute Data

Post on 24-Feb-2016

61 views 0 download

Tags:

description

GIS Lecture 5 Importing Spatial and Attribute Data. Outline. GIS Data Sets Map Projections Coordinate Systems GIS Data Sources. GIS Data Sets. GIS Data Sets. ArcInfo Coverages ArcView Shapefiles CAD Files Aerial Photos Event Files. ArcInfo. AATArc Attribute Table - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of GIS Lecture 5 Importing Spatial and Attribute Data

GIS 1

GIS Lecture 5 Importing Spatial and Attribute Data

GIS 2

Outline•GIS Data Sets•Map Projections•Coordinate Systems•GIS Data Sources

GIS 3

GIS Data Sets

GIS 4

GIS Data Sets• ArcInfo Coverages• ArcView Shapefiles• CAD Files• Aerial Photos• Event Files

GIS 5

ArcInfo

GIS 6

ArcInfo Coverages

AAT Arc Attribute TableARC Arc coordinates and topologyBND Coverage minimum and maximum coordinatesCNT Polygon centroid tablePAL Polygon topologyPAT Polygon/Point Attribute TableTIC Tic coordinates and IdsDBF Database Table

GIS 7

Coverage Attribute TablePolygon Coverage

GIS 8

Coverage Attribute TablePoint Coverage

GIS 9

Coverage Attribute TableLine Coverages

GIS 10

ArcInfo Coverages•Advantages-Many feature types-Polygons share borders-Area/Perimeter Fields

•Disadvantages-Cannot edit in ArcMap

B

A

D

1 2

3 4

Pine St.

Oak St.734C

E

G

F733

GIS 11

ArcInfo Export files•.e00 export exchange file•ArcCatalog translates into ArcGIS•Creates coverages

GIS 12

ArcView Shape Files Advantages•heads-up digitizing and editing•less storage/rapid display •can export to CAD

Disadvantages•one feature type•no area or perimeter with new shapefiles

GIS 13

ArcView Shape Files From 3 to 5 Files•.shp - stores feature geometry•.shx - stores index of features•.dbf - stores attribute data•.sbn and .sbx - store additional indices

GIS 14

ArcView Shapefiles

GIS 15

CAD Files Why CAD Drawings?• Better Precision for Digitizing -AutoCAD / Microstation-.DWG / .DXF

GIS 16

CAD Layers

GIS 17

Aerial Photos Combining Grid and Vector Maps

GIS 18

Orthophotography Digital imagery in which distortion from the camera angle and topography have been removed, thus equalizing the distances represented on the image

GIS 19

GPS•Global Positioning Systems•Earth-orbiting satellites broadcast precisely timed radio signals•GPS receivers determine positions on the ground by calculating distances from three or more satellite transmitters•More expensive than traditional optical and electronic methods

GIS 20

Event FilesX,Y Coordinates

GIS 21

Event Files

GIS 22

Map Projections

GIS 23

Map Projections and Distortion Map projections produce distortion in one or more spatial properties:•Shape, area, distance, and direction•Specific projections eliminate or minimize distortion

GIS 24

Distortion Examples

GIS 25

Mercator Projection: Distortion

GIS 26

Robinson Projection: Distortion

GIS 27

Projection Important•Measurements used to make important decisions•Comparing shapes, areas, distances, or directions of map features •Feature and image themes are aligned

Los Angeles

New York

Los Angeles

New York

Projection: MercatorDistance: 3,124.67 miles

Projection: Albers Equal AreaDistance: 2,455.03 miles

Actual distance: 2,451 miles

GIS 28

Projection not Important Business applications•Not of critical importance. •Concerned with the relative location of different features

On large scale maps - street maps•Distortion may be negligible •Map covers only a small part of the Earth's surface.

GIS 29

Coordinate Systems

GIS 30

Coordinate Systems•Spherical/Polar-Geographic Coordinate System

• Rectangular-State Plane-UTM

GIS 31

Geographic Coordinate System• Latitude and Longitude• Census Bureau TIGER files

Geographic Coordinate System Grid

GIS 32

Longitude: Meridians

GIS 33

Latitude: Parallels

GIS 34

Origin° Longitude (prime meridian)0

° Latitude (equator)

0

GIS 35

CoordinatesPittsburgh

-80

40

GIS 36

Degrees, Minutes, and Seconds (DMS): 40°26’2”N latitude -80°0’58”W longitude

Decimal Degrees (DD) 1 degree = 60 minutes, 1 minute = 60 seconds 40°26’2” = 40 + 26/60 + 2/3600 = 40 + .43333 + .00055 = 40.434°

Pittsburgh’s Point

GIS 37

World circumference through the poles is 24,859.82 miles, so for latitude: 1° = 24,859.82/360 = 69.1 miles 1’ = 24,859.82/(360*60) = 1.15 miles 1” = 24,859.82*5,280/(360*3600) = 101 feet

Length of the equator is 24,901.55 miles

Translated to Distance

GIS 38

Rectangular Coordinate Systems

State Plane Coordinates- Local Governments

UTM- US Military

Rectangular Coordinate System Grid

GIS 39

Rectangular Coordinates

200

400

0 200 4000

(100, 200)

(400, 300)

East (Feet)

Nor

th (F

eet)

Has all positive Cartesian coordinates in feet, called false eastings and false northings

GIS 40

State Plane Coordinate System•Established by the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey (now the National Ocean Survey)•At least one for each state•Rectangular (x,y) coordinates•125 zones, following state and county boundaries each with its own projection:

Lambert conformal projection for zones with east-west extent

Transverse Mercator projection for zones with north-south extent

•Cannot have zones joined to make larger regions

GIS 41

State Plane Coordinate Zones

GIS 42

State Plane Coordinate Zones

GIS 43

City of Pittsburgh as Geographic Coordinates

GIS 44

City of Pittsburgh as State Plane Coordinates

GIS 45

•NIMA - Military grid system

•Based on the transverse Mercator projection

•Applied to maps of the Earth's surface extending from the Equator to 84 Degrees north and 80 degrees south latitudes

Universal Transverse Mercator System (UTM)

GIS 46

UTM Zones in the Contiguous United StatesWorld is divided into 60 north-south zones, each covering a strip 6° wide in longitude

GIS 47

Data Sources

GIS 48

Other Sources of GIS Data

•US Census•ESRI Web Sites and Media Kit•Local Agencies•Land Surveys •Satellite Remote Sensing•Existing Paper Maps•Other WEB Sites

GIS 49

US Census• www.census.gov- TIGER Maps- Summary File

(SF) Tables

GIS 50

Census Tracts (TIGER) Small, relatively permanent statistical subdivisions of counties

•delineated by local committees in accordance with Census Bureau guidelines •between 1,000 and 8,000 people (in general)•1,700 housing units or 4,000 people•homogeneous population characteristics (economic status and living conditions)• normally follow visible features•may follow governmental unit boundaries and other non visible features• more than 60,000 census tracts in Census 2000

GIS 51

State Census Tracts

GIS 52

County Census Tracts

GIS 53

City Census Tracts

GIS 54

Census Blocks Groups Block groups (BGs) are the next level below census tracts in the geo-graphic hierarchy - a subdivision of a census tract -400 housing units, with a minimum of 250, and a maximum of 550 housing units -follow clearly visible features, such as roads, rivers, and railroads.

GIS 55

Census Block Groups

GIS 56

Census Blocks Smallest geographic area for which the Census Bureau collects and tabulates decennial census information.

Block boundaries are visible (street, road, stream, shoreline, etc.) or nonvisible (county line, city limit, property line, etc.) features.

GIS 57

Census Blocks

GIS 58

Other Census TIGER Layers

GIS 59

Summary File (SF) Tables American Factfinder

GIS 60

SF1 Tables

GIS 61

SF2 Tables

GIS 62

SF3 Tables

GIS 63

ESRI’s Website

GIS 64

ESRI Media Kit•Data and Maps•8 CDs and DVDs-Data & Maps and StreetMap USA (DVD)-Image Data (DVD)-Global Imagery (DVD)-World, Europe, Canada, and Mexico (CD)-United States (CD)

GIS 65

Local GIS Departments

GIS 66

Land Surveys•Specifies boundaries, rights-of-way, and other legal descriptions•Surveyors use optical and electronic instruments to measure precise control point locations established by geodesists•High quality data, but takes a lot of time

GIS 67

Existing Paper Maps•Vector Digitizing•Raster Scanning

GIS 68

Other GIS WEB Sites•http://www.gisportal.com/

•http://www.pasda.psu.edu/

GIS 69

Linking to Internet Sites PASDA Example

GIS 70

Linking to Internet Sites Geography Network Example

GIS 71

Summary•GIS Data Sets•Map Projections•Coordinate Systems•GIS Data Sources