1 5/15/2015 Ron Briggs, UTDallas POEC 6381 Introduction to GIS GIS Presentation and Output --charts --maps.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Center for Modeling & Simulation.  A Map is the most effective shorthand to show locations of objects with attributes, which can be physical or cultural.
Advertisements

GIS Presentation and Output --charts --maps. Presentation: Charts charts can be used to display tabular data. the types of charts available in ArcView.
NSF DUE ; Laura Johnson Cherie Aukland.
Intro to Geomedia Edited 01/11/05 1 Presentation Our final step is to get your work ready for presentation. Making a good map requires an artistic eye.
Annotation & Nomenclature By Corey Fortezzo for PG&G GIS Workshop, 2010.
Making the most of GIS mapping You can spend a week analyzing a project and destroy the results with a bad map.
The Map as a Model of Geographic Data The Language of Spatial Thinking Doç.Dr. Necla ULUĞTEKİN İTÜ.
Technical Support: (989) GIS and Mapping Procedures in ArcMap 9.x Creating an ArcMap Project Editing an ArcMap Project Printing an ArcMap Project.
Thematic Mapping ArcView_module_3 May 12, 1:30 PM.
Lab 5: Thematic Maps & workspaces You have a parcel file that contains a field containing property values. How do you see the property value patterns throughout.
Introduction to Cartography
©2005 by Austin Troy. All rights reserved Lecture 5: Introduction to GIS Legend Visualization Lecture by Austin Troy, University of Vermont.
Mapping GIS data Entering and Storing data on GIS is OK, but not much fun. We want to look at the maps and see them at a bunch of different scales! sounds.
MAPS AND CARTOGRAPHY What is a map? What is Cartography?
ESRM 250 & CFR 520: Introduction to GIS © Phil Hurvitz, KEEP THIS TEXT BOX this slide includes some ESRI fonts. when you save this presentation,
Different types of maps and how to read them.
Using Charts in a Presentation Lesson 6. Software Orientation Charts can help your audience understand relationships among numerical values. The figure.
Raster and Vector 2 Major GIS Data Models. Raster and Vector 2 Major GIS Data Models.
Creating charts in excel
Introduction To ArcMap ArcMa p. ArcMap is a Map-centric GUI tool used to perform map-based tasks Mapping –Create maps by working geographically and interactively.
Chapter 7 Visualization of Geographic Information and Generation of Information Products.
ArcGIS Overview Lecture 1: Software Layer characteristics Thematic maps.
Lecture 5 Map design. Cartography Cartography is the art, science and technology of making maps together with their study as scientific documents and.
Understanding and Interpreting maps
Importing your Own Data To display in GIS Lab 4a: (Table Join) Mapping By State, County, or Nation.
Creating a PowerPoint Presentation
Price Ch. 2 Mapping GIS Data ‣ GIS Concepts GIS Concepts Ways to map data Displaying rasters Classifying numeric data.
World History/ Geo September 9, 2015 Warm Up: What are maps? Why do we use them? Today’s Objective: Utilize a variety of maps, atlases, and geospatial.
Types of Maps – Physical maps Show landforms Shows water features May show relief ( how flat or rugged the land surface is) May show elevation- height.
Chapter 3 Section 1- Finding Locations on Earth
Intro to Human Geography. Evolution of Mapmaking Babylonians – 2300 BC earliest surviving maps written on clay tablets. Babylonians – 2300 BC earliest.
Geographic Toolbox Types of Geography –Physical Geography: regards the natural environment, such as… –Human Geography: regards the environment as it pertains.
Microsoft ® Office Excel 2007 Working with Charts.
Using ArcView Part 2 1 Using ArcView GIS: Part 2 Learning more of the basics for ArcView 3.3.
Introduction to ArcView RD 415. Menu Bar Button Bar Project Window Status Bar.
MAPS AND VISUALIZATIONS
McGraw-Hill Career Education© 2008 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Office Excel 2007 Lab 2 Charting Worksheet Data.
Mapping Earth Chapter 1 Earth Science. Ch1 L.1 Maps How can a map help determine location? Why are there different map projections for representing Earth’s.
GEOG 370 Christine Erlien, Instructor
Mr. Keller AP Human Geography September 2006
PEOPLE AND PERCEPTIONS OF THE WORLD Mental Maps. Making Sense of the World Images of geographic space Based on: information and impressions “New Yorkers.
Data Display and Cartography Chapter 8 – Chang Week 5.
Why do Geographers use Maps? AP Human Geography. Why do Geographers use Maps? All maps simplify the world Cartographers generalize information they present.
The purpose of a map is…..
1 Excel Lesson 5 Working with Multiple Worksheets and Charts Microsoft Office 2010 Introductory Pasewark & Pasewark.
Cartography: Communicating Spatial Information Scott Bell GIS Institute.
Skills you need to study Geography!
Introduction to Mapping What is a Map? A map is a representation of the Earth’s features drawn on a flat surface. Maps use symbols and colours to represent.
Learning the Basics of ArcMap 3.3 Updated 4/27/2010 Using Arc/View pt. 1 1.
Introduction to Cartography GEOG 2016 E Lecture-5 Map Compilation Techniques.
ArcGIS 9 ch 12 Edited 06/14/05 1 Creating Your Presentation Your final step is to get your work ready for presentation. Making a good map requires an artistic.
Integrating Graphics, Illustrations, Figures, Charts.
MAP SCALE Sizing the Model. Map Scale Ratio of a single unit of distance on map to the corresponding distance measured on the surface of the ground Gives.
Applied Cartography and Introduction to GIS GEOG 2017 EL Lecture-5 Chapters 9 and 10.
1. Explore Interactive GIS 2. Create Map Layouts 3. Reuse a Custom Map Layout 4. Create a Custom Map Template 5. Add a Report to a Layout 6. Add a Graph.
Basic Geography Globes and Maps. Basic Geography The story of the United States and the World begins with geography---the study of the earth in all of.
Mapping Chapter 2.
Key Terms Symbology Categorical attributes Style Layer file.
Data Representation and Mapping
Social Studies: Introduction to Maps
A map is a flat, two-dimensional representation of space.
Map Projections.
Maps and Mapping Never have so many poor maps been made so quickly
Using Themes to Present Information
Maps!!! Who doesn’t love a gorgeous map?
Learning the Basics of ArcMap 3.3 Updated 4/27/2010
What is a map? A map is a graphic representation of the whole or a part of an area. A map uses points, lines, and polygons to graphically represent an.
Nature and Perspective of Geography Tools of Geographers
Introduction to Mapping Lecture 3
Presentation transcript:

1 5/15/2015 Ron Briggs, UTDallas POEC 6381 Introduction to GIS GIS Presentation and Output --charts --maps

2 5/15/2015 Ron Briggs, UTDallas POEC 6381 Introduction to GIS Presentation: Charts charts can be used to display tabular data. the types of charts available in ArcView are typical of these available in GIS desktop systems most systems have dynamic (as opposed to static) charting: charts automtically updated as data in underlying tables changes: 6 types in ArcView: area, bar, column, line, pie, scatter Area Bar Column Line Pie Scatter

3 5/15/2015 Ron Briggs, UTDallas POEC 6381 Introduction to GIS Presentation: Maps What’s a map? "a representation, normally to scale and on a flat medium, of a selection of material or abstract features on, or in relation to, the surface of the earth.” International Cartographic Association A spatial model of the real world, but differentiated from it by: abstraction, focus, simplification, symbolization scale, projection, and purpose

4 5/15/2015 Ron Briggs, UTDallas POEC 6381 Introduction to GIS What’s in a Map? Abstraction – Imaginary features (i.e. political boundaries) as well as physical features – Past, present, and future (archaeological sites, current, and planned roads) features Focus – Selection and classification of features in real world to include in the map Simplification –Simplification of complex features such as coastlines –Exaggeration of features that are too small to show at the scale of the map Symbolization –Use of symbols or graphic to represent classified objects (e.g. church) Scale –The ratio of distance on a map, to the equivalent distance on the earth's surface. Projection – Representing curved surface of the earth on a flat plane. Distortion is inevitable. Purpose –To describe, measure, communicate/persuade

5 5/15/2015 Ron Briggs, UTDallas POEC 6381 Introduction to GIS Types of Maps 1. Planimetric (e.g municipal base map) A map designed to portray the horizontal positions of features; vertical information is specifically ignored. 2. Topographic (e.g. USGS 7.5 minute quads) A map designed to portray features on the surface of the Earth, including relief (elevation), hydrography, and cultural features. 3. Cadastral (e.g municipal parcel map) A map representing boundaries of land parcels, ownership, land use, valuation, and other related information. 4. Image (e.g LANDSAT image ‘map’) A map representing a remotely sensed picture or reflection of all or part of the Earth's surface –may or may not be orthomorphically correct. 5. Thematic (see next slide for types and examples) –A map used to visualize spatial relationships and patterns among information pertaining to some theme or concept (e.g. income)

6 5/15/2015 Ron Briggs, UTDallas POEC 6381 Introduction to GIS Types of Thematic Maps Thematic Map: A map used to visualize spatial relationships and patterns among information pertaining to some theme or concept (e.g. income) »Choropleth map: uses zones or polygons to display information using shading, dot, density, or other techniques. –e.g population change, ethnicity distribution »Proximal (dasymetric) map: shows zones of constant attributes, such as soil type or vegetation (similar to choropleth except that data determines boundary lines; no pre-defined polygons) –e.g zoning, soil map »Isopleth map (contour or isarithmic) : shows a contiuous three dimensional surface such as elevation using lines connecting points of equal value (contours). –e.g elevation, travel time contours from a point(s), land values, income »Point (dot) or symbol map: shows information relating to specific points using marker sysmbols whose size and/or frequency relates to magnitude of phenomena –housing sales, code violations, crimes

7 5/15/2015 Ron Briggs, UTDallas POEC 6381 Introduction to GIS Making Better Maps: some general principles keep it simple, but don’t rely on software defaults show only the area under study (e.g. if Texas, don’t show AK or LA counties): use small insert map to show relative location Plan for final printing/publication scale –allow for size reduction (e.g. for report or journal publication), –point symbols visually reduce at twice the rate of line features (a function of area) put title at top using ‘thick line’ font: serif/sans-serif; case not critical map labels –best in serif font (letters have ‘tails’), with first letter upper and rest lower case –place above and to the right of the feature (2nd choice: above to left) –use font size hierarchy to indicate relative importance: US, Texas, Dallas –water features traditionally labelled in italic font Create good map in black and white, then add color (not the reverse!) –1 in 10 people are colorblind –people will xerox your map anyway

8 5/15/2015 Ron Briggs, UTDallas POEC 6381 Introduction to GIS Color concepts –Hue: the actual color (red, blue, etc) –Saturation: how much of it –Value:the amount of black Use low saturation in background, high saturation in foreground choice of shading Quantitative data –symbols should have visual progression corresponding to data values –for polygons, use monochromatic color ramp: same color (hue), different saturation or value »can highlight top and bottom with contrasting color if desired »if use different fill patterns, be sure “visual progression” is achieved –for point symbols, use different sizes of the same symbol Qualitative data –For polygons, use different colors (polychromatic), or different fill patterns –For point symbols, use same size of different symbols To create a color ramp for any two colors, hold CTRL key while selecting colors be sure legend is big enough to clearly show different fill patterns Making Better Maps: color and symbolization

9 5/15/2015 Ron Briggs, UTDallas POEC 6381 Introduction to GIS Making Better Maps: some tricks to use Always include “neatline” around outside: ArcView uses this for positioning –Select Layout/add neatline to add neatline around outside of entire graphic Use the same theme twice (be sure to remove copy from legend) –e.g. place theme with thin black line on top of a copy of the theme with thick red line –e.g. have separate theme for outline of polygons Use buffering to create special effects (in View, select Theme/Create buffers) –e.g. along a shoreline, create multiple buffers then color ramp them –e.g.buffer within a polygon border, then save as new theme, and shade appropriately Controlling scale of maps in Layouts –use copy to create a second frame of identical size –Be sure distance units and map units are set in View/ Properties for any View used –Set scale option in “View Frame Properties” box (double click on frame to set this) Controlling size of point and line symbols in Layout –In View, double click on theme in TofC to open its Legend Editor –Click Advanced button, click Scale Symbols check box, type in Reference (output) scale for dot patterns, keep density constant and change size of dots (rather than converse): but most software won’t do this! Color, or use fill pattern (dots or stipple) for oceans and large water bodies Use graphics design package for major customization –Export entire layout to graphics package –Use package to create a custom graphic then bring in as a picture/graphic