Chasing Mayflies Archiving Geospatial Data Linda Zellmer Government Information & Data Services Librarian Western Illinois University

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
GeoMAPP Business Planning: Developing Materials to Get Stakeholder Buy-in Alec Bethune, North Carolinas Center for Geographic Information and Analysis.
Advertisements

1 Overview for DAP Business Units Digital Archives Problem Statement Records are all material "regardless of physical form, created or received in connection.
Technical Information Center
CHRISTINA MILLER, CA OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE RECORDS SERVICES DIVISION RECORDS MANAGEMENT eDiscovery and Electronic Records Management.
Sustainable Preservation Services for Archivists through Distributed Custody Caryn Wojcik State of Michigan Records Management Services.
Peter Granda Archival Assistant Director / ICPSR and the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library: Two Decades of Collaboration.
StatCat Building a Statistical Data Finder ssrs.yale.edu/statcat Steven Citron-Pousty Ann Green Julie Linden Yale University.
University of Illinois Archives Slide 1 Issues in Electronic Record Keeping Presentation to Electronic Records Working Group Chris Prom, Assistant University.
NARA – Roper Center Collaboration: USIA Office of Research Surveys Michael Carlson National Archives and Records Administration Marc Maynard.
1 CS 502: Computing Methods for Digital Libraries Lecture 27 Preservation.
The Trusted Digital Repositories Checklist Government Records and Archives Aspects Dr Stephen Ellis Assistant Director – General Government.
NDIIPP and NGDA National Preservation Network For Digital Content.
1 From Filing Cabinet to Desktop and Network: Records Management in N.C. State Government Ed Southern Government Records Branch N.C. Office of Archives.
Persistent Digital Archives and Library System (PeDALS) A Guide for Wisconsin State Agencies.
Department of Commerce Records Management Training.
Created May 2, Division of Public Health Managing Records What is a Record? What is a Records Retention & Disposition Schedule? Why is this Important?
North Carolina Geospatial Data Archiving Project (NCGDAP) Project Overview Partnership –University library (NCSU) and state agency (NCCGIA) –$520,000 funding,
Sub Committees and Working Group Activities Historical Data Working Group Presented by Brett Abrams NARA.
The Portuguese SDI and its Contribution for the GSDI Cristina Gouveia CNIG Portugal.
ARMA Charlotte - Piedmont Educational Seminar 2007 Managing Public Records Law and Practice In North Carolina Government Records Branch Division of Historical.
City of Seattle Office of the City Clerk Open Government = Access Challenges and Opportunities with Digital Records.
1 Working Group on Archives and Records Management WGARM.
1 A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. Chinese Proverb.
Digitization Panel August 12, 2010 Christopher C. Brown, coordinator Mike Culbertson, Colorado State U. James Mauldin, GPO.
The Western Waters Digital Library: Building a Resource Through Multi- State Collaboration and Technology Dawn Paschal Assistant Dean, Digital Library.
ACCESS for VALIDITY ACCESS for INNOVATION. Starting January 2011 for NEW proposals Not voluntary – “integral part” of proposal and FastLane Required for.
North Carolina Geospatial Data Archiving Project (NCGDAP) JISC/NDIIPP Joint Digital Preservation Workshop – May 2006 Presented by: Rob Farrell, Steve Morris,
ESRI User Conference, August 8, 2006 Long-term archiving of geospatial data: the NGDA project Julie Sweetkind-Singer John Banning Stanford University.
Richard MarcianoChien-Yi Hou Caryn Wojcik University of University of State of Michigan North Carolina North Carolina Records Management ServicesSALT DCAPE.
Open Access to Grey Literature: Challenges and Opportunities in India By Dr. Manorama Tripathi Prof. H. N. Prasad Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi. Mr.
Implementing the Standard on digital recordkeeping.
Why Archiving and Preserving GIS Data Is Important Maps tell a compelling story of change over time. They document movement, progress, and change to the.
Challenges and Opportunities for Academic Libraries Collaborative Imperatives to Support Collections, Digital Initiatives, and New Services for a Changing.
Metadata Handling in the North Carolina Geospatial Data Project (NCGDAP) NCSU Libraries Steve Morris Head of Digital Library Initiatives Rob Farrell Geospatial.
M u l t I b e a m III W o r k s h o p M u l t I b e a m III W o r k s h o p National Geophysical Data Center / World Data Centers NOAA Slide 1 End-to-End.
Section 108 Copyright in Libraries Slides produced by the Copyright Education & Consultation Program.
An introduction to records management at Clemson University Records Management Office 139 Anderson Hwy, Suite 100 Clemson, S.C
Safeguarding the Freedom of Information: Digital Archive Initiatives in the United States Federal Government Michael Paul Huff Information Resource Officer.
Long-Term Preservation of At- Risk Digital Geospatial Data: A Cooperative Agreement with Library of Congress Steve Morris NCSU Libraries Zsolt Nagy NC.
Users/Historical Data Working Group Update to Coordination Group Butch Lazorchak Library of Congress Chair, U/HDWG September 9, 2014 Coordination.
Archival Workshop on Ingest, Identification, and Certification Standards Certification (Best Practices) Checklist Does the archive have a written plan.
North Carolina Geospatial Data Archiving Project : Cooperative Project with Library of Congress on Preservation of Digital Geospatial Data Partners: NCSU.
NCPMA Fall MeetingOctober 11, 2006 GIS Data Preservation: Partnership with Library of Congress Steve Morris North Carolina State University Libraries.
ALA Institutional Repository Update ALA Archives at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Chris Prom Cara Bertram Denise Rayman.
Washington State Archives “Going Paperless” Presented by: Leslie Koziara, ERMP May 7, 2009 A GUIDE TO WASHINGTON STATE’S APPROVAL PROCESS FOR THE DESTRUCTION.
GPO POLICIES AND PLANS FOR SPATIAL INFORMATION DISTRIBUTION GPO POLICIES AND PLANS FOR SPATIAL INFORMATION DISTRIBUTION Judy Russell Superintendent of.
Archiving Geospatial Data: Background to the Problem Area State Government Users Committee October 16, 2008 Steve Morris, NCSU Libraries.
OAIS Rathachai Chawuthai Information Management CSIM / AIT Issued document 1.0.
Symposium on Global Scientific Data Infrastructures Panel Two: Stakeholder Communities in the DWF Ann Wolpert, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Board.
Archiving microdata Standards and good practices United Nations Statistics Commission New York, February 26, 2009 Olivier Dupriez World Bank, Development.
NDIIPP Project: North Carolina Geospatial Data Archiving Project Partners: NCSU Libraries Project Lead: Steve Morris NC Center for Geographic Information.
Wisconsin Digital Summit November 28, 2006 Electronic Records in Wisconsin Presented by Amy K. Moran Division of Administrative Services.
An introduction to records management at Clemson University Records Center is located at the Library Depot 103 Clemson Research Blvd Anderson, S.C
1/16/2016I. Revels Digital Imaging Workshop 1 Selection Considerations For Digital Imaging Projects.
Al Cornish, Systems Librarian Washington State University Libraries Preserving Access to Multimedia Collections.
Anatoliy Lyashchenko Research Institute of Geodesy and Cartography, Lyubov Stelmakh State Statistics Committee of Ukraine UN EGM GIS New York, 29 May –
National Geospatial Enterprise Architecture N S D I National Spatial Data Infrastructure An Architectural Process Overview Presented by Eliot Christian.
Preservation Strategies in the North Carolina Geospatial Data Archiving Project (NCGDAP) NCSU Libraries Steve Morris Head of Digital Library Initiatives.
Strategic Repurposing for Sustainable Access. Mission Statement The North Carolina State Archives, Archives and Records Section is part of the North Carolina.
Chang, Wen-Hsi Division Director National Archives Administration, 2011/3/18/16:15-17: TELDAP International Conference.
Data Management and Digital Preservation Carly Dearborn, MSIS Digital Preservation & Electronic Records Archivist
Geospatial Data Appraisal NDIIPP Meeting Presented by Brett Abrams, Archivist June, 2012.
Jaime Stoltenberg Map and Geospatial Data Librarian Arthur H. Robinson Map Library University of Wisconsin-Madison Wisconsin Land Information Association.
CENTRAL/WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS AUTOMATED RESOURCE SHARING Digitization GOALS & THEIR LOGISTICS Michael J. Bennett Digital Initiatives Librarian C/WMARS,
Building an Effective Paperless Records Management Governance Structure BADM 559 Enterprise IT Governance Professor Michael Shaw By Moh’d A. Obeidat 12/15/2008.
Building A Repository for Digital Objects
Digital Project Lifecycle Curating Across the Curriculum
Emulation: Good or Bad? Emulation as a Digital Preservation Strategy – Stewart Granger Reality and Chimeras in the Preservation of Electronic Records –
The role of metadata in census data dissemination
Executive Sponsor: Tom Church, Cabinet Secretary
Presentation transcript:

Chasing Mayflies Archiving Geospatial Data Linda Zellmer Government Information & Data Services Librarian Western Illinois University

Landsat 1 Image of Oahu

Process_Step:Process_Description: Several new federal lands were established since Those that meet the minimum mapping criterion of 640 acres (1 square mile) were added. They are: [Long List of areas here] Data sets were obtained from the State, regional, or field offices of the federal agencies which own or administer the newly created lands. The data were re- projected, generalized, and integrated into the existing federal lands data set...

Introduction   What are the legal requirements regarding archiving data?   What data should be archived & why?   Which agencies should archive data?   Are there any standards related to data archiving?   Other Considerations?   Who should see that data is archived?

Legal Requirements   Illinois Freedom of Information Act (5 Illinois Compiled Statutes 140/).   “... all persons are entitled to full and complete information regarding the affairs of government and the official acts and policies of those who represent them...

Legal Requirements "Public records" means all records, reports, forms, writings, letters, memoranda, books, papers, maps, photographs, microfilms, cards, tapes, recordings, electronic data processing records... having been prepared, or having been or being used, received, possessed or under the control of any public body.

What data should be archived? FGDC Archiving Guidelines   FGDC Historical Data Working Group developed a guide to determine if data has long term value: documents/histdata.pdf

Data Should be Saved If:   It relates to Government or individual legal rights.   It might be needed to defend against possible legal action.   It could be useful to people in other Federal agencies or the research community.

Data Should be Saved If:   Users need the raw, unedited data.   It has been made available to other users.   People can use the data without technical assistance.   The data can be used to study changes through time.

Data Should be Saved If:   It will be difficult or expensive to recreate.   A government program will be adversely affected if the data is lost.   It is compatible with more recent data.

What data should be archived?   Data should be archived if:   There could be legal ramifications.   It can be used by other agencies.   It will be expensive to recreate.   It can be used by researchers or to study change over time.

Should Any Other Data Be Archived?   Data developed with Federal grant funding.   Any data concerning the local state or area from any source.   Thesis data (especially data about the local state or area).

Federal Data Archiving Standards Standards require that records, such as data, be documented. This should include information on:   How the data was developed.   A data dictionary or description of fields.   A description of its relationship to other data.   Technical information needed to use the data.

Data Archiving Standards   National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program (NDIIPP) – developing a model for geospatial data Archiving (North Carolina State University).   Interim report lacks specific information on archival formats.

NDIIPP & NARA   NDIIPP - toolkit for ingest of geospatial data (not publicly available).   National Archives & Records Administration (NARA) – is collecting and archiving Federal geospatial data.   NARA also presented a Webinar on geospatial data archiving.

NARA Webinar   NARA webinar on data archiving dealt with two data formats – JPEG2000 and GeoPDF.   GeoPDF dependent on commercial software.   Need to preserve data in a format that can be used with GIS – queried & analyzed.   Data preservation should be neutral (software independent).

Archiving Options GIS Data in University of Minnesota’s Institutional Repository

Other Archiving Issues   Software changes over time or may become entirely obsolete.   Data formats change.   Data will need to be preserved and migrated.

Other Archiving Methods   Cloud Computing – provide older versions of software as an Internet service so that all people can use it.   Provide older versions of software (or even obsolete software) for use on the Internet.   Metadata should include information on software version used to develop data.

Other Considerations   What media are archival?   How often should data be archived?   Who should archive data?

Who Should Archive Data?   Government records are:   Owned by the citizens and State of Illinois.   To be created, maintained, and administered in support of the rights of those citizens and the operation of the State.   To be available for the use, benefit, and information of the citizens.   May not be disposed of without compliance with the Illinois Public Records Act. Illinois State Records Act (Illinois Compiled Statutes - 5 ILCS 160/)

Who Should Archive Data?

Conclusions   Data produced by State and local agencies needs to be captured and archived.   Digital spatial data is a public record and as such it does have to be archived.   Data to be archived must be properly described (Metadata).

Conclusions   State and local agencies should archive data if:   There could be legal ramifications   It can be used by other agencies   It will be expensive to recreate   It can be used by researchers or for studies of change over time

Conclusions   Guidelines for archiving spatial data need to be developed.   Until guidelines are developed, information about data availability and agency plans for their data could help preserve spatial information for future users.