Exercise 1: Creating GIS data—points lines and polygons A very common method of creating vector data is to physically create these files through on-screen.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Working with Tables 1.
Advertisements

KompoZer. This is what KompoZer will look like with a blank document open. As you can see, there are a lot of icons for beginning users. But don't be.
Concepts of Maintaining Your Data Simple Ways to Edit Your Data By Lorne Woods.
Presented by: Benefits Systems Support. Getting Started ê Open Powerpoint, create a blank presentation. ê Select a style for your first slide from the.
Word Processing First Steps
Created by Maria Edited as demo by Mr. Towler. How can the locations and identities of different plants in Desert Garden be made available to visitors?
Objective : To Monitor Water Quality in the pipelines of a Water Treatment Plant (WTP) Requirements : a. Map WindowMap Window b. Water Quality Data c.
Annotation & Nomenclature By Corey Fortezzo for PG&G GIS Workshop, 2010.
Access - Project 1 l What Is a Database? –A Collection of Data –Organized in a manner to allow: »Access »Retrieval »Use of That Data.
NR 322: Editing Spatial Data Jim Graham Fall 2008 Chapter 6.
You have just been given a CD that contains MapInfo format data layers of parcels, streets, and target zones. Your supervisor asks you to take a look at.
Technical Support: (989) GIS and Mapping Procedures in ArcMap 9.x Creating an ArcMap Project Editing an ArcMap Project Printing an ArcMap Project.
Mapping wind speed and direction in Antarctica An example of the work of the BAS Mapping and Geographic Information Centre.
AFOPro Spatial AFOPro Spatial is an extension created for ArcView 3.x. Before using the Tool the user must prepare some spatial data in ArcView. Add existing.
Tuesday Session 2 – Intro to ArcMap Starting Arc Map – Empty Map – Map Template – Project Data View – Display – Source – Selection Layout View – Draft.
Creating and Editing Feature Data Francisco Olivera, Ph.D., P.E. Srikanth Koka Department of Civil Engineering Texas A&M University.
Unit Eleven: Develop New Data In this unit… ► Overview ► Using ArcGIS Components ► On-Screen Digitizing.
Editing Basics (in ArcGIS 9.2) By Alma Vargas. Levels of Desktop ArcGIS Arc View Version that most clients will use The version that this session will.
Module 6 Feature Templates Create New Features Fix Topology Errors.
Esri UC2013. Technical Workshop. Technical Workshop 2013 Esri International User Conference July 8–12, 2013 | San Diego, California Editing in ArcMap:
NR 422: Topology Jim Graham Fall 2010 See: odatabase-topology.pdf.
Working with Tables Lesson 5 of Introduction to ArcGIS for Emergency Managers.
Importing your Own Data To display in GIS Lab 4a: (Table Join) Mapping By State, County, or Nation.
Lesson No:9 MS-Word Tools, Mail Merge and working with Tables CHBT-01 Basic Micro process & Computer Operation.
Intro to Geomedia Edited 08/25/04 1 Land Use Analysis An important aspect of any GIS is the use of analysis. Analysis helps us to say something meaningful.
ArcGIS 9 ch 9 Edited 06/14/05 1 Getting GPS Data into ArcGIS At this point, you have successfully collected, corrected, and exported your data using Pathfinder.
EDITING How to make your own!. esf Laboratory for Applied GIS 2 Orthophoto background Green is County boundary Yellow is soils layer (NRCS) This is called.
Martin Dodge Practical 2, 24th March 2004, pm Social Science Research Methodologies.
Attributes in ArcGIS. ArcGIS Attributes FID – ESRI’s internal identifier Shape – Actual spatial data.
ATN GIS Support ArcGIS: ArcMap Layout View.
ATN GIS Support ArcGIS: ArcMap Data View.
Resetting Student PreTests. Within the MyNursingLab Study Plans, pretests can be taken only one time by the student.
Animate picture to peek from bottom (1 of 3) 1. Right click on picture you want to animate. 2. Click on Custom Animation. 2 1 R.
RIGHT Mouse Button Formatting Cut Copy Paste Save LEFT Mouse Button MAIN BUTTON Single clicks Double clicks Drag Highlight.
Using ArcView Part 2 1 Using ArcView GIS: Part 2 Learning more of the basics for ArcView 3.3.
Part 2A (Today’s Part) Press and hold the small red button to turn receiver on Once the receiver acquires its position, press the page button until the.
DIGITIZING - BUILDINGS - ROADS Digitize on rectified image.
Module 4: Creating a Quick Map Sarah Hartsburg GIS Tech, Contractor for NPS Fire GIS
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Introduction to Editing.
Editing Attributes in ArcGIS Attributes – the data in records. e.g A parcel of land might be zone 3A residential. The field = TAG The attribute = 3A In.
474/574 Remote sensing Lab: Digitizing Sweet water Wetland Park areas, Tucson AZ by using remote sensing imagery (Aerial and Landsat) and ArcGIS software.
Topology Relationships between features: Supposed to prevent:
EDITING How to make your own!. esf Laboratory for Applied GIS 2 Manuscript Maps Paper maps drawn by a cartographer Generalization is a problem Scale is.
ArcGIS 9 ch 6 Edited 10/28/05 1 Land Use Analysis An important aspect of any GIS is the use of analysis. Analysis helps us to say something meaningful.
DEM TRAINING (DIGITAL ELEVATION MODEL). STEP 1 OPEN GIS.
Creating and Editing Feature Data Francisco Olivera, Ph.D., P.E. Srikanth Koka Department of Civil Engineering Texas A&M University.
Editing. General Comment As with GDBs the creation and editing of feature data can be complex Much more complex than is described in the on-line course.
NR 322: Editing Attributes Jim Graham Fall 2008 Chapter 6.
Access Module Implementing a Database with Microsoft Access A Great Module on Your CD.
ArcGIS 9 ch 4 Edited 11/4/05 1 Creating and Editing Data in ArcGIS 9 Data can be created and edited manually in a GIS. Using the imagery provided for your.
Esri UC 2014 | Technical Workshop | Editing in ArcMap: An Introduction Lisa Stanners, Phil Sanchez.
Created by Maria Mendoza Towler 4B. How can the locations and identities of different plants in Desert Garden be made available to visitors?
Learning the Basics of ArcMap 3.3 Updated 4/27/2010 Using Arc/View pt. 1 1.
Adding a Picture in ArcGIS. Getting Started Open ArcMap in ArcGIS Add shape files Find pictures on the web save in folder with shape files you added to.
A Look at Creating & Updating Point Files
DRAWING LINES To draw lines click View in the Main Menu Toolbar -> Toolbars and check the Editor option. The Editor toolbar will appear amongst the toobars.
European Computer Driving Licence
Demo #5: creating a point shapefile from Excel tables
Hazards Planning and Risk Management
Editing Spatial Data Sometimes, the data that you receive is not as accurate as it could be. You can easily correct this problem by making some simple.
BIOL 347: Microbiology Exploring The Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Applications for Health Science Dr. Maruthi Sridhar B. Bhaskar Department of.
Preliminaries: -- vector, raster, shapefiles, feature classes.
Hazards Planning and Risk Management
Hazards Planning and Risk Management
Digitizing - Buildings - Roads
GIS Lecture: Editing Data
Learning the Basics of ArcMap 3.3 Updated 4/27/2010
Introduction To ArcMap
Access Review.
European Computer Driving Licence
Presentation transcript:

Exercise 1: Creating GIS data—points lines and polygons A very common method of creating vector data is to physically create these files through on-screen digitizing. In Arc, you will need to create the shapefiles first (as blanks) and then fill in the features (points, lines, polygons). To do this we will use ArcCatalog to create the blank files then bring them into ArcMap to draw the shapes. 1.Start ArcCatalog and navigate to your folder. Select “New” and “Shapefile” and “polygon” DON”T close this window yet. 2.In the coordinate system box you’ll see it is empty. Click “Edit” and “Import” 3.Navigate to your folder (ON V:) and select the campus1.img file click “Add” 4.The information for the campus1.img projection should be in the box. Click “OK” 6.Click “Ok” again to create the shapefile (you don’t need to check any of the additonal boxes). 7.Repeat these steps for a point and a line feature 8.When you’ve created the 3 files, start ArcMAP and add the campus1.img image to your blank map

1.Add the 3 new shapefiles and the campus1.img image to the map. You’ll notice the shapefiles are empty. 2.Start an editing session (Editor pulldown menu) and make sure your polygon layer is the “target” file listed and that “Create New Feature” is the “task”. Remember: Tool-----Task-----Target when editing or creating features. 3. When you have the editing session started, click the down arrow next to the pencil icon. This is the selection of tools you can use to create and edit your new shapefile. For now stay with the sketch (pencil) tool.

With the sketch tool you are going to draw polygons by hand. Every click will drop a vertex into the map. The more vertices you have, the more detail in your polygons. NOTE: Square features may only need 4 vertices so there is no need to add 40. However, some irregular features like the pond will require several. You can go back and add, delete or move vertices to your shapefiles OR to others if needed. 4.When you have created your first polygon. Right click on the layer and open the attribute table. Here you will see that Arc created a table entry for your new polygon. It will do this for each one you draw. In future labs we’ll see how to merge these together if needed but initially it is better to have them as separate entries. 5.To add a field to the table go to “options” and “add field” NOTE: The edit session will need to be off for this to work so for now just create your polygons, points, lines (Stop editing and SAVE EDITS OCCASIONALLY then re start). 6.When you have drawn your features go to the tables and add the appropriate fields such as AREA, PERIMETER, LENGTH, Class (or land use etc.) Latitude (Y) and Longitude (X). NOTE: Number fields are “Double” format while classes will be “Text”

Part 1 Assignment: Create a basic landcover map for a selected area of the WCU campus using point, line and polygon features. Keep it simple but make sure it makes sense too. You’ll be going back to name these features and will be turning in a table. I’d suggest about 4-6 types of features at the most. For each feature type (point, line, poly) open the attribute tables and add the following fields (go to “options, add field”): 1. Class (your system of classification) (format will be text) 2. Area, length, perimeter, X, Y, as appropriate. (Format is “Double”) 3. Other numeric (double) or categorical (text) as needed. Naming your classes Select all of your polygons for any given class, right click in the table ON THE CLASS COLUMN and select Calculate Values. Type whatever name you assign to those polygons. Repeat until all of your features are titled. Calculating Length, Area, Perimeter, X and Y First clear out any selected features (selection, “clear selection features”) To add text to a table you can highlight the row(s) you want to fill in and right click on the COLUMN you need name or calculate and select “FIELD CALCULATOR” Numbers go in directly and text needs to be in “QUOTES” To calculate AREA, LENGTH, PERIMETER and Lat/Lon right click on appropriate column. Select “Calculate Geometry.” Here you will be given a choice for Area, Length, Perimeter, X and Y coordinates. Just make sure you are right clicking on the appropriate column when you select. To turn in : A single Layout with the following 1. The landcover map containing your point, line and polygon features 2. Legend, scale bar and N. arrow for your map window. 3. Figure caption explaining the map.