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Mapping GIS Data
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How maps portray the world
Point features Line features Polygon features Annotation features
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Talking about map scale
A large denominator gives a small fraction a small scale map. It shows a large area. A small denominator gives a larger fraction a large scale map. It shows a small area. 1 50,000,000 1 500,000 1 5,000
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Generalization and Scale
Small scale map Intermediate scale map Large scale map
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Scale and precision S: main way (60m) P: local road (20m)
1:100,000 scale map S: main way (60m) P: local road (20m) Let S be the size of the main way (with 60m width) represented by a 2 mm line symbol: 2 mm = 1 S S = 200,000 mm = 200 m ≠ 60 m Let P be the size of the local way (with 20 m width) represented by a 1 mm line symbol: 1 mm = 1 P P = 100,000 mm = 100 m ≠ 20 m
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Estimating precision from scale
Denominator of scale / 1000 gives approximate precision for a 1-mm thick line: 1:5, m 1:24, m 1:100, m 1: 1 million m
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Source scale and display scale
Most GIS data have an intrinsic scale inherited from the source
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Display vs source scale
Once in GIS data may be displayed at any scale. BUT Original scale of the map does impact the precision and accuracy of the data. Original scale 1:5 million Original scale 1:25 million You should not display or analyze data at scales very different from the original source data.
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Scale and resolution Resolution is the sampling distance of the stored x-y values. A larger scale map generally has a finer sampling distance and better spatial resolution. It can represent features with better precision. 1:5M scale 1:25M scale
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Map Types and Data Types
Single symbol map Unique values map Quantities maps: Graduated color map Graduated symbol map Dot density map Chart map Nominal data Categorical data Numeric data
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Nominal data Names or ID Number State names Owner of parcel
Tax ID number Parcel ID Number Usually portrayed on a map as labels
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Single symbol maps Display all features with the same symbol
Combine with labels to portray nominal data
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Categorical data Places features into defined number of distinct categories Portrayed by different symbol for each category
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Unique values maps Different symbol for each category or value
Volcano types Road types Geologic units
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Numeric data Interval data : Temperature, Elevation Ratio data :
Population, Rainfall
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Numeric data Numeric data that divided into classes Mapped using variations in symbol size, thickness, or color
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Quantities Classed maps
Graduated color map Graduated symbol map
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Colors for choropleth maps
Generally use change in saturation or close hues to indicate increase Avoid using too many colors which tend to mask increase
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Dot density map Numeric data that did not divide into classes, mapped using Dot density map.
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Chart Maps Proportional chart map
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