Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBrice Lee Modified over 9 years ago
1
GIS Tutorial 1 Lecture 5 Importing spatial and attribute data
2
Outline Map projections Coordinate systems GIS data sources Vector data formats Raster data formats 2 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
3
MAP PROJECTIONS Lecture 5 3 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
4
Latitude and longitude Longitude (meridians) 4 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
5
Latitude and longitude Latitude (parallels) 5 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
6
Longitude and latitude ° Longitude (prime meridian) 0 ° Latitude (equator) 0 6 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
7
Longitude and latitude Pittsburgh, PA USA -80 40 Coordinates 7 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
8
Long/Lat coordinates 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° 8 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
9
Long/lat coordinates Translated to distance 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 * 3,600) = 101 feet Length of the equator is 24,901.55 miles 9 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
10
Mercator projection (1569) Conformal projection Cylindrical Parallels and meridians at right angles Linear scale is constant in all directions around any point Preserves angles and shapes of small objects Distorts the size and shape of large objects Map projection for nautical purposes 10 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
11
Hammer – Aitoff (1882-1889) Equal-area Modified azimuthal projection Good for population density (world area) Difficult to see some areas 11 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
12
Robinson projection (1961) Pseudocylindrical Neither equal area nor conformal Meridians curve gently, avoiding extremes Good compromise projection for viewing entire world Used by Rand McNally since the 1960s and by the National Geographic Society (1988 and 1998) 12 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
13
Albers Equal Area Conic projection Scale and shape are not preserved, distortion is minimal between the standard parallels Standard projection for British Columbia, U.S. Geological Survey, U.S. Census Bureau 13 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
14
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: Mercator Distance: 3,124.67 miles Projection: Albers equal area Distance: 2,455.03 miles Actual distance: 2,451 miles 14 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
15
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 15 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
16
COORDINATE SYSTEMS Lecture 5 16 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
17
Geographic Coordinate System (GCS) Spherical coordinates Angles of rotation of a radius anchored at earth’s center Latitude and longitude Census Bureau TIGER files 17 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
18
U.S. Census GCS example 18 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
19
Rectangular coordinate system Used for locating an intersection on a flat sheet of graph paper or a flat map Cartesian coordinates (x,y) State plane and UTM 19 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
20
State Plane coordinates Established by the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey in 1930s Originally North American Datum (NAD 1927) More recently NAD 1983 and 1983 HARN Used by local U.S. governments All positive coordinates in feet (or meters) 20 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
21
State Plane zones 125 zones At least one for each state Cannot have zones joined to make larger regions Follow state and county boundaries Each has its own projection: Lambert conformal projection for zones with east-west extent Transverse Mercator projection for zones with north-south extent 21 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
22
State Plane zones 22 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
23
State Plane zones 23 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
24
Pittsburgh neighborhoods as state plane coordinates 24 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
25
Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) Rectangular coordinate system Used by U.S. military Covers entire world Metric coordinates Longitude zones are 6° wide Latitude zones are 8° high 25 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
26
Coordinate system summary Geographic coordinate system U.S. Census State plane coordinate system Local governments U.S. military Projections defined in ArcCatalog or ArcMap (.prj) files First file added in a map document sets the projection (others will adjust to it as long as they have a.prj file) 26 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
27
GIS DATA SOURCES Lecture 5 27 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
28
GIS data sources ESRI U.S. Census USGS and other government sources GDT Dynamap/2000 U.S. Street Data Engineering companies land surveys, aerial photos, CAD drawings University Web sites (e.g. Penn State’s PASDA) Others? 28 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
29
GIS data sources 30+ million Internet search results type “GIS data download” or “population China.e00 add the name of the state, county, or city to the search 29 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
30
GIS departments Web sites Washington, D.C. dcgis.dc.gov/ Chicago, IL www.cityofchicago.org/gis Austin, TX Tip: Search by county name (Travis County, Texas) http://www.ci.austin.tx.us/development/ ftp://ftp.ci.austin.tx.us/GIS-Data/Regional/coa_gis.html 30 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
31
ESRI’s Web site http://www.esri.com/data/resources/geograp hic-data.html http://www.esri.com/data/resources/geograp hic-data.html 31 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
32
U.S. Census Bureau Started building a map infrastructure in the late 1970s and early 1980s Census mapping needs were twofold: To assign census employees to areas of responsibility, covering the entire country and its possessions To report and display census tabulations by area, officials determined that the smallest area needed for these purposes is a city block or its equivalent 32 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
33
U.S. Census Bureau Compiles all line features used to create a block layer for the entire country Map features smaller than are the responsibility of local governments deeded land parcels buildings street curbs parking lots others? 33 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
34
Census TIGER/Line files Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing files Census Bureau’s product for digital mapping of the U.S. Available for the entire U.S. and its possessions Include the following geographic features roads and street centerlines railroads rivers lakes census statistical boundaries 34 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
35
TIGER census tracts Statistical boundary (below county level) 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 nonvisible features more than 60,000 census tracts in Census 2000 35 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
36
PA tracts 36 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
37
Allegheny County tracts 37 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
38
City Pittsburgh tracts 38 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
39
TIGER census block groups 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 39 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
40
Census block groups 40 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
41
TIGER census blocks Smallest geographic area for which the Census Bureau collects and tabulates decennial census information Visible boundaries street road stream Shoreline Nonvisible boundaries county, city, neighborhood boundary property line 41 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
42
Census blocks 42 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
43
Other TIGER layers 43 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
44
U.S. Census Bureau data tables http://factfinder.census.gov http://factfinder.census.gov 44 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
45
45 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook Geospatial Website for U.S.: geodata.gov
46
Summary File (SF1) tables 46 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
47
Summary File (SF3) tables 47 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
48
SF tables comparisons SF1 Population Age Sex Race Housing units FFH SF3 Income Educational attainment Citizenship Transportation Detailed housing 48 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
49
Census summary Shapefiles downloaded from www.census.gov or www.esri.com Data tables downloaded from American Factfinder http://factfinder.census.gov Data joins needed to join SF1 or SF3 to shapefiles GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook 49
50
VECTOR DATA FORMATS Lecture 5 50 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
51
ArcInfo coverages Created using ESRI’s ArcInfo software Older format Set of files within a folder or directory called a workspace Files represent different types of topology or feature types 51 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
52
Coverage attribute table Area and perimeter Coverage_ and Coverage_ID 52 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
53
53 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook ArcInfo Export files.e00 export interchange file ArcToolbox translates into ArcGIS Creates a coverage 1 3 4 2 5
54
Shapefiles ArcView native format Minimum files shp–stores feature geometry .shx–stores index of features .dbf–stores attribute data Additional files .prj–projection data .xml–metadata .sbn and.sbx–store additional indices 54 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
55
CAD drawings CAD software Autodesk, AutoCAD (.dwg) Bentley, Microstation (.dgn,.dxf) Often used by engineering companies Better digitizing precision 55 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
56
CAD drawings 56 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
57
CAD layers 57 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
58
Event files Data table that includes map coordinates, such as latitude and longitude or projected coordinates 58 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
59
Event files 59 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
60
Export event files 60 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook Creates point features
61
RASTER DATA FORMATS Lecture 5 61 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
62
Digital file formats TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) .tif file extension Very high quality images Commonly used in publishing Sizes are large because it is uncompressed GIF (Graphic Interchange Format): .gif as its file extension. Ideal for schematic drawings that have relatively large areas with solid color fill and few color variations. Small file sizes 62 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
63
Digital file formats JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group): .jpg file extension. Most widely used format for photographs and other images that have a lot of color variations Uses file compression at the expense of picture detail, if you specify a lot of compression 63 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
64
Summary Map projections Coordinate systems GIS data sources Vector data formats Raster data formats 64 GIS TUTORIAL 1 - Basic Workbook
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.