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Lecture 04 Referencing Data to Real Locations
GTECH 361 Lecture 04 Referencing Data to Real Locations
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Today’s Content Two types of coordinate systems Geographic Projected
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Today’s Objectives name two types of coordinate systems
identify components of each type of coordinate system assign coordinate system information to a dataset set display units for a data frame and measure distances on a map explain what a map projection is list the major categories of map projections list spatial properties that may be distorted when different map projections are applied change the map projection for a data frame and describe its effects
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Geographic Coordinates
Graticule Latitude Longitude Prime Meridian
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The Earth’s Shape The ancient Greek’s mathematical harmony
Simplest approximation: the sphere
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The Earth as an Ellipsoid
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Making of an Ellipsoid
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The Earth’s Shape
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Why Multiple Datums?
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Geodetic Datums
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Projected Coordinates
Flattening the Earth
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Origin of X, Y Coordinates
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Central Parallel
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False Easting/northing
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Coordinates in ArcGIS All geographic data have geographic coordinates (lat/lon) Some may have projected coordinates in addition to the geographic ones ArcGIS assigns the coordinate system to a map based on the GCS or PCS of the first dataset loaded Subsequent datasets are converted on-the-fly
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Map and Display Units Map units are determined by GCS or PCS
GCS in degrees or decimal degrees PCS usually in feet or meters Display units are determined by you They are defined as part of the data frame
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(Decimal) Degrees Converting from degrees to decimal degrees
Divide each value by the number of minutes (60) or seconds (3600) in a degree Add up the degrees to get the answer
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Map Projection Types Cylindrical Conical Planar
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Cylindrical Projections
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Conic Projections
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Planar Projections
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Understanding Distortion
Distortion cannot be avoided; we have to choose from distortion of Shape Area Distance Direction
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Preserving Properties
If two properties are to be preserved then one is always direction These properties are incompatible:
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Shape Property Conformal Non-conformal
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Area Property
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Distance Property
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Direction Property
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Direction Property Mercator with rhumb line or loxodrome
Azimuthal map with shortest distance
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Tissot Indicatrices
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Equatorial (normal) Aspect
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Transverse Aspect
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Oblique Aspect
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Aspects for Planar Projections
Polar Gnomic Stereographic Orthographic
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Aspects for Planar Projections
Equatorial Aspect Gnomic Stereographic Orthographic
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Aspects for Planar Projections
Oblique Aspect Gnomic Stereographic Orthographic
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Aspects for Conic Projections
Normal aspect
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Polyconic Projection Hassler, 1820s US Coastal Survey
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Perspective Position of the light source
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Perspectives
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Classifying Projections
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Classifying Projections
Cylindrical straight parallels; straight meridians Pseudo-cylindrical straight parallels, curved meridians Conic partial concentric circles for parallels; straight meridians Pseudo-conic partial concentric circles for parallels; curved meridians Planar Concentric circles for parallels; straight meridians Modified planar No common appearance of parallels and meridians
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Choosing a Map Projection
Conformal (shape-preserving) maps Topographic and cadastral Navigation Civil engineering Weather
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Choosing a Map Projection
Area-preserving maps Population density Land use Quantitative attributes
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Choosing a Map Projection
Scale-preserving maps no map preserves true distance for all measurements Airline distances Distance from epicenter of an earthquake Cost calculations
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Choosing a Map Projection
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Components of a GCS An angular unit of measure A prime meridian
A datum, which includes a spheroid
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Planar Coordinate Systems
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Cartesian Coordinates
Calculate distance A-B
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Universal Transverse Mercator
UTM zones
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UTM Zones .. as seen from the North Pole
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UTM Projections Each zone uses a custom Transverse Mercator projection with its own central meridian
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Universal Polar Stereographic
Fills the holes of UTM in polar regions
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State Plane Coordinate System
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SPC N-S zones use Transverse Mercator
E-W zones use Lambert Conformal Conic Maximal scale error is 1:10,000 NAD27 or NAD83 datum
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Public Land Survey System
PLS are shown in purple
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PLS It is used to locate areas, not points
It is not rigorous enough for spatial analysis like the calculation of distance or direction It is not a grid imposed on a map projection (a system invented in a room), but lines measured on the ground by surveyors
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PLS Meridians and Baselines
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PLS Area Unit Hierarchy
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PLS Township Sections A township is divided into 36 sections, each a square mile (640 acres) A section is divided into 160-acre quarters, which can be further divided into halves, quarters, and so on
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