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North Carolina Geospatial Data Archiving Project : Cooperative Project with Library of Congress on Preservation of Digital Geospatial Data Partners: NCSU.

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Presentation on theme: "North Carolina Geospatial Data Archiving Project : Cooperative Project with Library of Congress on Preservation of Digital Geospatial Data Partners: NCSU."— Presentation transcript:

1 North Carolina Geospatial Data Archiving Project : Cooperative Project with Library of Congress on Preservation of Digital Geospatial Data Partners: NCSU Libraries Project Lead: Steve Morris NC Center for Geographic Information & Analysis Project Lead: Zsolt Nagy NCPMA WorkshopApril 24, 2006

2 Note: Percentages based on the actual number of respondents to each question 2 NC Geospatial Data Archiving Project (NCGDAP) Partnership between NCSU Libraries and NC Center for Geographic Information & Analysis Focus on state and local geospatial content in North Carolina (state demonstration) Address NC OneMap objective: “Historic and temporal data will be maintained and available.” One of eight projects in the first NDIIPP funding round: “Building a Network of Partners” Engage existing spatial data infrastructure

3 Note: Percentages based on the actual number of respondents to each question 3

4 4 NDIIPP Overview National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program Congress appropriated $100 million for this effort, which instructs the Library to spend an initial $25 million to develop and execute a congressionally approved strategic plan Eight initial projects, 2004-2007: web pages, cultural heritage, numeric data, video, business records, mixed content, geospatial (2) Developing partnerships and identifying issues Extensive interaction among NDIIPP projects

5 Note: Percentages based on the actual number of respondents to each question 5 Risks to Digital Geospatial Data.shp.mif.gml.e00.dwg.dgn.bsb.bil.sid

6 Note: Percentages based on the actual number of respondents to each question 6 Risks to Digital Geospatial Data Focus on current data Archiving data does not guarantee “permanent access” Future support of data formats in question Need to migrate formats or allow for emulation Data failure “Bit rot”, media failure Preservation metadata requirements Descriptive, administrative, technical, DRM Shift to “streaming data” for access

7 Note: Percentages based on the actual number of respondents to each question 7 Time series – vector data Parcel Boundary Changes 2001-2004, North Raleigh, NC Temporal data to support business needs in: Real estate analysis Land use change analysis Economic planning

8 Note: Percentages based on the actual number of respondents to each question 8 Time series – Ortho imagery Vicinity of Raleigh-Durham International Airport 1993-2002 Even static orthophotos are at risk.

9 Note: Percentages based on the actual number of respondents to each question 9 Today’s geospatial data as tomorrow’s cultural heritage Future uses of data are difficult to anticipate (as with Sanborn Maps).

10 Note: Percentages based on the actual number of respondents to each question 10 Big Geoarchiving Challenges Format migration paths Management of data versions over time Preservation metadata Preserving cartographic representation Keeping content repository-agnostic Preserving geodatabases Harnessing geospatial web services More …

11 Note: Percentages based on the actual number of respondents to each question 11 Preserving Cartographic Representation Counterpart to the map is not just the dataset but also models, symbolization, classification, annotation, etc.

12 Note: Percentages based on the actual number of respondents to each question 12 Questions for You? What are your current practices for: Archiving data and managing time versions Managing geodatabase versions Transfer mechanisms for data to regional entities? to off-site storage for disaster recovery? Archiving project files and finished products What rights issues exist with regard to putting county and city data into an archive? What would you like this project to do?

13 Note: Percentages based on the actual number of respondents to each question 13 Ways to Participate in NCGDAP Identifying data for inclusion in the repository Discussing data format strategies Sharing ideas about archiving approaches and architectures Sharing and identifying concerns about rights issues, liability, etc. Host project visits to regional GIS groups

14 Note: Percentages based on the actual number of respondents to each question 14 Questions? Contact: Steve Morris Head, Digital Library Initiatives NCSU Libraries Steven_Morris@ncsu.edu Web site: http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/ncgdap/


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