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Data Display and Cartography Chapter 8 – Chang Week 5
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Map Elements Title Body – most important Legend North Arrow Scale Acknowledgement Neatline/Map border Others (options): Projection, grids, insert, data quality information.
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Exercise Add the following elements to your county map –Title –Legend –Scale Bar –Acknowledgement –North Arrow –Neatline/Border
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Map Symbols Points Lines Polygons Exercise – Open your ArcMap/ArcView project with your county census tract polygons. Add GPS points to the map. Download Street file from TIGER website (http://arcdata.esri.com/data/tiger2000/tiger_download.cfm)http://arcdata.esri.com/data/tiger2000/tiger_download.cfm –select TN –Select County name, then click Submit Selection –Select Line Features – Road and click Proceed to Download. –Click Download File –You should get a zipped file starting with lkA47xxx.zip. Start unzipping this file to get your road layer (again, it contains three files for a shape) –Move these three files to your folder (you’d better have a folder named “Data” under your personal folder) Add this road layer to your county map
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Size, Color and Patterns Adjust size of point symbols (grouped, not individually for the event points data) D-C on tgr47141trt00 (in ArcMap) to bring up the “Layer Properties” window. Select Unique Values under Categories and click “Add All Values” button from the window. You will have to choose a Value Field, such as tgr47000demtrt.P0010001. This will you the choices of individual colors for each polygons.
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Color Hue – colors – wavelength Value – lightness/darkness of a color, black to white. Usually, darker colors are more important features. Chroma (saturation) – richness/brilliance of a color. A fully saturated color is pure, whereas a low saturation approaches gray. Rules : Hue is for qualitative data. Chroma and Value are for quantitative data. Quantitative mapping received much more attention than qualitative mapping
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Color Schemes Single Hue Scheme – varies value and chroma to show sequential order Hue and Value – from light value of one hue to a darker value of a different hue. Examples are yellow to dark blue (or dark red). Better for recognition of general map information Diverging or double-ended scheme: use graduated colors betw two dominant colors, eg from dark blue-> light blue->light red -> dark red. Good for negative - > positive values, and other maps too. Part Spectral Scheme – use adjacent colors of the visible spectrum to show variations in magnitude, such as from Yellow to Orange to Red, Y – G – B. Full Spectral Scheme – use all colors in the visible spectrum. Used in elevation, not recommended for other maps (no logical sequences)
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Types of Maps – Thematic Maps Dot Map (your GPS points) Choropleth Map (population in each tract) Graduated Symbols (based on field values) Pie Chart map Flow Map Isarithmic map (contour) Dasymetric map
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Typography Serif (with serif), Sans Serif (without serif)- serifs are small, finishing touches at the ends of line strokes, which tend to make it easier to read running text in newspapers and books. Sans Serif : good for maps with complex map symbols and remain legible even in small sizes Type weight (bold/regular/light), Type width, font, size (in points),
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Labeling Examples: use USA + City Identify maps with 1) confusing legend 2) too many boxes or other typographic errors in Internet.
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