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Using Digital Mapping (GIS) in Your Research

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What is this GIS stuff? GIS at UD: Geographic ... create. modify. data. ... Can download raw data from here, open it up in Excel, save as dBaseIV file and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Using Digital Mapping (GIS) in Your Research


1
Using Digital Mapping (GIS) in Your Research
  • Shelly McCoy
  • June 17, 2004

2
What is this GIS stuff?
  • GIS at UD
  • Geographic Information Systems
  • GIS on campus
  • GIS and You

3
College of Marine Studies El Nino
4
Delaware Geological Survey
5
CHEPP Hazard Vulnerability Study
6
College of Agriculture and Natural Resources
7
What this class wont do
  • Show you EVERY way GIS can be used in your
    research
  • Show you how to use ArcView GIS software

8
What this class will do
  • Motivate you to learn more about GIS
  • Give you resources for more information and for
    places to find your data sometimes the hardest
    part!
  • Examine using different levels of GIS in your
    research
  • My Goal To have you start to use GIS in your
    research and eventually become comfortable enough
    with it that you will share the technology with
    others or bring it into your classroom!

9
  • Researchers in numerous disciplines are using GIS
    to help analyze and display their data.
  • Biologists track and define species and habitats
  • Geologists map earthquake fault lines
  • Hydrologists analyze watersheds and water quality
  • Archaeologists map the location of artifacts and
    sites
  • Agronomists evaluate crop yields
  • Epidemiologists track diseases
  • and countless other scientists analyze data or
    test models in their fields or integrate data
    from multiple fields.

10
H a r d w a r e
  • ranges from centralized computer servers to
    desktop computers used in stand-alone or
    networked configurations.
  • printers, plotters, digitizers, scanners,
    monitors, network
  • The University has 7 computer labs
  • with ArcView installed on the desktop,
  • 13 other labs have a GIS software available
  • by dialling through Strauss,
  • and the library has the Digital Mapping Station.

11
S o f t w a r e
  • GIS software provides the functions and tools
    needed to
  • store
  • query
  • display
  • analyze
  • create
  • modify
  • data.
  • UD has a site license for ESRI GIS software (and
    more recently ERDAS IMAGINE GIS software).

12
What you can use GIS to do
13
Explore See and interpret spatial relationships
  • Show the geographic distribution of data (simple
    method of detecting patterns).
  • Change Symbology (in Layer Properties window)

14
Tornado Data in GIS
15
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16
Q u e r y  a n d   A n a l y s i s Create new
info, find hidden patterns..
  • Simple questions
  • Where is there stressed vegetation?
  • How far is it between a contaminant source and a
    potentially exposed individual?
  • Where is land zoned for industrial use?
  • And analytical questions such as
  • Where are all the residences that could be
    exposed to this facilitys air emissions?
  • What is the dominant soil type for oak forest?
  • If I build a new highway here, how will traffic
    be affected?

17
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18
Visualisation Customizing to make the map your
own
  • For many types of geographic operations the end
    result is best visualized as a map or graph.
  • Map displays can be integrated with reports,
    three-dimensional views, tables, photographic
    images, and other output, such as multimedia.
  • Can export your map in 50 different formats (such
    as .jpg, .pdf, .bmp, and .tif) to use on the web
    and in other applications
  • Can print on a large-format printer for
    presentations or use the Tiling function to use
    8 1/2X11 paper and tile the map

19
Levels of Using GIS in your Research
20
Incorporate GIS skills and technology as
background tools in your research
  • Find GIS websites that already have ready-made
    maps to support your research
  • Use an online mapper specific to the data you
    need
  • Use data/software from a CD
  • You may already be using GIS technology without
    knowing it!

21
Focus on problem-solving over technology
  • Ask yourself
  • What factors need to happen in order for my
    analysis to work?
  • How can I test this model?
  • How can I show this so that others can
    understand?
  • Do this using GIS by
  • Repeat an analysis using different parameters
    each time and compare the results
  • Viewing attribute tables
  • Viewing statistics
  • Finding out how to join your data to geographic
    data
  • Querying this data

22
Develop an active learning environment
  • Confirm results you already hypothesized with a
    GIS test
  • Have your research assistants learn and use
    ArcView as well
  • If you have a problem that you think GIS can
    solve, ask me or RDMS how. Know that it probably
    can be used, you just have to find out how.

23
  • Once you get all of the data you need, the rest
    is cake

24
Where do you get this data?
  • GIS Software
  • CD-ROMs/DVD-ROMs
  • Morris Library, RDMS, or commercially
  • Internet
  • Colleagues
  • YOU provide it!

25
Types of GIS sources both online and in CD-ROM
format
  • Downloadable Data in GIS format
  • Data in tables, in PDF format, etc.
  • Interactive Mapper with or without downloadable
    data.

26
Downloadable Data in GIS format
  • What date was the data collected and by whom?
  • Can it be downloaded in a format that will work
    with ArcView?
  • Do you have enough room on your hard-drive?
  • Can you get it in CD/DVD format if needed?

27
Examples
  • Bureau of Transportation Statistics Geographic
    Information Services
  • www.bts.gov/gis
  • Canaan Valley Institute
  • Canaanvi.org/gis/gis_links.aspSPATIALDATA
  • GIS Analysis of Topographic Change in
    Philadelphia, During the Last Century
  • CD-ROM 1323

28
Data in tables, in PDF format, etc.
  • Does this data have a geographic component
    allowing you to join it to a layer in ArcView?
  • If not, you may want to write down the
    information you need and make your own table
  • If the data is in a table, can you open it in
    Excel to resave it as a Dbase IV file?

29
Examples
  • KIDS COUNT
  • www.kidscount.org/kc2002
  • www.kidscount.org/census
  • Can download raw data from here, open it up in
    Excel, save as dBaseIV file and bring into
    ArcView.
  • Topographic LIDAR An Emerging Beach Management
  • CD-ROM 1156

30
Interactive Mapper with or without downloadable
data.
  • Can you do enough analysis online with this
    mapper for your research?
  • Can you print out your maps?
  • Does the site give you enough information, so
    that if you wanted the data, you could get it
    (contact info)?
  • This is the easiest way to use GIS in your
    research, without having to use ArcView, for
    simple analysis.

31
Examples
  • Delaware Census Data 2000
  • http//datamil.udel.edu/census/
  • Geography Network
  • www.geographynetwork.com
  • CensusCD 1980
  • CD-ROM 1201
  • Global GIS Database Digital Atlas
  • CD-ROM 1294

32
If you provide your own data
  • Specifically ArcCatalog supports short integer,
    long integer , float, double, text, data,
    object_ID and blob.

33
Tips
  • ArcGIS can display and overlay layers in
    different coordinate systems as long as the
    system for each is defined.
  • If youre changing data, you may want to copy it
    first so that you have the original.
  • Come up with your own naming convention
  • Add an image before other data so that
    establishes the coordinate system used in the
    data frame
  • Try to define the coordinate system from metadata
    or by going in to the properties and looking at
    the shape field. Click on the row to bring up
    anther window, click on the ellipses, and this is
    where you define the coordinate system, Click,
    Add, OK, View and Refresh and it should now
    display correctly

34
Once you get the hang of it
  • Research plays an important supporting role
    for data, tools, and course content provided to
    students
  • .
  • Research-based instruction helps to promote
    learning by introducing students to real-world
    problems that make information learned in the
    classroom more relevant. The potential of GIS as
    a tool to support scientific inquiry in all
    disciplines and at all educational levels has
    been described by many researchers (Alber, 1988
    Audett and Abegg, 1996 Kerski, 2000).

35
http//www.udel.edu/gis/
36
  • http//www.lib.udel.edu/ud/digital/microcopy/gis/d
    ms.htm
  • Thank you!
  • Questions?
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