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Measurements and Scale

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Measurements and Scale Intro to Mapping Science * * * * * * * * * * Representative Fraction This method of specification is unit free. It matters not whether you are ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Measurements and Scale


1
Measurements and Scale
  • Intro to Mapping Science

2
Overview
  • Measurements
  • Review of linear and areal measurement systems
  • Rationale behind linear and areal unit
    definitions
  • Scale
  • The Representative Fraction
  • Use on a map
  • Defining when making a map

3
Linear and Areal
  • Linear measured distance along a line
  • Areal size of a portion of a surface

4
Imperial Units
  • Most of the measurement units we in the US are
    accustomed to are a legacy of measuring distances
    using the human body.
  • These Imperial or English units are inches, feet,
    yards and miles.

5
Defining an Inch
  • Based on barleycorns "three grains of barley,
    dry and round, placed end to end, lengthwise"
  • Based on the average width of a thumb at the base
    of the fingernail.
  • 1 inch is 25.4 mm
  • 1 foot is 12 inches

6
Defining a Foot
  • Anecdotal evidence points to the "foot" based on
    Henry I's actual foot.
  • A large majority of the population has feet
    smaller than 1 foot in length.
  • However, with footwear on, a human foot with shoe
    is close to 1 foot in length.
  • Useful in ad-hoc measurement "pacing"

7
Defining Yards and Miles
  • 1 Yard 3 feet
  • A yard is roughly one stride when walking
    quickly.
  • A mile was originally 1,000 paces (2,000 steps)
  • 1 Mile 5,280 feet or 1,760 yards
  • 1 Mile 8 furlongs ( 660 feet)

8
Nautical Miles
  • A nautical mile is 1 minute along a great circle.
    Also referred to as "1 minute of latitude along a
    meridian."
  • Measuring distances at sea along great circle
    routes.
  • Used in GPS tracking, polar exploration
  • Any distance travelled around a sphere.
  • 1 nmi 6080.20 feet.

9
Remember measurement systems can be entirely
arbitrary! As long as the base units are agreed
upon, you could use whatever you want to measure
the Earth!
  • Some admittedly make less sense than others

10
One more Smoots.
  • Named for Oliver Smoot, who was used as a
    measuring stick to measure the Harvard Bridge.
  • A smoot is 5 feet, 7 inches - his height.
  • Literally picked him up and carried him the
    length of the bridge.

11
Metric (SI) System
  • Straightforward, standardized system of
    measurement, with defined base units.
  • Decimalized units based on powers of 10.
  • The base linear unit of the Metric system is the
    meter.

12
Why the metric system?
  • Easy to use
  • Easy to convert
  • Standard system used around the world.
  • Who doesn't use the metric system?

13
Meter
  • Originally defined as 1/10,000,000th of the
    distance between the North Pole and the Equator,
    through Paris, France.
  • Think back to UTM northings measured north from
    the Equator.
  • Now defined as distance light travels in
    1/299,792,458 of a second.

14
SI Prefixes
  • The metric system is based on multiples of ten.
  • Units are either multiplied or divided by a
    multiple of ten to form a new unit of
    measurement.
  • Prefixes for specific multiples are appended to
    the base unit of measurement.

15
SI Prefixes
  • Going smaller
  • deci-, centi-, milli-, micro-

16
SI Prefixes
  • Going larger
  • deca-, hecto, kilo-, mega-

17
SI Prefixes
  • The metric system is incredibly easy to convert
    between different scales of measurement.
  • Just move the decimal point.

.
18
Defining areas
  • Imperial
  • Square feet
  • Acres
  • Square miles
  • Metric
  • Square meters
  • Hectares
  • Square kilometers

19
Square feet
  • 1 square feet is defined as a square having all
    sides measure 1 feet in length.
  • A square foot does not have to actually be a
    square shape.
  • Multiply the length by the width
  • 1' x 1' 1 square foot
  • 2' x 5' 10 square feet
  • .25' x 4' 1 square foot

20
Defining an Acre
  • 43,560 square feet.
  • A square 208' 9" on each side.
  • One furlong (660ft) and one chain (66ft).
  • Amount 1 person with one ox could effectively
    plough in one day.
  • This application of the acre helped establish it
    as standard area measurement in agriculture,
    planning and taxation.

21
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22
Square Miles
  • The area enclosed by a square that measures one
    mile on each side.
  • 27,878,400 Square Feet
  • 640 acres in a square mile.

23
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24
Metric Areal Measurements
  • Based on the meter.
  • 1 square meter is defined as a square having all
    sides measure 1 meter in length.
  • Employ the same SI prefixes to define areas at
    different scales.
  • Be aware of changes in order of magnitude.

25
Metric Area Units
  • Square meter
  • a square with 1 meter sides
  • Hectare
  • 10,000 square meters
  • close to acre in size (1 ha 2.471 ac)
  • Square Kilometer
  • 1,000,000 square meters

26
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27
Areal SI Prefixes
1 Meter
  • When changing prefixes on linear measurements,
    you are only concerned with one direction.
  • With area measurements, you change the order of
    magnitude in two directions.

1 Decameter
28
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29
Map Scale
  • The scale of the map is the ratio of a distance
    measured on the map to that of the distance in
    the real world.
  • A representative fraction shows that ratio, in
    the same units.
  • 124,000
  • one inch on the map equals 24,000 inches (2,000
    feet) in the real world.

30
Small and Large Scale
  • Small scale maps are maps where the
    representative fraction is very small.
  • example 11,000,000
  • Features on small scale maps are small.
  • Large scale maps are maps where the RF is
    relatively large.
  • example 11,200 (one inch to 100 feet)
  • Features on large scale maps appear large.

31
Map Scale
things look large at large scale
Large
124,000
1500,000
13,000,000
Small
things look small at small scale
32
Scale Specification Methods
  • Representative fraction.
  • Verbal or word statement.
  • Graphic.

33
Representative Fraction
  • Ratio between distance on the map and distance on
    the Earth.
  • 11 Very large scale (Steven Wright)
  • 11,000 Large scale or 1/1,000
  • 124,000 Medium scale
  • 11,000,000 Small scale or 1/1,000,000
  • Large scale versus small scale maps, a common
    point of confusion.

34
Representative Fraction
  • This method of specification is unit free. It
    matters not whether you are talking about inches,
    centimeters, miles, or cubits--the idea is the
    same this much on the map (an inch for
    instance) represents that much on the ground
    (1,000 inches).
  • In which case the RF 11,000

35
Calculating Representative Fraction
  • Measure map distance between two points map
    units.
  • Measure earth distance between the same two
    points earth units.
  • Convert all measurements to the same metric
    feet, meters.
  • Solve Map Distance 1 .
    Earth Distance XX (Earth Distance /
    Map Distance)
  • RF 1 (Earth Distance / Map Distance)OR RF
    1 X

36
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37
Calculation of Representative Fraction
  • Map units 5.25 inches
  • Earth units 372.7 miles
  • Convert all measure to same metric miles to
    inches
  • Earth Units to Inches miles 5,280 12
    372.7 5,280 12
    Inches 23,614,272
  • Solve 5.25 _ 1_
    23,614,272 XX 4,497,956.6
  • RF 14,497,957

38
Verbal Scale
  • This many units on the map represent that many
    units on Earth.
  • One inch to 20 miles.
  • One inch to 400 miles.
  • Unless you want to sound very ungeographical,
    avoid saying One inch equals twenty miles
    because clearly it doesnt! Use "x to y" instead.

39
Comparing Verbal and RF
  • 1 cm to 10m
  • 11,000
  • 1cm to 100m
  • 110,000
  • 1cm to 1km
  • 1100,000
  • 1cm to 20km
  • 12,000,000
  • 1 in to 600ft
  • 17200
  • 1in to 2,000ft
  • 124,000
  • 1in to 1mi
  • 163,360
  • 1in to 4mi
  • 1253,440

metric's much easier to remember.
40
Graphic Scale
  • Another map element, like your legend.
  • Draw line on map and divide into segments so that
    each segment represents a certain distance on
    Earth.
  • Use easily comprehendible units!

41
Why Use Graphic Scale
  • Remains accurate when map is enlarged or reduced.
  • Easy to transfer map units to Earth distance to
    answer, How far is A from B?
  • Easy to plot specified Earth distance on map.
  • Where should the stops on our trip be if we want
    to drive 400 miles each day?

42
Graphic Scale Construction
  • Determine the scale metric and the scale
    divisions
  • Metric miles, feet, kilometers
  • Divisions number of metric units (miles, feet,
    etc.) in one division of the scale.
  • Measure an arbitrary map distance between two
    points (inches), then determine Earth distance
    between same two points (miles).
  • Convert all measurements to same metric.
  • ArcMap will generate these for you if you have
    multiple map frames on a layout - make sure the
    scale is linked to the desired map frame.

43
Why do we worry about scale?
44
Map scale in GIS
  • Map scale specifies the amount of reduction
    between the real world and its graphic
    representation. Since a paper map is always the
    same size, its scale is fixed when it is printed,
    and cannot change.
  • However, a map in a GIS can be shrunk or enlarged
    at will on the screen or on paper. You can zoom
    in until the screen displays a square meter or
    less, or zoom out until the screen displays all
    of NJ. This means that geographic data in a GIS
    doesn't really have a 'map scale'.

45
Display scale
  • The display scale of a map is the scale at which
    it 'looks right'. Because a paper map is created
    at certain scale, its 'map scale' and 'display
    scale' are the same. The display scale influences
    two things about a map
  • The amount of detail.
  • The size and placement of text and symbols.

46
Data accuracy and uncertainty
  • Scale influences accuracy.
  • Data accuracy is an statement of how closely a
    bit of data represents the real world.
  • What features have been omitted ?
  • What non-existent features are represented ?
  • How correct is their classification ?
  • How current is the data ?
  • How far away is a map feature from its actual
    location in the world ?

47
Data resolution
  • Resolution is the degree to which closely related
    entities can be discriminated.
  • Usually, it is desirable to specify the
    resolution of a dataset as a minimum feature
    size.
  • For example, 'no lakes of less than 5 hectares
    surface area should be captured'. In a GIS, this
    is the most important reason for having the same
    data represented at different 'scales'.

48
Data detail
  • Data detail is a measure of how much information
    is stored for each feature. A GIS stores lines
    (eg, a lake shoreline) as a sequence of point
    locations, and draws it with the edges that join
    them. There is no limit to how many points can be
    stored, or how close together they may be.
  • The amount of detail on line features should be
    limited just like data density. It does not make
    sense to store points at intervals which are
    shorter than the accuracy of their locations.

49
Generalization
  • If your end result is a cartographic product, you
    must ensure that your features are represented
    appropriately for the scale at which the map is
    drawn
  • You will have to simplify features
  • Show dual carriageway as single line
  • Smooth outline of lakes, coastlines
  • Change feature type (points instead of polys)

50
Generalization
  • GIS data may preserve data beyond what you need
    or want
  • ArcGIS can differentiate between incredibly small
    values
  • State Plane (feet) default is 0.003937 inches
  • Software may have difficulties displaying overly
    detailed data at smaller scales

51
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52
Generalization Algorithms
  • Douglas-Poiker line simplification
  • Lines and polygon boundaries
  • Computer is never perfect
  • Line linked to known geography
  • Broken ring
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