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FOR 556: Spatial Modeling

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Raster GIS does this by placing a grid over the surface and in each cell noting ... Since in Raster GIS every grid has a value we can't make a MAP by laying layers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: FOR 556: Spatial Modeling


1
FOR 356/556 Introduction to Raster GIS
OR Leaning how to use RASTER GIS
2
This course is
3
  • A Critical Thinking course
  • Spatial Critical Thinking
  • Using Raster GIS
  • Grading is based on weekly Exercises
  • Exercises are designed to take 6 hrs or less per
    week
  • And quizzes
  • NO EXAMS

4
And
  • Since it is a computer course
  • You will find it VERY
  • FRUSTRATING
  • .At times!!!!!!

5
Well, thats it in a nutshell
Still interested ???
  • OK, on to some details.

6
Overview
  • What is this tool called Raster GIS?
  • Introduction of Instructional Team
  • Catalog description
  • Goals and Objectives
  • Course Environment
  • Requirements/Evaluation

7
Question 1
What is GIS?
  • Geographic Information System
  • A computer system that knows how to deal with
    stuff that has spatial coordinates
  • The stuff is in layers that lie directly on top
    of one another!
  • You can overlay different layers and perform
    operations on them

8
Question 2
Layers?
  • In GISs data is almost always stored in thematic
    layers for example
  • Boundaries
  • Rivers
  • Roads
  • In ArcView, a Vector GIS, it looks like this

9
Question 2
Layers?
10
Question 2
Layers?
  • In that example we used a VECTOR GIS (because
    that kind of data is what you are used to looking
    at e.g. road maps)
  • But the same idea applies to RASTER GIS the
    kind of GIS we are going to use in this course!

11
Raster Tax Parcels
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Raster Roads
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Question 3
Raster, Vector, what's the difference?
  • BIG DIFFERENCE!
  • Vector GIS represents the earth and objects on it
    as points, lines, and polygons
  • Raster GIS does this by placing a grid over the
    surface and in each cell noting what is under it.

14
The Difference
Here is a raster image of the tax parcels in the
Town of Nifkin.
Each tax parcel has a different color
4
This image was made by placing a grid over the
tax map and coding each grid cell with the number
of the parcel that was under it.
15
The Difference
Here is a raster image of the tax parcels in the
Town of Nifkin.
Each tax parcel has a different color
4
The Grid looks like this
This image was made by placing a grid over the
tax map and coding each grid cell with the number
of the parcel that was under it.
16
Parcel to Landuse
Classify
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More differences
  • Since in Raster GIS every grid has a value we
    cant make a MAP by laying layers over one
    another as was done in the vector example.
  • So it is a little hard to make maps that look
    like what you are used to looking at.
  • But we can still manipulate the layers in raster
    GIS
  • For example ----

18
Manipulation w/ a DEM
Low of 32
High
What area of Nifkin is served by a proposed tower?
High of 469
Low
19
Piece of Cake!
20
The process
Cell Tower Location image Elevation image
VIEWSHED
The Answer!
21
And in 3D
Green in View
Ridge Line
Cell Tower
22
Here is a more complex one
  • State law says I cannot log within 500 feet of a
    stream.
  • What impact does that have on the useable
    forested land in Nifkin?

23
Landuse
Stream
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Landuse
Stream
Raster of Streams
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Stream
Distance from streams In feet
Raster of Streams
26
Binary (1 or 0) map of area of Nifkin more than
500 feet from streams from Reclass of distance
map.
27
Red no harvestingOR Not Forested Land Green
Forested Land minus area within 500feet of stream
28
(No Transcript)
29
Raster vs. Vector
  • Vector GIS is good at associating each map
    feature (point, line, poly) with gigantic,
    distributed databases
  • Like the NY Centroid database for tax parcels
  • Raster GIS is not particularly good at that but
    is very good at spatial analysis (which vector is
    not very good at)

Spatial Query
30
Now About the course
31
About the Course
  • Instructors
  • Help
  • Course Description
  • Purpose the way
  • How
  • Teaching style
  • Learning
  • Labs
  • First two weeks
  • Requirements
  • Deliverables

32
Instructional Team
Instructor
Instructional Specialist
  • Lee P. HerringtonProfessor,Resources Info Mgt
  • 414 Bray Hall
  • lpherrin_at_esf.edu
  • 470-6674
  • James P. Halligan
  • 415 Bray Hall
  • jphallig_at_syr.edu
  • 470-4752

TA
  • Alexis Ellis

33
Help
  • You E-mail help556_at_rousmail.esf.edu
  • One of us strips your name from the question
  • Then answers the question
  • And then E-mails the answer to the class

34
Help
  • You E-mail help556_at_rousmail.esf.edu
  • One of us strips your name from the question
  • Then answers the question
  • And then E-mails the answer to the class

BUTwait until we tell you that it is working
35
Course Description
  • The Catalog and Extended Descriptions are
    located on the course webpage at
    http//www.esf.edu/for/herrington/556/for556.htm
  • The catalog description

36
Course Description
  • Catalog
  • 2 hours of lecture, 3 hours of lab per week
  • Intro to spatial thinking
  • Intro to raster GIS for spatial query, problem
    analysis, modeling, decision support
  • Not an intro to GIS (ERE 450/550 or FOR324)
  • BUT we assume you know nothing about GIS

37
Course Description
  • You will be learning IDRISI primarily through
    hands-on lab exercises based on real problems
  • The concepts and terms behind raster GIS are
  • in the reading
  • are imbedded in the exercises
  • are reinforced by quizzes
  • Over the semester, the lab exercise problems will
    get harder and we will hold your hand less
  • But you will spend less time on the problems as
    you gain experience
  • You will find that as your experience, knowledge,
    and confidence grow you may think of other
    potential applications and that lays the
    groundwork for the final project

38
Purpose -- The Why
  • The purpose of this course is to develop quality
    raster GIS users/professionals who
  • understand the nature of raster data
  • understand the significance and relevance of
    raster GIS capability,
  • have the ability to solve common spatial analysis
    problems,
  • can communicate raster GIS work to non-GIS users,

39
How?
  • Lectures, laboratory exercises, in-class
    assignments, quizzes, logbook, final exam, and
    portfolio
  • Building from simple concepts and exercise
    handholding to more complex problems and no
    handholding

40
Teaching
  • Teaching style
  • We are facilitators who will guide your personal
    learning
  • We dont know it all, but well help you look for
    answers
  • Wednesdays lectures/demos are usually
    background and theory
  • Mondays lectures/demos are usually focused on
    the exercise for the week.

41
Learning Process
  • We start with simple vocabulary, concepts and
    tools but the work becomes more detailed and
    complex with time
  • The focus is Problem solving!
  • Assignments are made as if you were working in
    the real world and your reports are the kind of
    reports you would write in the real world (NO
    STUPID ACADEMIC LAB REPORTS)
  • You learn from frustration and failure so expect
    that to happen
  • Hey, its software so problems that you dont
    anticipate come up

42
Requirements
  • E-mail account
  • Internet access -- schedule/announcements/help
  • You CANNOT keep data on the College cluster
    computers. Buy a memory stick (thumb drive,
    flash stick) of at least 512 meg for storage of
    your data.
  • Textbook -- Spatial Modeling by L.P. Herrington
    at the Marshall Mall Copy Center reader
    20071-1020 cover title is Raster GIS

43
E-mail accounts
  • We use ONLY the ESF assigned SU e-mail account to
    communicate with you!
  • That means that if you are NOT using the ESF
    assigned account you have to go to the SU page
    http//cms.syr.edu/email/aliasing/
  • and forward (redirect) mail from your SU account
    to your usual account!
  • If you are a Continuing Ed student e-mail me with
    a subject line 557 EMAIL and YOUR NAME in the
    body of the e-mail.

44
Review of the course web page
  • http//www.esf.edu/for/herrington/

The Schedule is the main working
page http//www.esf.edu/for/herrington/556/shd556.
htm What is assigned and when it is due Download
of Assignments
45
NOTE!
  • No lab this week or next you can do the work
    without a computer or our help
  • Wednesday next there is a quiz on chapters 1 and
    2 in the book
  • Chapter 1 is on line from schedule page

46
WARNING DONT GET BEHIND OR YOU WILL BE
TROUBLE BECAUSE YOU CANT CATCH UP!
47

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