GEO/EVS 425/525 Unit 7 Satellite Image Rectification

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "GEO/EVS 425/525 Unit 7 Satellite Image Rectification"

Transcription

1 GEO/EVS 425/525 Unit 7 Satellite Image Rectification You have seen satellite imagery earlier in this course. You are aware that the swath of the satellite over the earth s surface is diagonal, so that the imagery is not referenced to any standard reference system. In this exercise, you will take a satellite image from northeast Ohio and rectify a portion of it to the UTM system. You should choose the same quadrangle you chose for Unit 6. You will take some of the DEMbased and DLG-based information you derived for that unit and superimpose it over your satellite imagery. Your strategy in carrying out this exercise will be [1] examine the image to see what it contains, [2] locate your quadrangle roughly on the image, [3] bring up an image that will define ground control points, [4] compute the transformation matrix, and [5] resample the image. There are other ways you might rectify an image, but this is the easiest and the most straightforward. Satellite images are available on the R: drive in the Landsat Images folder, or you can download them from the WorldWide Web at First find an appropriate image. You are most likely to want an image from Path 18, Row 31, which runs from approximately Lakewood on the west to Erie, PA on the east and from southern Canada on the north to Akron on the south, or from Path 19, Row 31, which runs from approximately Beachwood on the east to Toledo on the west and from southern Canada on the north to Akron on the south. Make sure that you pick an image with as few clouds as possible hopefully none. Locate yourself on the image and get a rough idea what the boundaries of your quadrangle are. Download the image onto your X: drive. You may find an image that has been layerstacked into an ERDAS Imagine image, but you are more likely to find an image that consists of 7-8 TIFF images. Landsat images available to you come from Landsat-5 and Landsat-7. Landsat-5 has 7 bands; Landsat-7 has 8. In either case, you will want to include the first 7 bands, which include the visible bands (bands 1-3), near to middle infrared (bands 4-5 and 7), and thermal infrared (band 6). Landsat-7 will give you two choices of band 6 (low gain and high gain) as well as a panchromatic band (band 8). Both satellites have approximately 30-m resolution for the visible bands. Band 6 for Landsat-5 has a resolution of 120 m; for Landsat-7 band 6 resolution is 60 m. Landsat-7's band 8 resolution is 15 m. If you download the TIFF images for your Landsat scene, the naming convention should be fairly straightforward. For Landsat-5 you need all 7 bands; for Landsat-7 you need bands 1-5 and 7, as well as one or the other band 6 (but not both). You may wish to download band 8 as well. The images we get are approximately georeferenced. However, the georeferencing may leave much to be desired, and you will want to rereference it! Step 1: Subsetting and Layerstacking your Image We will assume that you have downloaded 7 TIFF images, one for each of the 7 bands of the scene you have chosen. Before you can georeference it, you need to put the 7 bands into a single image and subset it. You can do these tasks in either order in ERDAS; in ENVI you need to layer-stack before you can subset. ERDAS Imagine Click Spectral -> Layer Stack on the Raster tab. This will open the Layer Selection and Stacking dialog. In the Input File field, enter the image you want to have as layer 1, and click on Add. Then enter the image you want to have as layer 2 -> Add, and so on until you have added all of the layers you want to include in your final image. It is important to add the layers in the order you want to have them in the final image. Give your output file an appropriate name. If all of your layers are the same size (e.g. the entire scene), it doesn t matter whether you choose union or intersection as your output option; if you subset one of your layers before layer-stacking you should choose intersection. In any case, you should check Ignore Zero in Stats. Click OK. When your layer-stacked image is produced, look into the area you believe is included in your quadrangle. Open an inquire box by clicking the dropdown on the Inquire icon on the Information area of the Home tab.

2 Drag the corners of the inquire box until the box encompasses the area that will be included in your quadrangle. Remember that it should be somewhat larger than the area you think will be included to allow for errors, both yours and those made by the USGS. When you are satisfied that the inquire box includes the area you want to consider, click Subset & Chip -> Create Subset Image on the Geometry area of the Raster tab. Your input file is the layer-stacked file you have built. Give your output file an appropriate name. Click the From Inquire Box button, and check Ignore Zero in Output Stats. Click OK. This subsetting will create the image you will be working with for most of the rest of this semester. ENVI The process of layer-stacking an image in ENVI is almost identical to the process in ERDAS. Click Raster Management -> Layer Stacking in the ENVI Toolbox. When the Layer Stacking Parameters window opens, click the Import File button. Choose the image you want to have as layer 1and click OK. Then enter the image you want to have as layer 2 -> OK, and so on until you have added all of the layers you want to include in your final image. As with ERDAS, it is important to add the layers in the order you want to have them in the final image. Give your output file an appropriate name, and hit OK. To subset the image, click on File -> New -> Vector Layer, and give your vector layer a new name. Highlight the name of your new vector layer in the Layer Manager window (if it isn t already highlighted), and click the Vector Create icon on the icon bar. Click on each of the first 3 of the 4 corners of the area you want to include in your subset image, and then right-click and choose Accept to complete the polygon. Save the vector file. Click on Vector -> Convert Vector to ROI in the ENVI Toolbox. If you have included a single polygon in your vector file, it doesn t matter which option you choose. You do need to make sure that the region of interest (ROI) you wish to use as the basis of your subset is represented as an ROI. Then click Raster Management -> Subset Data via ROIs. The input file is your layer-stacked scene; your ROI is the converted vector. Again, the output file is the subset image you will be working with for most of the rest of this semester. ERDAS Imagine and ENVI When your subset images have been created, delete the complete scene from your X: drive to conserve space. Georeferencing your Subset Image Look at the metadata for your subset image. What reference system is being used? Note that there is always a reference system, even if it is simply rows and columns. Do you remember reprojection your quadrangle from UTM to State Plane? You must have a reference system if you are to change from one system to another. And since you will be changing the satellite image from whatever it is to UTM, it must have at least a rudimentary reference system. You will be identifying a series of ground control points (GCPs) that you believe are correctly georeferenced and moving your subset image so that the points on that image that correspond to the ground control points are superimposed over those GCPs. This means that you will have two images. The first is the subset satellite image that you wish to georeference; the second is a reference image that you assume is correctly georeferenced. In principle, you can use any image of your quadrangle as a reference image. Probably the most appropriate is the DLG for roads that you produced in Unit 6, as roads tend not to move around the way rivers do, and roads tend to be fairly visible on satellite images. ERDAS Imagine Load your subset image into the viewer (if it isn t already there). Depending on what kind of an image you have, you will look for the Multispectral, Panchromatic, Relief, or Thematic tab. These tabs have a Transform & Orthocorrect area, which contains a Control Points icon. Click that icon. Select Polynomial as your geometric model and then hit OK. The Multipoint Geometric Correction window opens, and you are invited to collect reference points from an Image Layer. Verify that this is the default choice (in the GCP Tool Reference Setup dialog), and hit OK. Choose your reference image in the next dialog, and hit OK.

3 When you have chosen your reference layer, the Multipoint Geometric Correction window will contain 6 windows. On the left are three windows representing the image you are georeferencing; on the right are three corresponding windows representing your reference image. Of these 3 windows, one is an index chip showing most of the image; one is a large chip showing a small area at close to full resolution; the third is a small chip showing a close-up of a very small area of the region in question. You will need to experiment using these windows most effectively. At the bottom of your screen is a gray area in which you will show your GCPs. Before you start, you should click on the Color swatches to change the colors from white (the default) to colors that will show up more easily on the two sets of windows. For example, yellow tends to be better than white on satellite images; red tends to show up better than white on DLGs. The choice is yours. The thing that you will need to concentrate on is the GCP tool. You have two sets of GCPs: input GCPs, which are in the arbitrary coordinate system of the satellite image and are digitized in the viewer from which you started the GCP tool, and reference GCPs, which are the known reference coordinates of the points corresponding to the input GCPs. Again, the input viewer on the left contains the data to be rectified in this case the subset satellite image. The reference viewer on the right contains the data with the known reference system in this case the DLM. Look at the icon bar on the GCP tool. The third icon from the left (it looks like a playing jump rope) turns on the automatic transformation calculation mode. Verify that this is highlighted; it is the default condition when you open the GCP tool. Any ERDAS Imagine image can have a set of GCPs associated with it. This set is stored in the data file along with the raster layers. If a GCP set exists for the top raster layer shown in the viewer, then those GCPs are shown when you bring up the GCP tool. The CellArray of the GCP tool shows the locations of each GCP in both viewers. The first column shows the ID of each GCP. Each ID begins with the default ID string, GCP#. You can change this if you want (e.g. if you have more than one set of GCPs for a particular satellite image). The most appropriate GCPs to choose on a satellite image are easily visible phenomena such as road intersections, stream junctions, bridges over streams, etc. (That s why you have the DLGs for roads and streams!). To set up GCPs, find a point which you can easily interpret on the images in both viewers. Click on the Create GCP icon (it looks like a circle with 4 tics on the inside). For your first GCP, click on the place you ve chosen in Viewer #1 and then on the same place in Viewer #2. You will notice three things. First, both viewers show a cursor that looks like the Create GCP icon and the notation GCP #1. Second, both closeup-chip viewers show the same icon and notations. Third, the coordinates of the GCP appear in the GCP tool. Note also that if you click on the Select icon in the GCP tool icon bar, you can move a GCP to a better position either in the main viewer or in the closeup-chip viewer. Get used to doing this. It is often a very very useful thing to be able to do. Note also that there are two columns in the GCP tool labeled >. This shows the active record. Normally, if you are digitizing a new GCP, the > should be in a blank record. If you are changing the location of a GCP, the > should be in the record that you are changing. Create two more GCPs by clicking on corresponding places in the two viewers. Verify, in the chip extraction viewers, that you are satisfied that the GCPs refer to the same places in the two viewers. Make sure also that your first three GCPs are widely distributed across the area you are ultimately concerned with! This is very important. In principle, 3 points are sufficient to define a surface to transform the satellite image to the UTM reference system (or any other reference system desired). The reason it s important to get your first three points widely separated is that doing so gives you the best chance to define a surface which will be close to the surface you will choose as your final definition of the transformation. Now create a fourth GCP. When you choose a GCP in either viewer, Imagine will place a GCP cursor in the other viewer at the place defined by the surface calculated from the points digitized thus far. You can

4 move the point to the correct location by dragging it by the mouse. Make several more GCPs. You can add as many GCPs as you want. If you want to move a GCP, select it, and drag the cursor in the viewer with your mouse. If you want to delete a GCP, select it, right-click in the Point # column, and select Delete Selection. You will notice that when you digitize the fourth GCP, a column opens in the GCP tool, telling you what the residual error is for each point. Another field opens in the GCP tool telling you the RMS error for the transformation. You want to insure that the total RMS error is within the tolerance range. National Map Standards calls for RMS error less than one half of the resolution of the input raster. Since the reference system for the TM image is pixels, you should try to get the RMS error below 0.5 if possible. Note that the residual error shown for each point is an indication of the contribution of that point to the total RMS error. If one point has an unusually high residual error, you should verify that the GCPs in the two images really do correspond to each other, and move one or the other until they do. Alternatively, you might delete the GCP altogether. You may have noticed, when you first started to do this exercise, that the Polynomial Model Properties dialog had a field called Polynomial Order with a default value of 1. The polynomial order is an indicator of the mathematical order of the transformation surface. You can change the order, if you choose to do so, by going back to the Polynomial Model Properties dialog (available from the Geo Correction Tools dialog). The number of GCPs required to calculate the transformation is equal to ½ (t+1)(t+2), where t is the order of the transformation. Thus, a first-order transformation matrix requires 3 points (½ * 2 * 3); a second order transformation matrix requires 6 points (½ * 3 * 4), etc. Once you have digitized enough GCPs to calculate the transformation surface, you are told your RMS and you can transform the image if you choose to do so. Try changing the order of the transformation. What does it do to your RMS error? You are now ready to resample the image. Resampling is the process of calculating the file values for the rectified image and creating the new file, based on the new reference system and the pixel values of the original file. All of the raster data layers in the new source Viewer will be resampled, and the output image will have as many layers as the input image. Most GIS products support at least 3 resampling orders: nearest neighbor, bilinear interpolation, and cubic convolution. The three are very different, and you must be very clear on what you want. Nearest-neighbor resampling finds the pixel in the original image closest to each pixel in the new image, and assigns that pixel in the new image with the value of that pixel in the original image. Bilinear-interpolation resampling finds the 4 pixels in the original image closest to each pixel in the new image, and assigns that pixel in the new image with the average value of the 4 pixels in the original image. Cubic-convolution resampling finds the 16 pixels in the original image closest to each pixel in the new image (i.e. the four considered in bilinear interpolation plus the 12 pixels surrounding them), and assigns that pixel in the new image with the weighted average value of the 16 pixels in the original image. Which you choose will depend on what you wish to do with the new image. The lowerorder resampling preserves the actual digital numbers reported by the satellite; the higher-order resampling gives a smoother surface, where the spatial distribution of the digital numbers is least altered from the original. To resample the image, click on the Resample icon in the Geo Correction Tools dialog. It s the one that looks like a skewed square with 4 quadrants. When the Resample dialog opens, choose an appropriate name for the output file, and choose the appropriate resample method. Verify that new map projection is what you expect. Verify the size of the output cell, and check to ignore zero is statistics. You last piece of information for this dialog is the geographic boundaries of the new output file. You can accept the default values, or you can open the metadata for your reference image and use the X and Y coordinates of the Upper Left and Lower Right corners, respectively (ULX, ULY, LRX, and LRY) as the extents of your resampled image. If you want to do that, put these numbers into the appropriate places in the Resample dialog. Click OK to perform the resampling. To verify that you ve rectified the image correctly, add the new image to a view.

5 ENVI The first step in registering your image in ENVI is to rasterize your DLG-derived road file using ArcGIS. Use Conversion -> To Raster -> Feature to Raster in the Arc Toolbox, and make sure that your raster has a pixel size roughly 1/4 the size of the pixel in your Thematic Mapper image. Then click Geometric Correction -> Registration -> Registration: Image to Image in the ENVI toolbox. The first dialog that opens asks you to select an input band from your base image. The base image, in ENVIspeak, is your reference image. This is the one you assume to be correctly georeferenced in this case the rasterized DLG that you have just created. Choose the layer (there is only one) for that image, and hit OK. The next dialog asks you to select an input warp file. This is the Thematic Mapper image that you wish to georeference, and you need to choose a single band to use for georeferencing (band 3 or 4 is usually the best). Again, hit OK. You should probably accept the defaults for the next dialogs until the Ground Control Points Selection and Image to Image GCP List windows open. What ENVI has done in generating these GCPs is to go through the image and pick likely points that can serve as GCPs. If you accepted the defaults, about 25 have been selected for you, but you need to verify that they are appropriate and correct and they are likely not to be! In the Image-to-Image GCP List, click on #1+ to move to likely GCP #1. Both the base image and the warp image will move to that site. Examine the location as carefully as you can. Can you verify that it is precisely the same point? Is there a nearby point to which you can move the GCP that you would be willing to state is the same in both images? If the likely GCP is precisely the same in both images, good (it probably won t be). If you can move the GCP in either the base or warp image (or both) to a point about which you feel secure, do so. To move the point, use the large image to move the chip bounding box to the general area you want to use as a GCP. Then move the cursor to the zoom chip box and click on precisely the point you want to use as a GCP. When the crosshairs are precisely located on the point you want to use in both images, click Update on the Image-to-Image GCP List dialog. That will move the GCP to that point. If ENVI has located a potential point that you cannot ascertain as being a GCP, and if you cannot find an appropriate point nearby, click On/Off on the Image-to-Image GCP List dialog. That will remove the GCP from the calculations. However, it won t remove the GCP from the image in the event that you might want to use it again. It is quite likely that of the 25 or so potential GCPs identified automatically by ENVI, you will turn several off. You should try to end up with good points before you generate your georeferenced file. If you want to add a point that you feel should be considered in generating the georeferenced image, you can move the crosshair cursors to that point in both your base and warp images and click Add Point in the Ground Control Points Selection dialog. As with ERDAS, ENVI shows you the RMS error for each point, so you when you ve identified a few good points that are spread around the image you can tell which points are better than others. Again, you should try to minimize overall RMS error. When you are satisfied with your RMS error, click Options -> Warp File in the Ground Control Points Selection dialog. You will need to choose the file you want to warp, then hit OK. You can accept the defaults in the Registration Parameters dialog that opens next (Polynomial and Nearest Neighbor are what you want). Enter an appropriate file name and hit OK. To verify that you ve rectified the image correctly, add the new image to a view. You may wish to load the images you created in both ERDAS and ENVI into adjacent views in a single viewer to compare the differences. Questions to Consider 1. How many layers does the TM image used in this rectification have? Which ones are you looking at? How many rows and columns does it have? What skip factor is being used? What does skip factor mean? 2. Can you imagine any way in which the image may have been clarified, so that you could see features more easily? How, for example, would you have used layers 1, 2, and 3, or 2, 5, and

6 7? Portfolio 1. Your composite image with the rectified satellite image for your quadrangle with some DLGs for that quadrangle on top of it, with each DLG having a suitable symbology.

How to georectify an image in ArcMap 10

How to georectify an image in ArcMap 10 How to georectify an image in ArcMap 10 The University Library has a large collection of historical aerial photos for some North Carolina Counties ( http://www.lib.unc.edu/reference/gis/usda/index.html

More information

Open icon. The Select Layer To Add dialog opens. Click here to display

Open icon. The Select Layer To Add dialog opens. Click here to display Mosaic Introduction This tour guide gives you the steps for mosaicking two or more image files to produce one image file. The mosaicking process works with rectified and/or calibrated images. Here, you

More information

Files Used in this Tutorial

Files Used in this Tutorial Generate Point Clouds Tutorial This tutorial shows how to generate point clouds from IKONOS satellite stereo imagery. You will view the point clouds in the ENVI LiDAR Viewer. The estimated time to complete

More information

Image Registration. Using Quantum GIS

Image Registration. Using Quantum GIS Using Quantum GIS Tutorial ID: IGET_GIS_004 This tutorial has been developed by BVIEER as part of the IGET web portal intended to provide easy access to geospatial education. This tutorial is released

More information

The Idiots Guide to GIS and Remote Sensing

The Idiots Guide to GIS and Remote Sensing The Idiots Guide to GIS and Remote Sensing 1. Picking the right imagery 1 2. Accessing imagery 1 3. Processing steps 1 a. Geocorrection 2 b. Processing Landsat images layerstacking 4 4. Landcover classification

More information

Mosaicking and Subsetting Images

Mosaicking and Subsetting Images Mosaicking and Subsetting Images Using SAGA GIS Tutorial ID: IGET_RS_005 This tutorial has been developed by BVIEER as part of the IGET web portal intended to provide easy access to geospatial education.

More information

GEOREFERENCING HISTORIC MAPS USING ARCGIS DESKTOP 10

GEOREFERENCING HISTORIC MAPS USING ARCGIS DESKTOP 10 5/20/2011 BALL STATE UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES GIS RESEARCH AND MAP COLLECTION GEOREFERENCING HISTORIC MAPS USING ARCGIS DESKTOP 10 GEOREFERENCING HISTORIC MAPS USING ARCGIS DESKTOP 10 *This tutorial is appropriate

More information

Drawing a histogram using Excel

Drawing a histogram using Excel Drawing a histogram using Excel STEP 1: Examine the data to decide how many class intervals you need and what the class boundaries should be. (In an assignment you may be told what class boundaries to

More information

ArcGIS. Image Server tutorial

ArcGIS. Image Server tutorial ArcGIS 9 ArcGIS Image Server tutorial Copyright 2006, 2007, and 2008 Zanja Technologies, Inc. All rights reserved. The information contained in this work is the property of Zanja Technologies, Inc., under

More information

Create a folder on your network drive called DEM. This is where data for the first part of this lesson will be stored.

Create a folder on your network drive called DEM. This is where data for the first part of this lesson will be stored. In this lesson you will create a Digital Elevation Model (DEM). A DEM is a gridded array of elevations. In its raw form it is an ASCII, or text, file. First, you will interpolate elevations on a topographic

More information

Creating a Guided Tour with Google Earth

Creating a Guided Tour with Google Earth Creating a Guided Tour with Google Earth Before creating a tour, first orient yourself to basic Google Earth functions. To start, download Google Earth to your desktop. This is free through earth.google.com.

More information

Raster Tutorial. Copyright 1995-2010 Esri All rights reserved.

Raster Tutorial. Copyright 1995-2010 Esri All rights reserved. Copyright 1995-2010 Esri All rights reserved. Table of Contents Introduction to the ArcGIS raster tutorial......................... 3 Exercise 1: Creating a mosaic dataset.......................... 4 Exercise

More information

Supervised Classification workflow in ENVI 4.8 using WorldView-2 imagery

Supervised Classification workflow in ENVI 4.8 using WorldView-2 imagery Supervised Classification workflow in ENVI 4.8 using WorldView-2 imagery WorldView-2 is the first commercial high-resolution satellite to provide eight spectral sensors in the visible to near-infrared

More information

Lesson 1: How to Download and Decompress USGS GloVis Landsat Data

Lesson 1: How to Download and Decompress USGS GloVis Landsat Data Created By: Lane Carter Advisors: Paul Evangelista, Jim Graham Date: October 2010 Software: Internet Explorer, Windows Explorer, WinZip Lesson 1: How to Download and Decompress USGS GloVis Landsat Data

More information

How to create PDF maps, pdf layer maps and pdf maps with attributes using ArcGIS. Lynne W Fielding, GISP Town of Westwood

How to create PDF maps, pdf layer maps and pdf maps with attributes using ArcGIS. Lynne W Fielding, GISP Town of Westwood How to create PDF maps, pdf layer maps and pdf maps with attributes using ArcGIS Lynne W Fielding, GISP Town of Westwood PDF maps are a very handy way to share your information with the public as well

More information

User s Guide to ArcView 3.3 for Land Use Planners in Puttalam District

User s Guide to ArcView 3.3 for Land Use Planners in Puttalam District User s Guide to ArcView 3.3 for Land Use Planners in Puttalam District Dilhari Weragodatenna IUCN Sri Lanka, Country Office Table of Content Page No Introduction...... 1 1. Getting started..... 2 2. Geo-referencing...

More information

LESSON 7: IMPORTING AND VECTORIZING A BITMAP IMAGE

LESSON 7: IMPORTING AND VECTORIZING A BITMAP IMAGE LESSON 7: IMPORTING AND VECTORIZING A BITMAP IMAGE In this lesson we ll learn how to import a bitmap logo, transform it into a vector and perform some editing on the vector to clean it up. The concepts

More information

and satellite image download with the USGS GloVis portal

and satellite image download with the USGS GloVis portal Tutorial: NDVI calculation with SPRING GIS and satellite image download with the USGS GloVis portal Content overview: Downloading data from GloVis: p 2 Using SPRING GIS: p 11 This document is meant to

More information

What do I do first in ArcView 8.x? When the program starts Select from the Dialog box: A new empty map

What do I do first in ArcView 8.x? When the program starts Select from the Dialog box: A new empty map www.library.carleton.ca/find/gis Introduction Introduction to Georeferenced Images using ArcGIS Georeferenced images such as aerial photographs or satellite images can be used in many ways in both GIS

More information

Image Draping & navigation within Virtual GIS

Image Draping & navigation within Virtual GIS Image Draping & navigation within Virtual GIS Draping of Geo Corrected data such as aerial imagery or map data enables virtual 3D field tours to be conducted in an area of interest. This document covers

More information

Under GIS Data select Hydrography This will show all of the state-wide options for hydrography data. For this project, we want the seventh entry in

Under GIS Data select Hydrography This will show all of the state-wide options for hydrography data. For this project, we want the seventh entry in Introductory Exercises for GIS Using ArcMap & ArcCatalog GIS Cyberinfrastructure Module EEB 5894, section 10 Please refer to the ESRI online GIS Dictionary for additional details on any of the terms in

More information

A Workflow for Creating and Sharing Maps

A Workflow for Creating and Sharing Maps A Workflow for Creating and Sharing Maps By Keith Mann, Esri What You Will Need Item Source ArcGIS Online for Organizations subscription ArcGIS 10.1 for Desktop (Any license level) ArcGIS Spatial Analyst

More information

Step-by-Step guide for IMAGINE UAV workflow

Step-by-Step guide for IMAGINE UAV workflow Step-by-Step guide for IMAGINE UAV workflow Overview This short guide will go through all steps of the UAV workflow that are needed to produce the final results. Those consist out of two raster datasets,

More information

Online Digitizing and Editing of GIS Layers (On-Screen or Head s Up Digitizing)

Online Digitizing and Editing of GIS Layers (On-Screen or Head s Up Digitizing) Online Digitizing and Editing of GIS Layers (On-Screen or Head s Up Digitizing) 2011 Charlie Schweik, Alexander Stepanov, Maria Fernandez, Lara Aniskoff Note: This work is licensed under the Creative Commons

More information

TUTORIAL - Locations & Mapping. Using the ESdat Environmental Database System. For use with ESDAT version 5

TUTORIAL - Locations & Mapping. Using the ESdat Environmental Database System. For use with ESDAT version 5 TUTORIAL - Locations & Mapping Using the ESdat Environmental Database System For use with ESDAT version 5 (version 5 software updates available from ) Function Tutorial - Locations and Mapping Table of

More information

Spatial Adjustment Tools: The Tutorial

Spatial Adjustment Tools: The Tutorial Spatial Adjustment Tools: The Tutorial By Peter Kasianchuk, ESRI Educational Services In this exercise, you will perform some spatial adjustment and data management operations data to be used in analysis

More information

Tutorial E D I T C A D. Editing CAD Geodata. TNTmips. and TNTedit

Tutorial E D I T C A D. Editing CAD Geodata. TNTmips. and TNTedit E D I T C A D Tutorial Editing CAD Geodata in TNTmips and TNTedit Before Getting Started This booklet introduces techniques for creating, altering, and updating CAD geospatial objects in the powerful Editor

More information

INSTRUCTIONS FOR MAKING 3D,.DWG CONTOUR LINES

INSTRUCTIONS FOR MAKING 3D,.DWG CONTOUR LINES INSTRUCTIONS FOR MAKING 3D,.DWG CONTOUR LINES A TUTORIAL FROM SPATIAL AND NUMERIC DATA SERVICES NICOLE SCHOLTZ AND GEOFF IVERSON Overview... 2 A. Get a Digital Elevation Model (DEM)... 3 B. Open ArcMap,

More information

Data Visualization. Prepared by Francisco Olivera, Ph.D., Srikanth Koka Department of Civil Engineering Texas A&M University February 2004

Data Visualization. Prepared by Francisco Olivera, Ph.D., Srikanth Koka Department of Civil Engineering Texas A&M University February 2004 Data Visualization Prepared by Francisco Olivera, Ph.D., Srikanth Koka Department of Civil Engineering Texas A&M University February 2004 Contents Brief Overview of ArcMap Goals of the Exercise Computer

More information

Web Editing Tutorial. Copyright 1995-2010 Esri All rights reserved.

Web Editing Tutorial. Copyright 1995-2010 Esri All rights reserved. Copyright 1995-2010 Esri All rights reserved. Table of Contents Tutorial: Creating a Web editing application........................ 3 Copyright 1995-2010 Esri. All rights reserved. 2 Tutorial: Creating

More information

Chapter 6: Data Acquisition Methods, Procedures, and Issues

Chapter 6: Data Acquisition Methods, Procedures, and Issues Chapter 6: Data Acquisition Methods, Procedures, and Issues In this Exercise: Data Acquisition Downloading Geographic Data Accessing Data Via Web Map Service Using Data from a Text File or Spreadsheet

More information

Software requirements * :

Software requirements * : Title: Product Type: Developer: Target audience: Format: Software requirements * : Data: Estimated time to complete: Fire Mapping using ASTER Part I: The ASTER instrument and fire damage assessment Part

More information

Tutorial 8 Raster Data Analysis

Tutorial 8 Raster Data Analysis Objectives Tutorial 8 Raster Data Analysis This tutorial is designed to introduce you to a basic set of raster-based analyses including: 1. Displaying Digital Elevation Model (DEM) 2. Slope calculations

More information

Migrating to Excel 2010 from Excel 2003 - Excel - Microsoft Office 1 of 1

Migrating to Excel 2010 from Excel 2003 - Excel - Microsoft Office 1 of 1 Migrating to Excel 2010 - Excel - Microsoft Office 1 of 1 In This Guide Microsoft Excel 2010 looks very different, so we created this guide to help you minimize the learning curve. Read on to learn key

More information

Data Visualization. Brief Overview of ArcMap

Data Visualization. Brief Overview of ArcMap Data Visualization Prepared by Francisco Olivera, Ph.D., P.E., Srikanth Koka and Lauren Walker Department of Civil Engineering September 13, 2006 Contents: Brief Overview of ArcMap Goals of the Exercise

More information

The following is an overview of lessons included in the tutorial.

The following is an overview of lessons included in the tutorial. Chapter 2 Tutorial Tutorial Introduction This tutorial is designed to introduce you to some of Surfer's basic features. After you have completed the tutorial, you should be able to begin creating your

More information

Sample Table. Columns. Column 1 Column 2 Column 3 Row 1 Cell 1 Cell 2 Cell 3 Row 2 Cell 4 Cell 5 Cell 6 Row 3 Cell 7 Cell 8 Cell 9.

Sample Table. Columns. Column 1 Column 2 Column 3 Row 1 Cell 1 Cell 2 Cell 3 Row 2 Cell 4 Cell 5 Cell 6 Row 3 Cell 7 Cell 8 Cell 9. Working with Tables in Microsoft Word The purpose of this document is to lead you through the steps of creating, editing and deleting tables and parts of tables. This document follows a tutorial format

More information

How To Hydrologically Condition A Digital Dam

How To Hydrologically Condition A Digital Dam Program: Funding: Conservation Applications of LiDAR Data http://tsp.umn.edu/lidar Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund Module: Instructor: Hydrologic Applications Sean Vaughn, DNR GIS Hydrologist

More information

Adobe Illustrator CS5 Part 1: Introduction to Illustrator

Adobe Illustrator CS5 Part 1: Introduction to Illustrator CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, LOS ANGELES INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY SERVICES Adobe Illustrator CS5 Part 1: Introduction to Illustrator Summer 2011, Version 1.0 Table of Contents Introduction...2 Downloading

More information

Lab 3. GIS Data Entry and Editing.

Lab 3. GIS Data Entry and Editing. Lab 3. GIS Data Entry and Editing. The goal: To learn about the vector (arc/node) and raster data types entry and editing. Objective: Create vector and raster datasets and visualize them. Software for

More information

From GPS Data Collection to GIS Data Display A Walk-Through Example

From GPS Data Collection to GIS Data Display A Walk-Through Example From GPS Data Collection to GIS Data Display A Walk-Through Example The Global Positioning System (GPS) is a satellite based navigation system consisting of 24 satellites, a worldwide network of tracking

More information

ENVI Classic Tutorial: Atmospherically Correcting Multispectral Data Using FLAASH 2

ENVI Classic Tutorial: Atmospherically Correcting Multispectral Data Using FLAASH 2 ENVI Classic Tutorial: Atmospherically Correcting Multispectral Data Using FLAASH Atmospherically Correcting Multispectral Data Using FLAASH 2 Files Used in this Tutorial 2 Opening the Raw Landsat Image

More information

Figure 3.5: Exporting SWF Files

Figure 3.5: Exporting SWF Files Li kewhatyou see? Buyt hebookat t hefocalbookst or e Fl ash + Af t eref f ect s Chr i sjackson ISBN 9780240810317 Flash Video (FLV) contains only rasterized images, not vector art. FLV files can be output

More information

Raster: The Other GIS Data

Raster: The Other GIS Data 04-Raster_Tutorial_Arcgis_93.Doc Page 1 of 11 Raster: The Other GIS Data Objectives Understand the raster format and how it is used to model continuous geographic phenomena Understand how projections &

More information

3D-GIS in the Cloud USER MANUAL. August, 2014

3D-GIS in the Cloud USER MANUAL. August, 2014 3D-GIS in the Cloud USER MANUAL August, 2014 3D GIS in the Cloud User Manual August, 2014 Table of Contents 1. Quick Reference: Navigating and Exploring in the 3D GIS in the Cloud... 2 1.1 Using the Mouse...

More information

Working with SQL Server Integration Services

Working with SQL Server Integration Services SQL Server Integration Services (SSIS) is a set of tools that let you transfer data to and from SQL Server 2005. In this lab, you ll work with the SQL Server Business Intelligence Development Studio to

More information

Creating PDF Forms in Adobe Acrobat

Creating PDF Forms in Adobe Acrobat Creating PDF Forms in Adobe Acrobat Flinders University Centre for Educational ICT Contents What are PDF forms?... 1 Viewing a PDF form... 1 Types of PDF forms... 1 Printing and saving PDF forms... 1 Forms

More information

How to make a line graph using Excel 2007

How to make a line graph using Excel 2007 How to make a line graph using Excel 2007 Format your data sheet Make sure you have a title and each column of data has a title. If you are entering data by hand, use time or the independent variable in

More information

Introduction to GIS (Basics, Data, Analysis) & Case Studies. 13 th May 2004. Content. What is GIS?

Introduction to GIS (Basics, Data, Analysis) & Case Studies. 13 th May 2004. Content. What is GIS? Introduction to GIS (Basics, Data, Analysis) & Case Studies 13 th May 2004 Content Introduction to GIS Data concepts Data input Analysis Applications selected examples What is GIS? Geographic Information

More information

Working With Animation: Introduction to Flash

Working With Animation: Introduction to Flash Working With Animation: Introduction to Flash With Adobe Flash, you can create artwork and animations that add motion and visual interest to your Web pages. Flash movies can be interactive users can click

More information

If you know exactly how you want your business forms to look and don t mind

If you know exactly how you want your business forms to look and don t mind appendix e Advanced Form Customization If you know exactly how you want your business forms to look and don t mind detail work, you can configure QuickBooks forms however you want. With QuickBooks Layout

More information

Lesson 3 - Processing a Multi-Layer Yield History. Exercise 3-4

Lesson 3 - Processing a Multi-Layer Yield History. Exercise 3-4 Lesson 3 - Processing a Multi-Layer Yield History Exercise 3-4 Objective: Develop yield-based management zones. 1. File-Open Project_3-3.map. 2. Double click the Average Yield surface component in the

More information

Instructions for Configuring a SAS Metadata Server for Use with JMP Clinical

Instructions for Configuring a SAS Metadata Server for Use with JMP Clinical Instructions for Configuring a SAS Metadata Server for Use with JMP Clinical These instructions describe the process for configuring a SAS Metadata server to work with JMP Clinical. Before You Configure

More information

Lesson 15 - Fill Cells Plugin

Lesson 15 - Fill Cells Plugin 15.1 Lesson 15 - Fill Cells Plugin This lesson presents the functionalities of the Fill Cells plugin. Fill Cells plugin allows the calculation of attribute values of tables associated with cell type layers.

More information

EXCEL PIVOT TABLE David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA Dean s Office Oct 2002

EXCEL PIVOT TABLE David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA Dean s Office Oct 2002 EXCEL PIVOT TABLE David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA Dean s Office Oct 2002 Table of Contents Part I Creating a Pivot Table Excel Database......3 What is a Pivot Table...... 3 Creating Pivot Tables

More information

Acrobat PDF Forms - Part 2

Acrobat PDF Forms - Part 2 Acrobat PDF Forms - Part 2 PDF Form Fields In this lesson, you will be given a file named Information Request Form that can be used in either Word 2003 or Word 2007. This lesson will guide you through

More information

Linear Referencing Tutorial

Linear Referencing Tutorial Copyright 1995-2010 Esri All rights reserved. Table of Contents An overview of the linear referencing tutorial........................ 3 Exercise 1: Organizing your linear referencing data in ArcCatalog...............

More information

Help Document for WWW.SAGIS.ORG. Step by step, how-to instructions for navigating and using the Savannah Area GIS viewer.

Help Document for WWW.SAGIS.ORG. Step by step, how-to instructions for navigating and using the Savannah Area GIS viewer. Help Document for WWW.SAGIS.ORG Step by step, how-to instructions for navigating and using the Savannah Area GIS viewer. 1 SAGIS Savannah Area GIS is focused on providing access to Geospatial data in a

More information

Lab #8: Introduction to ENVI (Environment for Visualizing Images) Image Processing

Lab #8: Introduction to ENVI (Environment for Visualizing Images) Image Processing Lab #8: Introduction to ENVI (Environment for Visualizing Images) Image Processing ASSIGNMENT: Display each band of a satellite image as a monochrome image and combine three bands into a color image, and

More information

2013 Getting Started Guide

2013 Getting Started Guide 2013 Getting Started Guide The contents of this guide and accompanying exercises were originally created by Nemetschek Vectorworks, Inc. Vectorworks Fundamentals Getting Started Guide Created using: Vectorworks

More information

Activity: Using ArcGIS Explorer

Activity: Using ArcGIS Explorer Activity: Using ArcGIS Explorer Requirements You must have ArcGIS Explorer for this activity. Preparation: Download ArcGIS Explorer. The link below will bring you to the ESRI ArcGIS Explorer download page.

More information

Getting Started with the ArcGIS Predictive Analysis Add-In

Getting Started with the ArcGIS Predictive Analysis Add-In Getting Started with the ArcGIS Predictive Analysis Add-In Table of Contents ArcGIS Predictive Analysis Add-In....................................... 3 Getting Started 4..............................................

More information

Symbolizing your data

Symbolizing your data Symbolizing your data 6 IN THIS CHAPTER A map gallery Drawing all features with one symbol Drawing features to show categories like names or types Managing categories Ways to map quantitative data Standard

More information

University of Arkansas Libraries ArcGIS Desktop Tutorial. Section 2: Manipulating Display Parameters in ArcMap. Symbolizing Features and Rasters:

University of Arkansas Libraries ArcGIS Desktop Tutorial. Section 2: Manipulating Display Parameters in ArcMap. Symbolizing Features and Rasters: : Manipulating Display Parameters in ArcMap Symbolizing Features and Rasters: Data sets that are added to ArcMap a default symbology. The user can change the default symbology for their features (point,

More information

Spatial Analyst Tutorial

Spatial Analyst Tutorial Copyright 1995-2010 Esri All rights reserved. Table of Contents About the ArcGIS Spatial Analyst Tutorial......................... 3 Exercise 1: Preparing for analysis............................ 5 Exercise

More information

How to test and debug an ASP.NET application

How to test and debug an ASP.NET application Chapter 4 How to test and debug an ASP.NET application 113 4 How to test and debug an ASP.NET application If you ve done much programming, you know that testing and debugging are often the most difficult

More information

Creating a File Geodatabase

Creating a File Geodatabase Creating a File Geodatabase Updated by Thomas Stieve January 06, 2012 This exercise demonstrates how to create a file geodatabase in ArcGIS 10; how to import existing data into the geodatabase, and how

More information

Finding GIS Data and Preparing it for Use

Finding GIS Data and Preparing it for Use Finding_Data_Tutorial.Doc Page 1 of 19 Getting Ready for the Tutorial Sign Up for the GIS-L Listserv Finding GIS Data and Preparing it for Use The Yale University GIS-L Listserv is an internal University

More information

Geocoding and Buffering Addresses in ArcGIS

Geocoding and Buffering Addresses in ArcGIS INTRODUCTION and Buffering Addresses in ArcGIS is the process of assigning location coordinates in a continuous, globlal reference system (Latitude and Longitude, for instance) to street addresses. While

More information

Obtaining and Processing MODIS Data

Obtaining and Processing MODIS Data Obtaining and Processing MODIS Data MODIS is an extensive program using sensors on two satellites that each provide complete daily coverage of the earth. The data have a variety of resolutions; spectral,

More information

Completing Baseline s Site Survey Request Form

Completing Baseline s Site Survey Request Form Completing Baseline s Site Survey Request Form The first step in successfully implementing a radio network for your irrigation controllers is to identify the proposed locations for each radio. These radios

More information

Spatial Database Support

Spatial Database Support Page 1 of 11 Spatial Database Support Global Mapper can import vector data from and export vector data to the following spatial databases: Esri ArcSDE Geodatabase Esri File Geodatabase Esri Personal Geodatabases

More information

GelAnalyzer 2010 User s manual. Contents

GelAnalyzer 2010 User s manual. Contents GelAnalyzer 2010 User s manual Contents 1. Starting GelAnalyzer... 2 2. The main window... 2 3. Create a new analysis... 2 4. The image window... 3 5. Lanes... 3 5.1 Detect lanes automatically... 3 5.2

More information

Managing Imagery and Raster Data in ArcGIS

Managing Imagery and Raster Data in ArcGIS Technical Workshops Managing Imagery and Raster Data in ArcGIS Hong Xu, Sangeet Mathew, Mark Harris Presentation Overview ArcGIS raster data models Which model to use Mosaic dataset storage and properties

More information

ENVI Classic Tutorial: Classification Methods

ENVI Classic Tutorial: Classification Methods ENVI Classic Tutorial: Classification Methods Classification Methods 2 Files Used in this Tutorial 2 Examining a Landsat TM Color Image 3 Reviewing Image Colors 3 Using the Cursor Location/Value 4 Examining

More information

Tips & Tricks for ArcGIS. Presented by: Jim Mallard, Crime Analysis Supervisor Arlington, Texas. 2007 IACA Conference Pasadena, Ca

Tips & Tricks for ArcGIS. Presented by: Jim Mallard, Crime Analysis Supervisor Arlington, Texas. 2007 IACA Conference Pasadena, Ca Tips & Tricks for ArcGIS Presented by: Jim Mallard, Crime Analysis Supervisor Arlington, Texas 2007 IACA Conference Pasadena, Ca Table of Contents Lock & Load Labels for Maximum Speed!...2 Choose your

More information

DESIGN A WEB SITE USING PUBLISHER Before you begin, plan your Web site

DESIGN A WEB SITE USING PUBLISHER Before you begin, plan your Web site Page 1 of 22 DESIGN A WEB SITE USING PUBLISHER Before you begin, plan your Web site Before you create your Web site, ask yourself these questions: What do I want the site to do? Whom do I want to visit

More information

Guide to geometric morphometrics

Guide to geometric morphometrics Guide to geometric morphometrics Heidi Schutz, University of Colorado Jonathan Krieger, the Natural History Museum, London Version 0.4, 30 May, 2007. Copyright 2007 Eigenshape analysis Programs The key

More information

Tutorial 3 - Map Symbology in ArcGIS

Tutorial 3 - Map Symbology in ArcGIS Tutorial 3 - Map Symbology in ArcGIS Introduction ArcGIS provides many ways to display and analyze map features. Although not specifically a map-making or cartographic program, ArcGIS does feature a wide

More information

MrSID Viewer 2.0 for Windows 95/NT4.0

MrSID Viewer 2.0 for Windows 95/NT4.0 MrSID Viewer 2.0 for Windows 95/NT4.0 What is MrSID? Introducing MrSID MrSID image compression and decompression software offers users high-quality image-compression capabilities, along with the ability

More information

Using Spreadsheets, Selection Sets, and COGO Controls

Using Spreadsheets, Selection Sets, and COGO Controls Using Spreadsheets, Selection Sets, and COGO Controls Contents About this tutorial... 3 Step 1. Open the project... 3 Step 2. View spreadsheets... 4 Step 3. Create a selection set... 10 Step 4. Work with

More information

A Quick Start Guide to Using PowerPoint For Image-based Presentations

A Quick Start Guide to Using PowerPoint For Image-based Presentations A Quick Start Guide to Using PowerPoint For Image-based Presentations By Susan Jane Williams & William Staffeld, Knight Visual Resources Facility College of Architecture, Art and Planning Cornell University.

More information

Latin American and Caribbean Flood and Drought Monitor Tutorial Last Updated: November 2014

Latin American and Caribbean Flood and Drought Monitor Tutorial Last Updated: November 2014 Latin American and Caribbean Flood and Drought Monitor Tutorial Last Updated: November 2014 Introduction: This tutorial examines the main features of the Latin American and Caribbean Flood and Drought

More information

Chapter 4: Website Basics

Chapter 4: Website Basics 1 Chapter 4: In its most basic form, a website is a group of files stored in folders on a hard drive that is connected directly to the internet. These files include all of the items that you see on your

More information

Photoshop- Image Editing

Photoshop- Image Editing Photoshop- Image Editing Opening a file: File Menu > Open Photoshop Workspace A: Menus B: Application Bar- view options, etc. C: Options bar- controls specific to the tool you are using at the time. D:

More information

GPS Tracking Software Training and User Manual

GPS Tracking Software Training and User Manual GPS Tracking Software Training and User Manual Table of Contents Introduction... 4 Login Page... 4 Dashboard... 4 Create Group... 5 Edit Group... 6 Group Editor... 6 Add New Vehicle... 7 Configure Tracking...

More information

Tessellating with Regular Polygons

Tessellating with Regular Polygons Tessellating with Regular Polygons You ve probably seen a floor tiled with square tiles. Squares make good tiles because they can cover a surface without any gaps or overlapping. This kind of tiling is

More information

Building Qualtrics Surveys for EFS & ALC Course Evaluations: Step by Step Instructions

Building Qualtrics Surveys for EFS & ALC Course Evaluations: Step by Step Instructions Building Qualtrics Surveys for EFS & ALC Course Evaluations: Step by Step Instructions Jennifer DeSantis August 28, 2013 A relatively quick guide with detailed explanations of each step. It s recommended

More information

ArcGIS Tutorial: Adding Attribute Data

ArcGIS Tutorial: Adding Attribute Data ArcGIS Tutorial: Adding Attribute Data Introduction A common need in GIS is to map characteristics, or attributes, of different geographic areas. These maps are called thematic maps. Examples of thematic

More information

WFP Liberia Country Office

WFP Liberia Country Office 1 Oscar Gobbato oscar.gobbato@wfp.org oscar.gobbato@libero.it WFP Liberia Country Office GIS training - Summary Objectives 1 To introduce to participants the basic concepts and techniques in using Geographic

More information

A Guide to Using Excel in Physics Lab

A Guide to Using Excel in Physics Lab A Guide to Using Excel in Physics Lab Excel has the potential to be a very useful program that will save you lots of time. Excel is especially useful for making repetitious calculations on large data sets.

More information

Publishing KML Services Tutorial

Publishing KML Services Tutorial Publishing KML Services Tutorial Copyright 1995-2010 Esri All rights reserved. Table of Contents Tutorial: Publishing a KML service............................ 3 Copyright 1995-2010 ESRI, Inc. All rights

More information

G492-GIS for Earth Sciences Raster Data Structure

G492-GIS for Earth Sciences Raster Data Structure G492-GIS for Earth Sciences Raster Data Structure I. Introduction A. Basis - grid cell structure 1. representing map elements as dimensional pixels that are attached to cell attributes 2. Raster Data -

More information

Q&As: Microsoft Excel 2013: Chapter 2

Q&As: Microsoft Excel 2013: Chapter 2 Q&As: Microsoft Excel 2013: Chapter 2 In Step 5, why did the date that was entered change from 4/5/10 to 4/5/2010? When Excel recognizes that you entered a date in mm/dd/yy format, it automatically formats

More information

Select the Crow s Foot entity relationship diagram (ERD) option. Create the entities and define their components.

Select the Crow s Foot entity relationship diagram (ERD) option. Create the entities and define their components. Α DESIGNING DATABASES WITH VISIO PROFESSIONAL: A TUTORIAL Microsoft Visio Professional is a powerful database design and modeling tool. The Visio software has so many features that we can t possibly demonstrate

More information

Tutorial 6 GPS/Point Shapefile Creation

Tutorial 6 GPS/Point Shapefile Creation Tutorial 6 GPS/Point Shapefile Creation The objectives of this tutorial include: 1. Converting GPS field collected point information into a shapefile 2. Creating a shapefile from a simple x,y coordinate

More information

Microsoft Migrating to Word 2010 from Word 2003

Microsoft Migrating to Word 2010 from Word 2003 In This Guide Microsoft Word 2010 looks very different, so we created this guide to help you minimize the learning curve. Read on to learn key parts of the new interface, discover free Word 2010 training,

More information

Project Management within ManagePro

Project Management within ManagePro Project Management within ManagePro This document describes how to do the following common project management functions with ManagePro: set-up projects, define scope/requirements, assign resources, estimate

More information

National Register of Historic Places: GIS Webinar Cultural Resource GIS Facility National Park Service June 2012

National Register of Historic Places: GIS Webinar Cultural Resource GIS Facility National Park Service June 2012 National Register of Historic Places: GIS Webinar Cultural Resource GIS Facility National Park Service June 2012 In February and March 2012 the National Register of Historic Places held webinars in conjunction

More information