gis 101 – an introduction to geographic information systems university of illinois library

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GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

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Page 1: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems

University of Illinois Library

Page 2: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Goals for today

• A Introduction to some of the things possible with GIS.

• Look at some maps.• Think about how GIS can be applied to your

own project.

Page 3: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Other workshops in this series

• Library GIS 102 – ArcMap and census data: Practice creating maps, finding data, shape files and making presentation layouts

• Library GIS 103 – ArcMap: Importing images and giving them locations, creating shape files, shading areas of proximity.

Page 4: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Introductions

• Name• Department• A sentence about why you are here

Page 5: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

GIS = Geographic Information System

• A system to present information and analysis that has a geographic component.

• A system that uses maps and images to track any sort of information.

Page 6: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

A wide range of things can form a Geographic Information System

• GPS in cars• Maps• What are some others?

Page 7: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

What is needed to make a GIS?

http://www.flickr.com/photos/library_of_congress/2179864672/

Page 8: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

A sextant, clock, compass, tables and maps make this a GIS.

Sextant gives latitude

Clock gives longitude

Page 9: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Where people use GIS

• GPS in car for navigation• Google maps• Any map (electronic or paper)• Class projects• Geocaching

Page 10: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Where people use GIS

• Genealogy – trace the routes of your ancestors

• Crime by location in a city• Weather and climate• Demographics and human interest• Districts and neighborhoods

Page 11: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Why might you use GIS?

• To answer questions.

In 1900, which U.S. counties had the ability to produce a traditional Thanksgiving dinner?

Page 12: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Thanksgiving Meal Self-Sufficiency Index - 1900 Census

www.nhgis.org

Page 13: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

What are some ideas you have for using GIS?

Page 14: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Family Migration

http://www.jsenterprises.com/john/famhist/hockertimmigration.html

Page 15: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Migration

• Many projects in History touch on migrations of people, ideas or items.

• Geographically related concepts can be visualized easier using a map.

• Maps can be drawn by hand, but having a computer re-draw it when you make a change can be very handy.

Page 16: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Stacy Maple’s story

• Studying the remains of New Mexico tribes and villages.

• He began to question if there was a relationship between the locations and environments of the sites.

• “He began plotting. Dot after dot, he placed each site onto an old United States Geological Survey topological map. But, again, he was left with dangling question marks. The points on paper did not suffice.”

http://www.yaledailynews.com/news/2011/oct/21/b/

Page 17: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Stacy Maple’s story

• GIS software can calculate relationships between sets of points.

• He discovered that hunter-gatherer tribes were located in places with panoramic views where they could see the surrounding land

• Agricultural tribes did not restrict their location in that way

• “Everything is somewhere, and that somewhere matters” – Stacy Maples, Yale GIS specialist

http://www.yaledailynews.com/news/2011/oct/21/b/

Page 18: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

William Rankin

• GIS can be used to visualize complex or abstract correlations between any type of information with a geographic component.

• “Deciding to learn GIS to make a single map would be kind of like saying you want to learn Excel to make one graph”- William Rankin, history professor

http://www.yaledailynews.com/news/2011/oct/21/b/

Page 19: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

John Snow and Cholera

• He was a physician in 1850’s London.• In 1849 he publishing an essay stating that

diseases such as Black Death and cholera were not caused by bad air.

• In 1854 he created a map that showed the relationship between cholera and the public sources of water in Soho England.

• As a result, the local council deactivated the pump that was the source of cholera.

Page 20: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Soho - 1854 map by John Snow

Page 21: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Red Highlight for the cholera cases

Page 22: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Make the circle size = # infected

Page 23: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Add Blue for the water sources

Page 24: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

GIS for interactive urban design

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xbVNbwN5bIk&feature=player_embedded

Page 25: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Larsen ‘C’ Ice Shelf

• Shows how the glacier has been shrinking

Page 26: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Bill Rankin’s Radical Cartography

• History professor at Yale• Interested in the relationship between

science and space.• http://www.yaledailynews.com/photos/galleri

es/2011/oct/21/radical-cartography/

• The following slides are from his gallery

Page 27: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library
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All map projections have distortion

Making Europe look good warps the U.S.

Page 35: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

We can make all latitudes straight

Gall Stereographic projection – stretches Canada

Page 36: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Less distortion of area size creates curving latitude lines

NAD 1983- State Plane Colorado

Page 37: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Strange Maps Blog

• Interesting maps and commentary. • http://bigthink.com/blogs/strange-maps

Page 40: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

CityEngine

• Build simulated cities. • Place the roads, pick some building styles and

the CityEngine fills in the rest.• http://www.esri.com/software/cityengine/de

mos.html

Page 41: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

GIS time-lapse

• Pedestrians on a snowy sidewalk• http

://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QnCh2xQnVLU

Page 42: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Interactive Web GIS

• Historic aerial images of Florida• http://ags.scgov.net/aerials/

Page 44: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Interactive Web GIS

• Open Street Map• Public domain, created by volunteers• Anyone can add information to the map• http://www.openstreetmap.org/

Page 45: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Interactive Web GIS

• Earthquakes – current data• Linked to USGS earthquake center• http://

help.arcgis.com/en/webapps/flexviewer/live/index.html

Page 46: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Survey

• What did you like most about this workshop?• What would you like to see in the future?• What GIS skills would you like to learn?

Page 47: GIS 101 – An introduction to Geographic Information Systems University of Illinois Library

Thank you

• Scholarly Commons for one-on-one consultation. http://www.library.illinois.edu/sc/

• ATLAS data services and GIS training http://www.atlas.illinois.edu/news/#article54373