on some fundamental geographical concepts 176b lecture 3

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On Some Fundamental Geographical Concepts 176B Lecture 3

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Page 1: On Some Fundamental Geographical Concepts 176B Lecture 3

On Some Fundamental Geographical Concepts

176B Lecture 3

Page 2: On Some Fundamental Geographical Concepts 176B Lecture 3

Nystuen, J. D. (1963) “Identification of some fundamental spatial concepts”

• Search for a common geographical terminology to eliminate redundancy

• Basics: Distance, pattern, relative position, site and accessibility

• Advantages of abstract models and assumptions, e.g. isotropic surface

Page 3: On Some Fundamental Geographical Concepts 176B Lecture 3

The mosque floor

Page 4: On Some Fundamental Geographical Concepts 176B Lecture 3
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Geographic primitives

• G = g (x, y, z, s, A, t)

• [x, y, z] = f(d• Geography also highly

dependent upon model

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UCSBUCSBLat: 34.4087 Lon: -119.8447Lat: 34.4087 Lon: -119.8447

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Projection, datum etc. for a 7.5 min quad

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GIS basic geometric functions

• A GIS package must be able to move between– map projections– coordinate systems– datums– Ellipsoids

• A GIS must be able to GEORECTIFY• Not always a simple task!

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Orthorectification

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Georegistration: Control

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Georectification

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Conflation

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Address matching

2123 South Main St.AnywhereCA 93901

4,312,205mN623,864mE

15N

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Geographic information fundamentals

1. Volume

2. Dimensionality

3. Continuity

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Volume

• 1 meter pixel

• 24 bit depth (8 bit R, 8 bit G, 8 bit B)

• California 3rd largest State A=158,706 square miles

• A= 411,046,653,039 square meters

• N=9.865x10^10 bytes

• 98 gigabyte image

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Volume Issues: Tiles and Pyramids

Page 17: On Some Fundamental Geographical Concepts 176B Lecture 3

Dimensionality

• Simple geographic features can be used to build more complex ones.

• Areas are made up of lines which are made up of points represented by their coordinates.

• Areas = {Lines} = {Points}

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Areas are lines are points are coordinates

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Continuity

• Attributes of the earth fall into different spatial “behaviors” over space and time

• Many phenomena are best treated as continuous fields– E.g. air temperature, atmospheric pressure,

population density

• Others have distinct spatial extent or edges– E.g. census tracts, buildings, roads

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Field vs. Feature (object)

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Fields are often rasters

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Air Photos

Discontinuous irregular rasters: resampling

1929

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Features are often vectors

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Properties of Features

• Size

• Distribution/density

• Shape

• Scale

• Orientation

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Size: Resolution and Extent

10cm, 25cm, 50cm, 1m

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Resels: Non-uniform Support

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Data structure conversion

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Distribution

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Geographical Clustering

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Clusters on points/networks

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Shape

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Shape vs. Support

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Shape measures/analysis

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Scale: RF vs. Detail

Santa Barbara

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Scaling behavior

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Orientation: Objects & Frame

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Tobler’s First Law of Geography

• “Everything is related to everything else but near things are more related than distant things” (Tobler, 1970)

• Variation of (x1 – x0)2

• Spatial autocorrelation

• Violates assumptions of statistics

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Geographical relations

• Among features– Contains/overlaps/intersects

– Contiguity/Adjacency

– Proximity

– Trajectory

• Within fields– Neighborhood relation

– Pattern

– Process

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Vector polygon overlay

O =

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Raster overlay

01

& =

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Buffering

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Pattern

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Pattern (Fourier) Analysis

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Contiguity

http://www.clearproject.net/chapter10fig5.JPG (Clear Lake, Iowa)

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Semivariogram

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Most important, process…

•G = g (x, y, z, s, A, t)

t0 t1 t2 t3

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Strands

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Time-Space dynamics

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Dynamics

1930 1950 1970 1980 1990

FROM

TO

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Geography

The study of the earth and its features and of the distribution of life on the earth, including human life and the

effects of human activity.