SO432, GIS Fall 2011
Maps of Your County
Lab objectives
Contrast ASCII and binary storage of cartographic data.
Understand how vector data is designed and stored.
Understand the structure and importance of a shapefile.
Clip a dataset to cover just a region of interest.
Prepare a final map with cartographic features (legend, scale bar, graticule or labeled grid).
Deliverables:
Discussion of the difference between the ASCII TIGER file and the shapefile version, showing the location of your house, as an example. How many files are in each, what is the purpose of each?.
Two maps, each with a scale bar, legend, and graticule or labeled grid.
NED elevation, clipped to show just the county, with the ASCII TIGER file overlaid.
NLCD, with the shapefile TIGER overlaid.
The directions are in the MICRODEM help file, with links to detailed directions. You can find it in the Table of contents, Tutorials and Labs, GIS, County Maps.
You will get four data sets for your county.
Get the FIPS code for your county at http://www.epa.gov/enviro/html/codes/state.html.
From http://seamless.usgs.gov/index.php get:
The National Elevation Dataset (NED) for your county. You can get either the 1" or 1/3" data, and insure that you get the Geotiff format.
The NLCD-2001 ( National Land Cover Dataset 2001 - Land Cover) for your country. Insure that you get the Geotiff format. For the program to recognize this data set, you must either put it in the correct directory, or put in a file in the directory to identify it.
References:
The MICRODEM help file has information for both TIGER data and shape files.
If you want more information:
Reading on TIGER data: http://www.cs.nyu.edu/~yap/classes/modeling/01s/lect/l52/l.html Do not try the exercises on this page, but read to get an understanding of the encoding.
Shape file technical description: http://www.esri.com/library/whitepapers/pdfs/shapefile.pdf (probably more than you need to read).
The file c:\mapdata\tiger\tiger_cfcc.dbf on the hard disks in the lab (open it with the DB button in MICRODEM or Excel) has definitions of the CFCC codes. The file is also at http://www.usna.edu/Users/oceano/pguth/microdem/win32/tiger_cfcc.dbf
Native TIGER Format:
In the RT1 file, find the record (this might be a block) that includes your home, paste it into your lab report, and fill in the table below:
| Your home street address | TLID | Address Range | CFCC of street | Meaning of CFCC | Lat/Long | Lat/Long |
In the RT2 file, are there additional coordinates for your record? How could you tell?
If you block does not have a continuation record, find another record that does and fill in the table for that record.
| TLID | Address Range | CFCC of street | Meaning of CFCC | Lat/Long | Lat/Long |
| Additional Latitude points | Additional Longitude Points |
How many additional coordinates can there be in the RT2 file? What else (if anything) is in the RT2 file? How can you go between the RT1 and RT2 files?
What other kinds of records (besides roads) are in the RT1 file? How could you tell? You can use the TIGER Icon in MICRODEM which has an intelligent display of the RT1 and RT2 files.
ESRI Shape File:
Does the shapefile have all the information in the native TIGER file? Does it have any additional information? Is it missing anything in the RT1 and RT2 files?
Find the record for your block. What are the lat/long coordinates for the record (when you find the record, you can right click on it and get the coordinates), and how do they compare with the coordinates for the record in the native TIGER format?
Where are the actual coordinates of your street stored?
Highlight your block on the map and the multi-coordinate block, and blow the map up. Can you see the individual line segments that were digitized?