1 / 23

Topographic mapping in Fiji: Challenges and opportunities

Topographic mapping in Fiji: Challenges and opportunities. Conway Pene 2012 Pacific GIS&RS Conference 27-30 November 2012, Suva. Thoughts from the field. A user .... and abuser... of topographic maps In the field and in the office On paper and on screen

najwa
Télécharger la présentation

Topographic mapping in Fiji: Challenges and opportunities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Topographic mapping in Fiji:Challenges and opportunities Conway Pene 2012 Pacific GIS&RS Conference 27-30 November 2012, Suva

  2. Thoughts from the field • A user .... and abuser... of topographic maps • In the field and in the office • On paper and on screen • About Fiji... but may be relevant to other island countries

  3. Why do we still use topographic maps? • Doesn’t everyone uses Google Mud Earth?

  4. Topographic maps in Fiji • Series • Updated every 10 years (well... almost) • About 60 A1-size sheets • Scale • Published at 1:50,000 • Content • 6 themes • Vegetation • Hydrography • Terrain • Survey • Structures • Transport • Annotation

  5. Topographic map production process • Review – problems with existing maps • Plan – what do new maps need? • Fly – logistical challenges • Capture – sensors record images • Process – add spatial context to images • Digitise – interpret images; feature data • Map – cartographic design • Distribute – publish and print

  6. Topographic map use process • Buy map from lands department • Scan on desktop scanner – produce image • Geo-reference in GIS • Use as backdrop for operational data • Digitise features for spatial analysis

  7. Challenge - scale • Are current capture and production scales suitable? • Suitable for what?... Suitable for whom? • Do we know who uses these maps and why? • What scales do we work at? • Hydrology, infrastructure, population – 1:5,000 • Agriculture, forestry – 1:10,000 • ????? at 1:50,000?

  8. Challenge - content • Topographic themes – how relevant? • Do we need new ones? • Labels – on the map, but no index • Gazetteer –allow geocoding attribute data • Imagery – image backdrops more useful • Where to get imagery? • But how to integrate?

  9. Challenge - quality • Topological accuracy of underlying spatial data • Points, line polygons used to generate symbols • More useful to GIS as raw spatial features • BUT... need major topological improvement • Attribute quality and consistency • “the power of the map is from the table”

  10. Opportunity – improve quality • Printed index – find features more easily • Name and x,y coordinates of all labelled features • Start of a gazetteer? • Gray-scale compatible colours • Detail lost when printed/copied to black-white

  11. Opportunity – digital publication • Raw data – for GIS industry • Analysis, value adding • Digital end products • Topo sheets in GeoPDF, GeoTIFF • Directly from source vector layers and cartography

  12. Opportunity – digital publication • Map and data services • www.fijitopo.gov.fj • Web service – maintains cartographic standards • Web services – access data without having data • GPS integration • Consumer GPS market • Currently no good quality Fiji base maps

  13. Opportunity – new backdrops • Current – vegetation... Interpreted, outdated • Other possibilities • Imagery – obviously... • Land cover – new categories, more detail • Substrate – soils and geology • Administration – hierarchy of boundaries, places • Infrastructure – transport, pipes, cables, wireless coverage • Services...

  14. Opportunity – collaboration • User community • What do end users want to see in their topographic maps? • What can end users contribute to the topographic map?

  15. Opportunity – multi-purpose map • One map, many uses • Beyond the topographic map?... • 19th century concept and product • 21st century problems and technologies • The National Atlas? • www.nationalatlas.org.fj • Improved topographic mapping as a vehicle for geospatial development

  16. Opportunities – outsourcing 1 • Review • Seek input from community • Multi-stakeholder consultation process • Business role – independent consulting • Plan • And collaborate • Advice on technology and production process • Business role – independent consulting

  17. Opportunities – outsourcing 2 • Fly • Air survey specialist companies • Capture • Sensor and platform vendors • multiple bands, LiDAR • Process imagery • Image processing specialists • All these already outsourced

  18. Opportunities – outsourcing • Digitise • labour intense • Outsource to digital sweatshops • Map • Cartographic design • Outsource to graphic design • Distribute • Multimedia publication • Outsource to publication specialists

  19. Opportunities – new roles • Currently – Government department trying to do everything • Role for the private sector? • Data is infrastructure • Who builds infrastructure best? • Look at current trends... Teleco, power, water, roads • Coming soon... Hospitals, schools,

  20. The Fiji xxxxxxx Authority • What is the role of government? Depends on.. • Needs of the sector • Capacity of the market • What could government do? • Data designer – help define what we need • Data client – buy data on behalf of the taxpayer • Data reviewer – quality control what is produced • Data authority – certify data to a standard

  21. This is already happening... • Cadastral mapping • Community expresses needs • Government sets standards • Private sector does the heavy lifting • Government checks and certifies

  22. So what was the point of all that? • Make existing products more useful • Make new products from existing data • Develop roles for private sector in mapping • Use improved topo mapping as opportunity to develop modern geospatial information industry

  23. But please don’t reinvent the wheel!

More Related