Mitchell ERIS GIS book reading- Chapters 1,2, & 3
Since the publication of Mitchell’s book, the knowledge and application of GIS have increased dramatically. Written for both new and experienced GIS users, it gives a clear format to follow. Chapter 1 first introduces the question of what GIS analysis is, and how geographic features and attributes are related to the programming. “GIS is a process for looking at geographic patterns in your data and at relationships between features.”
It discusses how data scientists realized the multitude of areas in which GIS and spatial analysis can be used to help aid many of our world’s problems. This ties into the usage of ArcGIS and many platforms alike. It’s a community to join, not just a way to map things. Through GIS, you can find out why things are where they are and how things are related. Framing questions and being specific help make the program run more smoothly. It’s good to have an understanding of how it will be used and who is the one using it. It also emphasises choosing a good method to approach; there’s a difference between precise and broad results.
Results can be displayed as a map, values in a table, or a chart. It shows examples and visuals of geographic features that are discrete, continuous phenomena, or summarized by area. With discrete features, the location can be pinpointed. Continuous phenomena are like a blanket, it can be found or measured anywhere and have no gaps (precipitation or temperature). Summarized by area represents the counts or density of individual features within area boundaries.
In the second chapter, it explains mapping. The helpful features that can be examined by maps, and how it allows people to understand where things are. The chapter gives several real-world examples of how GIS helps multiple professions get a clear idea of different obstacles and specific areas that need attention. By looking at the locations of features, you can begin to explore causes for the patterns you see.
Deciding what to map, what info you’re looking to obtain by the analysis, how you’re going to use the map, and knowing your audience are all key things to remember. Preparing your data is another key step, as there are many layers to categories in mapping. Each method has its own advantages and disadvantages, and the chapter encourages trying multiple views to find the best presentation.
Mapping the “most and least” is explained in the third chapter. But honestly, the explanations in this chapter felt repetitive of the first two. Many smaller, but essential features, of GIS and its mapping. Choosing places that meet the criteria and then applying them to maps. Mapping the patterns of features and knowing the best way to present them. The map’s audience plays a role too, understanding whether the data is being explored or presented by a map. Using ratios to accurately represent distributions, ranking, and creating classes. These help paint a larger picture. The chapter explores more about modeling suitability, exploring how to model suitability for various applications, including site selection and movement analysis.
I feel like I just absorbed so much about mapping and still have no clue what im doing
Cool to learn about though!