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2009 NAIP Color Aerial Photography Now Available PDF Print E-mail

Written by Rick Kelson,

AGRC received word today (October 26, 2009) that the imagery vendor, Surdex, will be reprocessing imagery in 23 counties (see list below) to achieve improved color balance and tone. A post will be made when the new version of the imagery is available.

Sample from 2009 NAIP imagery, new Legacy Highway / I-215 interchangeNew statewide color aerial photography is now available from the Utah SGID ftp website.

This imagery was flown this summer (2009) as part of the National Agricultural Imagery Program (NAIP). Funding was provided by the USDA and a statewide partnership that provided matching funds that expanded the program to a statewide footprint.

State-level funding partners include:

  • Utah Department of Agriculture
  • Utah Public Lands Policy Coordination Office (PLPCO
  • Utah School and Institutional Trust Lands Administration (SITLA)
  • Utah Department of Natural Resources (DNR)
  • Utah Automated Geographic Reference Center (AGRC)

Currently this new imagery is available only in zipped county-wide MrSid mosaic format but will soon be available via ImageServer and individual files upon receipt of the raw .tif images. An update will be posted to the Utah GIS Portal when ImageServer services and .tif files are available.

Important notes, please read:

  • Some large counties may be divided into 2 mosiacs
  • Zip files greater than 2 GB may not open using standard unzipping tools built into Windows and Unix operating systems. For these files, try using a Zip application like the commerical product WinZip or an open source product like 7zip.
  • Counties that will not be reprocessed by Surdex are: Daggett, Rich, Salt Lake, Tooele, Utah, & Wasatch

Download 2009 NAIP MrSID mosaics

 

 

 

User Comments (2)
14, Oct. 2009
Last Updated ( 26, Oct. 2009 )
 
Cartogram with ArcMap: Utah Federal Lands Acreage PDF Print E-mail

Written by Zach Beck,

Federal Land Ownership of the United States Cartogram depicting total Federal land acreage by stateUtah is one of many western states that have a large percentage and large acreage of federally owned and administered lands. Cartograms employ a strategy of distorting the geography of features so they are sized in proportion to a particular data attribute.

The purpose of cartograms is to communicate the nature of the data strictly through visualization. This image was created using the ESRI Cartogram Geoprocessing tool for ArcMap, a free download for ArcMap 9.3 users.

Comment on this Article
13, Oct. 2009
Last Updated ( 13, Oct. 2009 )
 
NSGIC '09: Summary and Highlights PDF Print E-mail

Written by Bert Granberg,

Word cloud from NSGIC2009 tweets, by Mike Mahaffie (DE) In many ways, the 2009 NSGIC annual conference was a barometer for the impact of new technologies and trends on the geospatial field.

Much of the presentation content, discussion, and twittering focused on social media and mainstream technologies/players that will likely become extremely relevant to 41 state GIS coordinators, government GIS operations, and industry represented in Cleveland this week. Despite the poor wireless internet performance at the conference hotel, a good portion of the attendees followed the presentations and the online Twitter discussion (#NSGIC2009) simultaneously; many did so on accounts they did not have prior to the conference.

This seems to prove the point that in the information technology world -- it would be a hard argument that GIS and geospatial aren't inhabitants -- change is a given and we all need to keep up or face the consequence: irrelevance. Not convinced? Ivan Deloatch, Staff Director of FGDC, announced that FDGC is seriously considering conducting a portion of its efforts to construct a new national geospatial policy document (that will likely form the basis of NSDI 2.0) using online collaboration and social networking tools.

Utah at NSGIC. Utah's participation with NSGIC has always been strong. At this years conference, Dennis Goreham was honored with NSGIC's lifetime achievement award and Bert Granberg was elected to the NSGIC board . Matt Peters and Bert presented on AGRC's efforts to expose the many content layers in Utah's State Geographic Information Database (SGID) as web and map services.

Key conference threads (note, all NSGIC 2009 powerpoint slidesets are available on slideshare.com):

  • NSDI. Ivan Deloatch (FGDC) and Bill Burgess, NSGIC's legislative liaison in DC presented their thoughts on the state and future of the NSDI, a to-date elusive vision crafted in the 1980's. Ivan discussed some promising possibilities associated with a web2.0 approach to the NSDI. Burgess, a long time listener, long time caller during the 25 year run of the NSDI talk show presented 13 key NSDI  issues that need to addressed if it is to be a successful. Burgess's key issues would be a good study for similar implementation areas within state and local government.

  • Data As Services. Utah's geospatial services presentation was just one example of many in support of a simple strategic theme present at the conference: expose relevant data as services, let creative people do great things with them. This approach fits in with the simple mantra "open, transparent" that Deloatch indicated was pervasive in Obama administration.

  • Broadband Mapping. NTIA announced the first 4 states awarded funding for mapping broadband availability. With many state GIS coordinators who were involved with their state's application and many private sector partners represented at the conference, it was no accident that NTIA's Anne Neville was on the plenary agenda and very available for discussion during her stay.  

  • Social/Media New Technologies. Learon Dalby (AR), NSGIC's past president gave a running presentation on social media and new technologies impact to the geospatial field, including a provocative you tube video entitled Is Social Media A Fad?
     
  • Public/Private Partnerships. Consider the emergence of crowd-sourced data (open street map), ubiquitous mobile geospatial collectors (think iphone), and new public/private partnerships like the agreements data partnership that NY and MA have established with NAVTEQ. Just what will be the stewardship model for geospatial data in the future?

Barney Krucoff, the District of Columbia's GIS Manager and National Geospatial Advisory Committee member provided an interesting 2 dimensional continuum for examining the diversity of spatial data sources. The first contiuum characterizes the driver for building the data from public good to mass consumer market. The second dimension characterizes the barrier to entry for creating and maintaining the data from monopoly (high) to relatively no barrier.

These two axes divide geospatial data stewardship into four quadrants (see slide 3 from his presentation ):
  • Public Sector Lead (public good, monopoly). Examples: stream gauge mapping, or topo maps.
  • Creative Commons (public good, no barrier). Examples: species sightings, trail mapping
  • Public/Private Partnership (mass market, monopoly). Examples: routing data, parcel/valuation data services
  • Private Sector (mass market, no barrier). Examples: Starbucks or ATM locations.

Interesting questions arise when looking at these sectors. For example, will new high resolution commercial satellites result in a public/private partnership licensing model or will the current USDA NAIP and USGS urban high resolution model of public domain imagery persist? Will the NY and MA partnership with NAVTEQ become a more persuasive model or will creative commons efforts live Open Street Map become dominant?
  • Addressing Standard. Martha McCart Wells, reported on the emerging addressing standard, driven by URISA and NENA, that is  likely to be adopted by FGDC . This is a standard that has been in the works for 5 years and provides, in four separate parts, data content, classification, quality, and exchange standards for street, landmark, and postal addresses. It is a data standard (logical) not an database standard (implementation) and attempts to incorporate existing standards work represented in the NENA street and landmark standards and the US Postal addressing standards. The standard includes unique identifiers and, also, standards for quality assessment of addresses and address matching, AGRC now has access to the wiki with latest documentation of this standard and can facilitate access to it (email This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it ). The hope is that this standard is finalized in the near future so it can be taken into consideration for the upcoming transportation work group meetings that are part of a FGDC CAP grant that AGRC received.

  • The Future of Imagery. With some big players (Microsoft?) rumored to be interested in offering imagery as a service to government and new commercial high resolution satellites going into orbit, many were asking the question "what is the future of public domain imagery programs?" Many states have existing enterprise contracts with Microsoft for software and services, could/will imagery as a service slipped into these existing agreements?

  • Sensors and Crowd Sourcing. To be efficient, more data needs to be collected at the point of transaction or by people who know/care enough about the geography to be motivated to contribute. A few looks at OpenStreetMap should be convincing enough.
User Comments (1)
13, Oct. 2009
Last Updated ( 13, Oct. 2009 )
 
AGRC at NSGIC 2009: Reorganizing Around Web Services PDF Print E-mail

Written by Bert Granberg,

Reorganizing Around Web Service
 
Presented at the 2009 NSGIC annual conference in Cleveland, OH.
 
Abstract:
Like many states, Utah has experimented with several internet map applications solutions over the years. In the past year, the Utah state GIS coordination office, the Automated Geographic Reference Center (AGRC), has developed several mature geospatial application web sites that integrate map display, query, editing, and geoprocessing into core agency business functions such as FOIA/GRAMA, document management, project management, and project reporting.
 
The success of these internet map sites has forced AGRC to strategize, reorganize, and prioritize personnel, processes, data maintenance, and web services to best meet this suddenly burgeoning need.This presentation will briefly highlight some of the custom geospatial functionality of sites built for the Departments of Environmental Quality and Natural Resources, some core map and web services, and AGRC's reorganization to support this expanding line of work.
 
Presenters:
Matt Peters, Manager, Geospatial Applications & Services Group (AGRC)
Bert Granberg, Manager, State Geographic Information Database (AGRC)
 
Comment on this Article
12, Oct. 2009
 
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