It may be time to run an overview, two years on this personal project on East Anglia, the last step of which was reviewed by socium.co.uk:
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Showing posts with label geology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label geology. Show all posts
Sunday, 11 March 2012
Saturday, 16 July 2011
Even more temporal maps
I posted here my webmaps from the East Anglia Medieval Fenlands project. I have now posted these on arcgis.com for use in ESRI maps: Watch future posts on time-enabling this project, and adding geo-processing to further examine these derived data. Note also that ArcGIS is available for personal use an research for $100 worldwide now.
Labels:
BGS,
change,
community,
data.gov,
East Anglia,
economy,
environment,
evolution,
geology,
GIS,
land cover,
metadata,
OrdnanceSurvey,
time,
UK
Friday, 11 February 2011
Reading Social Web Maps
Look at this map, and what it doesn't show is as instructive as what it shows. You guessed it, it's the low number of social media hits - anyone on the blogosphere or twitterverse would find those numbers on the low side, especially considering the passion current events in Egypt generated on the ground and online - and I wager doesn't reflect poor map making, but rather the fact the web was tampered with during the events in Egypt.
Saturday, 28 August 2010
5 Ws for citizens-as-sensors
Des Kilfoil at the CBC in Calgary, Canada introduced me 20-odd years ago to the 5Ws, the basic tenets of any investigative reporting, from journalists to police, from Wikipedia:
- Who? Who was involved?
- What? What happened (what's the story)?
- Where? Where did it take place?
- When? When did it take place?
- Why? Why did it happen?
- How? How did it happen?
Tuesday, 15 June 2010
The Big Easy button
Building geoinfo from the ground up is patent in this Gov2.0 presentation on citizen-focussed geoweb at the Greater New Orleans Community Data Center toward sustainability in the Big Easy:
Labels:
agencies,
aggregation,
BGS,
Canada,
collaborative,
community,
data.gov,
for-free,
free data,
geodata,
geology,
geoportal,
OrdnanceSurvey,
public,
repository,
simple,
UK,
USGS,
Web2.0
Saturday, 15 May 2010
Gathering clouds over the horizon, Part II
I posted earlier an example of a simple Google Map reading a list of Olympic cities - this was part of a list of Google and OpenLayer maps I built over the years on my old website - I also posted a nifty display of plate boundaries in Google Earth here. Following on the discussion of new web mappping (Part I of this post), I recreated both on giscloud.com to see how the two implementations compared.
Saturday, 1 May 2010
Historic Fenlands Mashup
[See updates at bottom, and predecessors Medieval Fenlands GIS and Post-medieval Fenlands GIS]
Here is a mashup on giscloud.com of the geographic history of land cover and surface geology of East Anglia since Domesday based on:
Here is a mashup on giscloud.com of the geographic history of land cover and surface geology of East Anglia since Domesday based on:
Saturday, 24 April 2010
Post-medieval Fenlands GIS
Let's look at the geographic history of land cover and surface geology of East Anglia after the Civil War , based on Ordnance Survey OpenData and British Geological Survey web mapping services (WMS). My previous posting discussed H.C. Darby's historic & geographic economics of East Anglia Fenlands between the Domesday census and the Civil War.
Wednesday, 30 December 2009
Webmaps, history, climate and geology
Chatting with local history buffs brought up amazing facts about climate change and sea level rise since the Middle Ages in East Anglia. One book's sketch map relates how the North Sea coastline differed from today, and how that affected Anglo-Saxon socio-economics there before and after the Norman conquest and the Domesday book.
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