FindingPetroleum in London yesterday launched me as early adopter of LINQ Ltd. Here is the companion Digital Energy Journal Apr/May full issue p.14. Also new banner on my home page.
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Tuesday, 19 April 2016
Monday, 4 April 2016
Another Take on Climate Change, Part VI (the last)
2024 update: 'They will flip': Earth's poles are shifting and it is not a good sign for life on our planet
I previously asked how current vagaries of climate may relate to earth's magnetic field reversals? One problem was that geological records (ocean bottom magnetic stripes) didn't span well into historic records (volcanic lava deposits)! Well this appears to have been addressed in this video:
Friday, 12 February 2016
Animation of historic Paris building footprints
Bâti Paris is a beautiful suite of maps of the Parisian buildings and listed monuments since the 18th c. posted by Etienne Côme. I gave it an organic twist by rotating and mirroring each time slice, to make it look like a breathing lung, and posted it as a video:
Wednesday, 20 January 2016
Another Take on Climate Change, Part V
[Update: Part VI, more on geomagnetic reversals]
Parts I, II, III & IV from March 2011 became relevant in a comment yesterday on Euan Mearns post on extreme climate. He pointed to the Laschamp event, and suggests this: that the wandering of the North Pole heralds a impending magnetic reversal, such as happened 4000 years ago evidenced in the French Massif Central near Clermont Ferrand.
Parts I, II, III & IV from March 2011 became relevant in a comment yesterday on Euan Mearns post on extreme climate. He pointed to the Laschamp event, and suggests this: that the wandering of the North Pole heralds a impending magnetic reversal, such as happened 4000 years ago evidenced in the French Massif Central near Clermont Ferrand.
Sunday, 17 January 2016
Global vector datasets on the web
I described exactly two years ago posting NOAA's global shoreline dataset on my AWS stack - added recently to personal portfolio for easy access - I discussed here earlier, why post global vector datasets, when web services provided such varieties of backdrops? At issue is that vector data are so large at global scales, that NOAA above and Natural Earth post them as various scales, where details are trade-off against scale.
Friday, 8 January 2016
To teach or not to teach, that is the question
With apologies to The Bard, whilst the internet in general and YouTube in particular are great tools - I use them here and on YouTube myself - there is the danger of posting educational videos uncritically.
Labels:
ArcGIS Desktop,
ArcGIS Online,
ERDAS,
ESRI,
FME,
GCS,
Imagine,
NAD83,
reproject,
SafeSoft,
SterlingGEO,
UTM
Sunday, 29 November 2015
Friday, 20 November 2015
Friday, 30 October 2015
Sunday, 18 October 2015
GIS for oil spill modelling - Part II
This is a follow-up to Part I explaining oilspill modelling using NOAA Gnome modelling software and Kuwaiti ROPME data, all in the public domain. This has now been posted on ArcGIS Online as a time-aware file geodatabase map package. In this video using a dark grey basemap, the map package shows mock oil dispersal via advanced annotation, inversely proportional to time.
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