GIS Workshop Selected Final Maps
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GIS WorkshopSelected Final Map ProductsSpring 2010Instructor:Matthew W. WilsonAssistant Professor of GeographyBall State University
Course Description:Geographic information technologies continue to drive the representation and management of complex as well as everyday spatial information. As a result, increasing numbers of for-profit and non-profit organizations have recognized the need to transform their information into a spatial format. The demand for collaborative and participatory skills in the use of these mapping tools has, of course, been furthered by this general trend. Therefore, the goal for this course is that each student will become an independent and effective GIS user while developing their collaborative skills in the use of GIS for spatial analysis and representation. To meet this goal, this course follows a participatory workshop model, drawing on Elwood (2009) -- an intensive, hands-on experience in which student teams use GIS in collaboration with community partners. These partnerships will involve students in a full range of collaborative GIS: working with team members and project partners to identify project goals, acquiring and preparing spatial data for GIS analyses, communicating with clients to assess progress, managing spatial data, and producing necessary maps and analyses. The lecture, reading, and seminar discussion components of the course will focus on topics important to collaborative development -- to be prepared to implement, manage, and apply in a variety of research and applications areas, and in multiple geographical and institutional contexts.
Note: Further details about these projects, as well as their data sources, are available on request.
TableofContents............................................................................Student‐AuthoredProjectDescrip5ons 3
...........................................................................................CityofMuncieAnimalShelter 5CityofMuncieTotalStraysin2009(dotdensity) 5CityofMuncieTotalStraysin2009(by2000censustract) 6CityofMuncieStrayCatsin2009(by2000censustract) 7CityofMuncieStrayDogsin2009(by2000censustracts) 8CityofMuncieAnimalsDOAsin2009(by2000censustracts) 9CityofMuncieMisc.Straysin2009(by2000censustracts) 10
............................................................MuncieFinancialServicesandPovertyMapping 11MuncieSocialandFinancialServices:Banks 11MuncieSocialandFinancialServices:TaxPreparaMon 12MuncieSocialandFinancialServices:PredatoryLending 13MuncieSocialandFinancialServices:HomelessShelters 14MuncieSocialandFinancialServices:Churches 15MuncieSocialandFinancialServices:Childcare 16MuncieSocialandFinancialServices:PublicSchools 17MuncieSocialandFinancialServices:Libraries 18
..............................................................................................................Indiana500Tour 19Indiana500TourTrailBasemap 19
............................................................................ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland1998‐2008 20ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:JanuaryGroundSurface 20ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:AprilGroundSurface 21ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:JulyGroundSurface 22ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:OctoberGroundSurface 23ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:April1998SatelliteSurfaceTemperature 24ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:April2008SatelliteSurfaceTemperature 25ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:July1998SatelliteSurfaceTemperature 26ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:July2008SatelliteSurfaceTemperature 27
.................................................................................HistoricalGISforTropicalCyclones 28HistoricalGISforTropicalCyclones:1775AtlanMcHurricaneSeason 28HistoricalGISforTropicalCyclones:1775HurricaneSanPedro 29HistoricalGISforTropicalCyclones:1775IndependenceHurricane 30HistoricalGISforTropicalCyclones:1775NewfoundlandHurricane 31HistoricalGISforTropicalCyclones:1780AtlanMcHurricaneSeason 32
.............................................................................................MappingMuncieSidewalks 33MappingMuncieSidewalks:AvailableSidewalks 33MappingMuncieSidewalks:SidewalkCondiMons 34MappingMuncieSidewalks:ReMrementServices 35MappingMuncieSidewalks:MajorMITSbusstops 36MappingMuncieSidewalks:CulturalPointsofInterest 37MappingMuncieSidewalks:Age65+ 38
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Student‐AuthoredProjectDescrip:ons
Health Services in Muncie (maps not included as per agreement with partner)Brad Hofmann, Brad Beer, Corbin Haggard
Our project consists of creating maps of the current use of the Open Door Health Services. We were given a list of patients under the age of 18 that have used the service. We created a map of this data that will display which census blocks have used the service the most. We also created a map of the primary care facilities in Muncie. When we use these two data sets and compare them to demographics such as poverty levels, race & ethnicity, single-parent household, insurance status, and teenage pregnancy rates the Open Door Health Services facility will be able to more confidently apply for grants because they will now be able to visually show where their services are being used.
City of Muncie Animal Shelter (pgs. 5-10)Will Hamby, Andrew Goldblatt, Matt Canale
The main objective of this project is to illustrate the growing stray animal problem in the City of Muncie. Animal shelter employees will be our primary target for this topic as well as the public. We will use mapping software, created by ESRI, as a tool to categorize and analyze data. This software will also be used to create maps that graphically represent problem areas within Muncie. These maps will be given to the City of Muncie Animal Shelter to give them an idea of where to focus their efforts in combating this problem.
United Way: Financial Services and Poverty Mapping in Muncie (pgs. 11-18)Daniel Mills, Jeremy Trusty, Ashley Hooker
The collaborative community project that we have been assigned is projected to provide the United Way with maps showing locations and density of certain places including poverty and social services, financial services, and tax preparation services. Specifically these locations include banks, child care providers, food pantries, homeless shelters, libraries, predatory lending facilities, schools, and tax preparation services. Our goal is to create maps of these locations within the city boundaries of Muncie, IN that can be used for future analysis. Mainly they will be used to analyze where certain places are located with respect to areas with the highest poverty levels ultimately representing potential areas for developing new facilities.
Indiana 500 Tour (pg. 19)Todd Davis, Jeff Hultman, Carrah McElfresh
The Indiana 500 Tour Project is aimed to guide the public of Indiana or surrounding areas in a tour of Indiana Automobile Historic Places. This trail will highlight the automobile industry, but also any business that has historical value when going on this tour. Our job as GIS students was to map the locations of interest. There are five different types of places to visit along the trail, and that can include everything from diners and drive-ins to historic museums. The final product of this project is an interactive website in which there will be information about anything that relates to this tour. Also, there will be interactive maps that can be sorted by what type of attraction the visitors wishes to view. Overall, it should be a great website to educate people in the history of Indiana's automobile industry, and then hopefully motivate them to go experience it first hand!
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Chicago Urban Heat Island 1998-2008 (pgs. 20-27)Laura Giboo, Jessica Thompson
An urban heat island is a phenomenon in which city areas experience as much as a 10 degree Fahrenheit temperature increase over surrounding areas. To understand the urban heat island effect, it is important to note that city areas are made up primarily of concrete and asphalt (buildings and streets) with very little natural vegetation. The primary cause of heat islands is the absorption of incoming solar radiation which later becomes trapped on the earth’s surface. Urban heat islands are caused when the incoming solar radiation is absorbed into the Earth’s surface, concrete, and asphalt but is not released. An urban area becomes a storage box for heat in which the heat absorbed during the day, is not released until night (Gartland, 2008). In recent years, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has established an Urban Heat Island Pilot Project, where Chicago was a chosen city. In this project, Chicago worked jointly with the EPA to reduce the urban heat island effect (EPA, 2002). Our project is geared towards analyzing the difference between the urban heat island effect from 1998, before the EPA implemented their pilot project, and 2008, to see if the pilot project has begun to eliminate the problem. We will use satellite imagery and various remote sensing and GIS tools to help with the analysis process.
Historical GIS for Tropical Cyclones (pgs. 28-32)Steve LaVoie, Korey Klein, Derek Lawalin
An extensive database that contains the tracks of known tropical cyclones in the North Atlantic Ocean after 1850 is currently available and is commonly known by the abbreviation HURDAT or North Atlantic Hurricane Database. While this database is an invaluable tool to public and private agencies alike, some of the deadliest hurricanes on record occurred prior to 1851. This study revolves around the identification and quantification of tropical cyclones that existed during the one hundred year period from 1751-1850 dubbed the "Pre-HURDAT era" by the analysis team. While previous researchers have compiled works on tropical cyclones that occurred prior to 1851, they have yet to attempt the development of a full database, complete with cyclone tracks, for any period prior to 1851. This study is essentially a synthesis of all available historical and scientific data in order to analyze the tracks of every tropical cyclone witnessed by man during the Pre-HURDAT era. The goal of this study is to add valuable data to HURDAT in order to determine long term trends in tropical cyclone frequency.
United Way: Mapping Muncie Sidewalks (pgs. 33-38)Jeffrey Gibbs, Daniel Root
Our project is focused on mapping the conditions of Muncie's sidewalks as they relate to the MITS bus system. As a portion of Muncie's senior population continues to grow, so does the importance of sidewalks and public transportation. This project aims to better illustrate areas where sidewalks need to be improved or constructed, so as to better serve Muncie's population. Sidewalks are important when it comes to getting to and from MITS route stops and shelters, and people being able to utilize the MITS system from their neighborhoods. The second half of our project deals with charting all MITS routes, MITS shelters and stop locations as they relate to sidewalk coverage for the city.
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CityofMuncieAnimalShelterCityofMuncieTotalStraysin2009(dotdensity)
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CityofMuncieTotalStraysin2009(by2000censustract)
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CityofMuncieStrayCatsin2009(by2000censustract)
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CityofMuncieStrayDogsin2009(by2000censustracts)
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CityofMuncieAnimalsDOAsin2009(by2000censustracts)
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CityofMuncieMisc.Straysin2009(by2000censustracts)
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MuncieFinancialServicesandPovertyMappingMuncieSocialandFinancialServices:Banks
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MuncieSocialandFinancialServices:TaxPrepara:on
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MuncieSocialandFinancialServices:PredatoryLending
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MuncieSocialandFinancialServices:HomelessShelters
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MuncieSocialandFinancialServices:Churches
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MuncieSocialandFinancialServices:Childcare
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MuncieSocialandFinancialServices:PublicSchools
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MuncieSocialandFinancialServices:Libraries
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Indiana500TourIndiana500TourTrailBasemap
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Muncie
Kokomo
Bloomington
Terre Haute
Warsaw
Columbus
Michigan City
Elkhart
Anderson
Lafayette
Indianapolis
Chicago
Fort Wayne
Evansville
Louisville
South Bend
Cincinnati
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ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland1998‐2008ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:JanuaryGroundSurface
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ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:AprilGroundSurface
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ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:JulyGroundSurface
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ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:OctoberGroundSurface
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ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:April1998SatelliteSurfaceTemperature
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ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:April2008SatelliteSurfaceTemperature
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ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:July1998SatelliteSurfaceTemperature
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ChicagoUrbanHeatIsland:July2008SatelliteSurfaceTemperature
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HistoricalGISforTropicalCyclonesHistoricalGISforTropicalCyclones:1775Atlan:cHurricaneSeason
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HistoricalGISforTropicalCyclones:1775HurricaneSanPedro
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HistoricalGISforTropicalCyclones:1775IndependenceHurricane
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HistoricalGISforTropicalCyclones:1775NewfoundlandHurricane
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HistoricalGISforTropicalCyclones:1780Atlan:cHurricaneSeason
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MappingMuncieSidewalksMappingMuncieSidewalks:AvailableSidewalks
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MappingMuncieSidewalks:SidewalkCondi:ons
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MappingMuncieSidewalks:Re:rementServices
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MappingMuncieSidewalks:MajorMITSbusstops
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MappingMuncieSidewalks:CulturalPointsofInterest
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MappingMuncieSidewalks:Age65+
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