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Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis Sajid Pareeth, Ph.D [email protected] Department of Land & Water Management IHE Delft Institute for Water Education
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Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

Oct 31, 2021

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Page 1: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

Sajid Pareeth, [email protected]

Department of Land & Water ManagementIHE Delft Institute for Water Education

Page 2: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

– Concept and application of Water Productivity– Introduced case study – Kirkuk Irrigation project– Introduction to WaPOR database– Data analysis and extraction in WaPOR– You have created a login in WaPOR portal!

Your Day 2 Tasks:

– WaPOR Quiz – 23 of you attempted (Good job !)– Exercise 1: Point time series in WaPOR portal (only 16 submitted yet !)

- (Continue with this exercise, But you are getting more exciting work today !)

Remember the reading/additional materials

Have you all installed QGIS?

Recap to Day 2:

Page 3: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

Welcome to Day 3:

Page 5: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

• What is GIS?• What is Georeferencing/Projection/Coordinate Reference System (CRS)?• Spatial data – Vector vs Raster?

Discuss !

Can you answer these questions?

Page 6: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

GIS

System

GIS

…..the system of computer software, hardware and data, and

personnel to help manipulate, analyze and present information that is

tied to a spatial location.

“G” = Geographic

Denotes the concept of spatial location on Earth’s surface

Importance of relative location (not just where you are but where you are in relation to everyone else)

“I” = Information

Database; tables of data

Transformation of table information into spatial context for analysis and visualization

Geographic Information Systems (GIS)

Presenter
Presentation Notes
Let’s start with some questions: How many of you have experience with GIS and RS? What is that experience Their view on RS ? Any software tools they used before. What is GIS and role of remotesensing
Page 7: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

Data Sources

Geographical Information System (GIS)

Existing analog maps Existing tabular data

Inpu

tPr

oces

sing

Out

put

Satellite Image

- 7 -

Architecture !

Page 8: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

A map is a graphic representation or scale model of spatial concepts.

It is a means for conveying geographic information.

Coordinate Systems are grids which are used to describe or identify the location of points in a space.

Maps

Page 9: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

Latitudes and Longitudes

Page 10: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

• Other terms – Projection, Coordinate Reference System (CRS), SpatialReference System (SRS)

• Georeferencing is defined as the assignment of coordinates of an absolute geographic reference system to a geographic feature

• In remote sensing it is process of assigning geographic coordinates to an satellite image

• Raster data is commonly obtained by scanning maps or collecting aerial photographs and satellite images which needs georeferencing to assign ground coordinates

Georeferencing

Page 11: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

• Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) , cylindrical projection, commonlyused projection in analysis

• Most of the global data sets are provided in Latitude and Longitude

• EPSG stands for European Petroleum Survey Group. They publish a database of coordinate system information plus some very good related documents on map projections and datums.

• Check http://spatialreference.org for details on coordinate systems andcorresponding EPSG codes

You must know !!

Page 12: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

UTM zones

Page 13: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

Vector

Raster

Tabular information(attribute table)

Data types

Page 14: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

Vector data structure

Page 15: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

Raster data structure

Page 16: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

Raster data structure

Page 17: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

• Many formats available for vector and raster– Most common are

- Geotiff for raster (.tif)- Shapefile (.shp)/geopackage(.gpkg) for vector

• Most global products will be in other formats like netCDF and HDF4/5

• List of raster formats here:– http://www.gdal.org/formats_list.html

• List of Vector formats here:– http://www.gdal.org/ogr_formats.html

Data formats

Page 18: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

• Free and Open Source GIS Software– An OSGeo project– Packaged with a bunch of other open source libraries and tools– Most popular and stable

QGIS – Quantum GIS

Page 19: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

QGIS – User interface

Page 20: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

• Three lecture tutorials are provided to you:– Tutorial 1: Introduction to QGIS and map layers– Tutorial 2: Map layout in QGIS– Tutorial 3: Zonal statistics in QGIS

Tutorials – Self pace

Page 21: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

You will find the tutorial here

Page 22: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

• Follow the tutorials and prepare a population density map of Iraq Governorates:– Example map– Submit the map in .png or .jpgformat– Deadline: 15 April midnight

Exercise 2:

Page 23: Introduction to GIS and Spatial Analysis

You will find the tutorial here

Submit your exercise here