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Showing posts from October, 2025

GIS5027 Module 1: Visual Interpretation

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In a blink of an eye, I have returned with new maps for my second GIS grad course! Not much of a break in-between the first course and this next one, but hopefully with the closing of the last class, I can continue the momentum into the next, which is Remote Sensing and Photo Interpretation. Module 1 covered Visual Interpretation based on 3 different parts: identifying tone and texture, identifying features, and interpreting color. For part one, we had to identify tones from light to dark and textures by how fine to coarse areas were in this USGS historical aerial from 1965. We did this by creating two separate feature classes for tone and texture, giving them both a new text field in order to name each feature record accordingly. Manually, we digitized areas they showed these variations in tones and textures. After doing so, we simply had to create a map layout, which is becoming one of my favorite parts of the map making process. The creativity aspect of it all really scratches that ...

GIS5050 Final Project: The Bobwhite-Manatee Transmission Line

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The time has come for the final project to be completed and the class done! It's a bit wild for me to think that much time has passed where my first GIS grad course is over. Throughout the entire final project, I had a lot of fun actually creating these maps -- maybe too much since I ended up losing sleep some days because I was so in a flow state, so into just constantly trying and tweaking ideas of how the basemap should be or how the insets should look, etc. I think the biggest takeaway I have from my first grad course in a long time is that I'm way too much of a perfectionist. I even chuckled at myself how frequently I wanted to redo the recordings of my final presentation just because I didn't like how I said something, stuttered, or so on. At this point, no amount of minor editing will change my grade that drastically -- it's not worth it to mull over to no end. Ultimately, I'm still very proud of the map deliverables I created and are maps I would be content ...

GIS5050 Module 6: Georeferencing, Editing, & 3D Mapping

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It's the last module before the final project assignment -- it's both exciting and a bit nerve-racking since the deadlines are coming up so fast! Module 6 covered georeferencing, editing, and 3D mapping. Since 3D mapping was not a requirement, I didn't do it; however, if I have time later in the week, I'd like to make an addendum to this post and add my 2nd map deliverable if possible. As someone who hasn't made a 3D map, it intrigues me and would love the opportunity to finally get one underneath my belt. Since the lab assignment focused largely on georeferencing and editing vector data, we worked a lot with satellite aerial imagery of the University of West Florida campus. We had to take 2 JPEGs of the north and south sides of the UWF campus and georectify them using different transformations -- the north aerial I performed in 1st order polynomial while the south aerial I did in 2nd order polynomial. Georeferencing was one of the first things I learned at my workp...