GIS5027 Module 1: Visual Interpretation
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 ...