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Table of Contents:
- What is the
FGDL?
- FGDL CD-ROMs -
Contents, Costs, Ordering and Delivery
- FGDL Data and
Imagery - General Questions
- FGDL Custom Software
- Other GIS Software
- Using FGDL Data
and Imagery
- Contacting the
FGDL Team
This FAQ is Copyright 1999 by the GeoPlan Center at the
University of Florida. This document may be reproduced, so long as
it is kept in its entirety and in its original format.
Credits: This FAQ was written by Andrea Goethals in 1999. It was
updated in 2003 by Crystal Goodison, Sam Palmer, and Ilir Bejleri.
Many thanks to the FGDL users for contributing questions.
The Florida Geographic Data Library (FGDL) is a
mechanism for distributing satellite imagery, aerial photographs and
spatial (GIS) data throughout the state of Florida. The data is
organized by county, or other regulatory boundaries, and is
distributed on CD-ROMs. The FGDL is warehoused and maintained at the
University of Florida's GeoPlan Center, a GIS Research and Teaching
Facility. There are currently over 350 layers of GIS data in the
FGDL, including FDOR Tax Data and several types of Remotely Sensed
images, such as LandSat TM and Aerial Photography. New data layers
will be continuously added to the FGDL as they become available.
The main benefits of the FGDL are its contributions
to the availability, clarity and uniformity of Florida's databases.
*AVAILABILITY: Data can be distributed at less cost and more
efficiently between state agencies and to the public and private
sectors. Data is available for download free of charge on our website.
*CLARITY: Data are organized for use by non-GIS persons so that
individual users will no longer be required to understand the more
technical aspects of GIS to be able to accomplish geographic
information analyses.
*UNIFORMITY: Data are organized with a standard format,
projection and documentation; many users will not have to do any
additional data processing in order to begin analyses.
Various GeoPlan Center projects have included the
development of databases that were subsequently added to the FGDL.
These projects include the Cross Florida Greenway Project, The
Statewide Greenways Planning Effort, The National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (NPDES), the FDOT Environmental GIS
Database Development Project, and the FDOT Efficient Transportation
Decision Making Project..
The FGDL has been compiled from data and images collected from
numerous state and federal governmental agencies, as well as some
nonprofit organizations and private companies.
The Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT)
is the lead agency contributing to the development
of FGDL. In the past, the Florida Department
of Environmental Protection (FDEP) has also contributed a great deal to the FGDL.
We use Federal Express in all cases, next day
service where available. In most cases the turnaround time is just
2-3 weeks. Some people (especially those on the University of
Florida Campus) opt to pick it up here instead of having it
delivered to them. If you want to come pick up your order, PLEASE
follow these instructions:
(The following only applies to
those who do not want their order Federal Expressed to
them.) Please fax your Order Form to (352) 392-3308, attention
Nelda. Make sure you leave a phone number on your order form.
Someone will call you when your order is filled. You make pick up
your order between the hours of 10:00 AM and 2:00 PM. Please take
note that the University of Florida has very little visitor parking.
Your order will be waiting for you in room 431 of the Architecture
Building. Ask for Nelda Schneider. PLEASE bring with you an original
signed Order Form, along with a check made out to the University of
Florida. No cash or credit card payments can be accepted.
In most cases the turnaround time is 2 to 3 weeks
AFTER we receive your order. During the time when we release a new
version of FGDL, it may take a little longer for us to fill the
orders.
No. We are a small research center. The price of
these CD-ROMs ($20.00 apiece) is just enough to allow us to gather,
process, maintain, house, and 'deliver' the data. If and when the
FGDL becomes fully funded, we would like to provide free copies to
schools and libraries, but this has not happened yet.
According to the county the CD-ROMs will be
delivered to. If this county is outside of Florida, no sales tax is
necessary.
No sales tax is necessary if we ship the CD-ROMS
outside of Florida.
Sorry - we provide the data, not maps.
All of the FGDL data is in the following projection:
| Projection |
ALBERS |
| Units |
METERS |
| Datum |
HPGN |
| Spheroid |
GRS1980 |
| 1st standard parallel |
24 0 0.000 |
| 2nd standard parallel |
31 30 0.000 |
| central meridian |
-84 0 0.000 |
| latitude of projection's origin |
24 0 0.000 |
| false easting (meters) |
400000.00000 |
| false northing (meters) |
0.00000 |
We use the Albers projection because two of our
main data contributors are FDEP and FDOT who both work in Albers,
and because we distribute the data in one statewide projection. UTM
and Stateplane projections have zones that make it impossible to
"connect" the different pieces of the state. We consider the ArcView
on-the-fly projection an ESRI software problem/limitation and have
been in contact with them regarding something a little more robust.
Also many of our clients need more precise measurements (usually
area) which Albers offers. Geographic Latitude Longitude is not a
projection but a coordinate system and does not adjust for correct
area, shape, distance or other factors.
The Albers Conic Equal Area projection uses two standard
parallels to reduce some of the distortion of a one standard
parallel projection. Although neither shape nor linear scale are
truly correct, the distortion of these properties is minimized in
the region between the standard parallels. This projection is best
suited for land masses extending in an east-to-west orientation
rather than those lying north to south.
Most of this projection info can be gathered from the web. Look
at the sites from USGS and NEMA (the defense mapping agency). The
most commonly referenced author of projections and their formulae is
John Snyder, who used to be with USGS.
See these sites:
Map Projection Overview, Peter H. Dana, The Geographer's Craft
Project, Department of Geography, The University of Texas at Austin
Coordinate Systems Overview, Peter H. Dana, The Geographer's Craft Project,
Department of Geography, The University of Texas at Austin
Geodetic Datum Overview, Peter H. Dana, The Geographer's Craft Project,
Department of Geography, The University of Texas at Austin
There is a coordinate calculator on the market from Blue Marble
called the Geographic
Calculator. There may also be some other ones out there. Albers
is a common projection so most calculators should have it, and the
ability to enter the user defined parmaters (parallels,
false-eastings, etc). Most of these calculators are for Unix and NT
alike. The NT ones usually come in a Visual Basic (VB) type of
interface that one could probably call from another VB app. The Unix
or Linux ones are either command line or a TCL or Java interface
that can also be called from other apps.
Please contact the source of the dataset, which is
identified in that dataset's metadata. Metadata is included with every
FGDL Data layer.
There is no real standard in the GIS industry at
the moment. Just like the rest of the computer and tech industry
most of the formats for data transfer and storage are proprietary.
There is a group called the OpenGIS Consortium (http://www.opengis.org/) that is
looking at ways to standardize GIS data.
FDOR Tax data are tables only, there are no parcel
lines, polygons, or points associated with this data. The files are
dBase (.dbf) tables. However, TAXS are the tax records summarized by
section, and it is possible to link this table to the sections of the
Public Land Survey System. For more information, please see the metadata
for PLSS.SHP.
The FGDL Extension for ArcMap 9.x is a toolbar designed to help users integrate FGDL
Version 3 or later data into ArcMap 9.x documents. This extension works with FGDL
Version 3, Version 2003, Version 2004, and later. This extension does not work with
FGDL Version 1, 2, or 3.
Click here for more
information.
The new extension does not provide Geoprocessing tools.
ArcExplorer comes on the FGDL CD-ROMs.
Additionally, you can download it for free from ESRI's site. Please
go to:
http://www.esri.com/software/arcexplorer/index.html
We are keeping a list of GIS Software at
http://www.geoplan.ufl.edu/software.html.
Yes. MapInfo Professional v.5.5 comes with a
Universal Translator that reads ESRI shapefiles.
Since the data are digital you can create a map of
almost any size. The limiting factor is the original source scale
(for vector data) or resolution (for raster data). You would not
want to create a 1:2,000 scale map with 1:100,000 data. All of our
datasets come with documentation that contain information (metadata)
about the scale, attributes, contact information, etc.
Yes there is, at least for the Tmtrue and Tmfals
images. (To be able to do this with multiband images such as the MSS
images, you would need the Image Analyst extension.) Follow these
steps in ArcView:
- Make sure the IMAGINE extension is turned on. (With the
Project Window active, go to FILE - EXTENSIONS to
bring up the Extensions dialog box. Scroll down the list of
Available Extensions, and make sure there's a check next to
IMAGINE Image Support. Click on OK)
- With a View active, add the image(s) to the view. (In the
lower left corner of the Add Theme dialog box, put the Data Source
Type as an Image Data Source for the Tm images to show up
in the Add Theme dialog box.)
- Double-click on the name of the Tm image in the View's Table
of Contents to bring up the Image Legend Editor.
- When the Image Legend Editor dialog box appears, click on the
button that says Colormap.
- Double-click on the colored rectangle to the right of the 0
value to bring up the Color Palette.
- Select the transparent color (it is the top-left box with an x
through it)
- Press the Apply button in the Image Colormap dialog
box.
- Repeat these steps for all the images that you want to do this
to.
FGDL Data is meant for use with GIS software.
There is a free GIS viewer made by ESRI called
ArcExplorer. For more
information about GIS software, see our page listing GIS Software:
http://www.geoplan.ufl.edu/software.html.
Note that software is usually not the problem when it comes to using
the large datasets that are a part of GIS. The real problem is
hardware. A good rule of thumb is that you can never have too much
RAM when dealing with large GIS datasets. Also a good graphics card,
8MB or better, and a good size monitor 19" or larger.
All of the tax data is in .dbf format which can be
read by ArcView, Quatro Pro, Excel, Access, etc. If you are in
Arcview you can add a dbf file in the tables section of the project
window. These data are stand-alone datasets. This is due to their
size and lack of spatial reference. We are now working to accumulate
parcel data so as to tie-in the tax tables to a spatially referenced
parcel dataset.
This problem can be fixed by copying images and
world files to hard drive (local or networked) and then loaded into
ArcView 3.1 for Unix. Another alternative is to upgrade to Arcview
3.2 and you will not experience this problem.
This will happen because the prj file for FGDL Verion 3
makes ArcMap think that the data's projection is using the North American
Datum of 1983 when it is actually using the HARN datum. FGDL Version 3 and
Version 2003 data are in the same projection, but their projection files
are different because the Version 3 prj file had to be edited and updated
to be read correctly in ArcGIS 8.x. The best thing to do is delete the FGDL
Version 3 prj file and replace it with the new prj file for Version 2003.
Many SHPO datasets were added for the FGDL Version 2003.
ARCHIS was updated with new data and renamed to SHPO_STRUCTURES. ARCSIT was
deleted from FGDL. This was done May 2003, so this will only pertain to CDs
ordered after this date.
Please see our FGDL Feedback page: FGDL
Feedback
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