Tuesday, July 24, 2012

That Moment..

.. when you realize that you used fabric softener instead of laundry detergent, and that's why your clothes smell and feel awesome but maybe don't look so clean. And then realizing that you've done other loads in the past using only fabric softener and cold water. Yeah, sometimes that happens.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Land Use, ArcGIS, and You!

.. Well, maybe not You, but at least Me.

There's some pretty cool data hosted at the McGill Geology department, and I took a peek at the first set on Global Cropland and Pasture data from 1700 to 2007 (whoa!).

It's in NetCDF format (yeah, I hadn't heard of it either), which is pretty cool because it holds a bunch of time slices of data, so in just one file you have ALL those years from 1700 through modern-day. Plus it's a relatively small file and really easy to flip through those years in Arc. I'm still trying to figure out how to get ArcMap to play nicely with it in raster format, as the Raster Calculator seems displeased trying to operate on the data.

So here's what I came up with: a combined map of land use for crops and pastures in the year 2007. Pastures are blue and crops are green, and overlapping areas are various shades of turquoise, going all the way to dark dark green-blue. (Very pale greens and very pale blues means there's not that much of either, but there's even less of whichever color isn't showing.) Pretty intuitive with the different areas (northern parts of Africa/Canada/Russia aren't used for much of either, midwestern US is for both, and so forth).

In other news, some of the land use analysis and mapping I did for the Land of Sky Regional Council in North Carolina is going to be discussed next Tuesday in the US Department of Transportation Eco-Logical Webinar on Green Infrastructure and Transportation Planning! Klasse!

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Fun with GIS

I'm trying to beef up my GIS portfolio in hopes of finding an awesome full-time position somewhere (anyone?). And naturally I'm doing this by having a little fun, that is, by doing some small and easy yet interesting projects. I found a really nice collection of links to data repositories (located here), with collections ranging from precipitation and temperature maps to land cover and health. It's just a matter of figuring out what to do with it all.

So I started out with an observational exercise: looking at the difference in precipitation levels across the US over the past half century. For being so simple, it's actually pretty telling stuff, and it at least seems to match with observations people have made in the Southeaster-ly parts of the country, namely that many bodies of water were once regularly higher than they are today after our near-annual droughts.

Caveats: the precipitation data from the PRISM project is part of a research project that models precipitation for entire areas based on a small number of actual measurements; while that idea makes me put on my skeptical face, PRISM is apparently considered some of the best data out there. However, the data is not awesomely labeled; I believe the numbers in all the data files were in millimeters but wouldn't stake my life on it based on the lack of metadata. Furthermore (and here's the iffiest part).. the data files are averaged over a period of years. There's a file of averages from 2005-2009, 2000-2004, 1995-1999, 1990-1994, and.. 1961-1990. Yeah.

So the difference displayed by this map is between average precipitation levels during 2005-2009 and average precipitation levels during 1961-1990. No fancy intermediate averages or anything like that, just comparing the average levels during those two sets of time. Open it up and have a look!

I'll likely be posting these sorts of things on a regular basis, so check them out or contribute your own ideas, data, and maps!

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

City By the Bay

In keeping with the theme of visiting places I hadn't been for a while, I decided that late April was high-time for a trip to San Francisco and Berkeley. I couldn't believe that over a year and a half (closer to 2) had passed since I lived there!

The trip started off on a really bad foot; I had been pretty sick with some sort of upper respiratory nastiness for the preceding week, but decided to power through the trip anyway, popping vitamin C pills and drinking liters of water 2 or 3 times a day. That regimen seemed to do the trick, and I ultimately returned far healthier than I had left. As much as I hate flying, I really enjoy flying across the country, for the completely different scenes you can pass back-to-back. I have a whole series of shots I took on the plane, but I'll just post one example here. From elaborately laid-out fields to chiseled snow-capped mountains:

Turns out I chose a great time to visit.. because it was FREE WEEK! The first week of each month means tons of museums and galleries open for free, so I had my pick of daily cheap entertainment. Most noteworthy were the De Young Museum, the ever-fun Exploratorium by the elegant Palace of Fine Arts, and the Conservatory of Flowers, with Plantosaurus Rex busting through one of the greenhouses!




In addition to doing prodigious amounts of walking (we're talking Bay to Breakers every day), I revisited at least one new old friend each day, had a fabulous and much-needed night of swing dancing at 9:20 Special, spent lots of time exploring Golden Gate Park, and ate so much delicious food I could've popped. (Well, not really, since I learned that lesson while living there..) And naturally, I paid a visit to Berkeley.



The weather was great the whole time, and it allowed me to be outside most of the day everyday. (How would I have gotten to see the horse racing at Golden Gate Fields otherwise?) It was exciting to get to spend a week in SF, as I never really explored the city that thoroughly, evidenced by my lack of knowledge that there are actual bison living in Golden Gate Park.
But when it came time to return home, I was pretty excited to see the Tennessee green under my plane. (Actually.. that's a lie. It was totally dark when I flew home, but whatever. I was still very happy to be back.)

Hello, Mr. Arch!

Continuing with old posts that never actually got posted...

Back around Easter, I made the trek into St. Louis that I had made at least twice every year for fantastic 4 years but hadn't made since graduating from WashU in 2008. 

While I was there, I visited the ever-changing-yet-ever-the-same beautiful WashU campus, saw a lot of old friends, partook in tasty food, harassed a nesting robin, danced, attended a house party, and visited family in Illinois all which made me reminisce fondly on my college days.

 The majestic steps of Brookings.. unchanged.

The creepy Donny Darko-esque bunny statue.. unchanged.

And Graham Chapel.. unchanged, but for the cherry blossoms in bloom at the time. My favorite time of year on the WashU campus.. maybe!