Lecture 6 Flashcards
Geoprocessing tools 5 categories:
overlay and proximity analysis
surface analysis
statistical analysis
table analysis
extraction analysis
Overlay analysis
involves combining spatial and attribute data from two or more spatial data layers and examining their relationship
top 6 tools on the geoprocessing menu
Buffer, Clip, Intersect, Union, Merge, Dissolve
Surface analysis
tools that create layers of continuous data such as deriving a slope layer or an aspect layer from a Digital Elevation Model (DEM)
Statistical analysis
examine both spatial and non-spatial statistical relationships.utilizing the basic geographic principal that object near each other are more likely to be similar then objects that are far apart
Table analysis
finds answers based on table data
Extraction analysis
tools which create smaller datasets from larger ones
ERASE
Uses a binary input model and is the tool only accepts two layers: the input and the erased feature
INTERSECT
uses a multiple input model, meaning the tool will find the areas common to all the layers
MERGE
Merge will create one data set from two, with the output layer containing all the attributes from all of the input layers
Difference between merge and append
one allows you to ‘smooth’ layers together/ creates a new feature class and the other ‘adds features’ to an existing layer/ provides a new feature class with similar fields
Union
combines two or more data sets and compare the relationship between the two, adding fields to the attribute table and splitting geometric features to reflect this relationship. It retains all data from both the bounding and data layers.
Clip
known as a “cookie cutter” overlay. Use this tool to cut out a piece of one dataset using one or more of the features in another dataset. Can be used to create a date set for study area or area of interest
Dissolve
used to combine similar features within a data layer. Usually applied based on a specific attribute associated with each feature
BUFFER
a region that is less than or equal to a specified distance from one or more features.