h) Displacement of features:
When decreasing the presentation scale of data,
features often conflict with each other and must
be displaced for cartographic representation.
An example of a feature being displaced in this
data set was a rock symbol that had to be
interactively moved because it was too close to
the shoreline at the 1:250 000 scale.
3.1.3 Building Topology
The requirement for clean structured data for
this type of an application was apparent. Since
the data set was not cleaned or structured, it was
decided that sample cleaning would be done in
order to utilize some of the automated
generalization functionality. The two features
that were selected for the sample cleaning were
roads and gravel pits. The following is a brief
description of the cleaning performed and the
generalization applied to the clean data:
* The roads were cleaned by building their
topological network, which deleted
overshoots, snapped undershoots, and
removed pseudo nodes and duplicated lines.
This allowed the file's arcs (roads) to be
categorized by length, the different
categories to be highlighted on the display,
and the deletion of a category of lines
interactively or in batch.
* Since the gravel pit file was relatively small,
its full polygon topology was built. This
enabled: all the polygons below minimum
size to be highlighted on the display, the
grouping of the ones that belonged together,
and the use of the "dissolve polygon"
CARIS functionality to automatically delete
the remaining polygons smaller than
minimum Size.
3.1.4 Edge Matching of Map Data Sets
Edge matching is a term used to describe the
process of making two adjacent data sets
graphically continuous so that the features on
both sheets continue smoothly from one data set
into the other without breaks or disjoints. This
functionality would be required for joining the
sixteen 1:50 000 digital files that make up a
1:250 000 data set to create a seamless file.
There were many options available in the
CARIS edge joining routine and, depending on
the application, the operator can customize the
routine with the different option qualifiers.
Some of the options were as follows: edge
matching within one file or between two files;
matching lines within a specified maximum
distance (map or ground distance); restricting
the processing to a given layer number(s) or
feature code(s); and joining lines with the same
contour values. Also, the operator can specify a
method of joining the lines such as straight
extend (straight line between end points) or
modify the lines so the join is made smoothly.
The results of the execution of the routine were
displayed and found that approximately 60% of
the lines had joined. Since the tolerance must
be kept low to avoid incorrect joins, there will
always be the need for interactive editing.
3.1.5 Metrication and Editing of Contours
Since the contours from the 1:50 000 data set
were metric and those from the 1:250 000 data
set were imperial, the decision to use the metric
contours was consistent with CCM's policy
with respect to the requirement for all new
products to be in metric. A 20m interval would
be sufficient, thus every second contour line
was selected from the 1:50 000 data set.
Editing of contours was required for the re-
entrance with single line rivers that had been
generalized from double line rivers and to
ensure that they did not enter the newly derived
gravel pits.
3.1.6 Quality Control
Quality control is more a procedure that must be
set, than a functionality that can be specified.
The initial step in the quality control procedure
was to run a statistical listing for the derived
data set and to check that the feature codes were
correct for the 1:250 000 product. Plots of each
derived layer were then produced at the
1:250 000 scale and inspected for content,
minimum size and cartographic presentation.
These plots were also overlaid on each other
and checked for fit. The results of the
comparison of the manually revised map sheet
and the derived data plots were very favorable
with slight variations due to generalization
choices, within the accuracy tolerances.
3.2 Revision Using Landsat TM Imagery
The 1991 Landsat TM imagery that was
acquired consisted of seven spectral bands and
covered approximately the area of a 1:250 000
map sheet. Landsat TM has a resolution of
30m. The image was subdivided and
reformatted to PIP (PCI-BSQ intermediate file
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