- 171
- 112 471
Jenness Enterprises: Adventures in GIS
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 6 เม.ย. 2020
Raster Lab 13: Hillshades with Swiss Method effects in ArcGIS Pro; Blurring the Hillshade
Here we’ll look at how to modify a hillshade by blurring it a bit. This is another one of the Swiss Method modifications to hillshades, and this one is often used to make the hillshade more subtle and little less distinct in a map. The USGS uses this method in their online topographic maps.
This lab exercise is one of a series of 13 that explore basic raster analysis and surface analysis in ArcGIS Pro. The full lecture and lab exercise document can be downloaded here:
• PDF Format: drive.google.com/file/d/1mn554a10cGSfNJCZLdHIz_GCsx7y3UfC/view?usp=sharing
• MS Word: docs.google.com/document/d/17aprxHBEb76n5ghTQgGfEBtWz84xponb/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=113601434494391531497&rtpof=true&sd=true
Here are a few ModelBuilder tools that perform some of the functions demonstrated in these labs, including Swiss Method modifications for hillshades, TPI, NDVI and NDWI: drive.google.com/file/d/1MDMLqwZolsCLVpKiy9i75aQceRI-gIPw/view?usp=sharing
For related videos discussing specialized types of raster analysis, take a look at:
• Basic Hydrologic Analysis in ArcGIS Pro: th-cam.com/video/9rWtpahmzdw/w-d-xo.html
• Common Wildlife Analytical Functions, Lecture 1: Environmental Envelopes and Minimum Convex Polygons: th-cam.com/video/gil4U3SmVb8/w-d-xo.html
• Common Wildlife Analytical Functions, Lecture 2: Kernel Densities: th-cam.com/video/qY7KVH4MT18/w-d-xo.html
Class Data:
• ZIP Format: drive.google.com/file/d/16DYFSSrquBjTCfjOH7qvw-u-fyZu4-oJ/view?usp=sharing
• 7-Zip Format: drive.google.com/file/d/15-o52LTrJ-1Mk4ZLYoO3rCKcyotROLnA/view?usp=sharing
All Lectures and Lab Videos:
• Lecture Video Raster and Surface Analysis in ArcGIS Pro, Episode 1 (reclassification, zonal analysis, neighborhood analysis and math with raster layers) [20 min, 18 sec]: th-cam.com/video/rEbHQVchWkA/w-d-xo.html
• Lecture Video Raster and Surface Analysis in ArcGIS Pro, Episode 2 (Slope and Aspect) [21 min, 51 sec]: th-cam.com/video/AqYRgKN-UZQ/w-d-xo.html
• Lecture Video Raster and Surface Analysis in ArcGIS Pro, Episode 3 (Solar insolation, Hillshades and Curvature) [23 min, 07 sec]: th-cam.com/video/h4eqsvrM7AI/w-d-xo.html
• Lecture Video Raster and Surface Analysis in ArcGIS Pro, Episode 4 (Common issues we have with analyzing raster data) [17 min, 11 sec]: th-cam.com/video/C5YovY3lpPY/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 1 - Calculating Aspect from a DEM [8 min, 41 sec]: th-cam.com/video/XwAl9xIzkpo/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 2 - Calculating Slope from a DEM [8 min, 25 sec]: th-cam.com/video/E6P8qtDnTxg/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 3 - Calculating a Hillshade from a DEM [6 min, 47 sec]: th-cam.com/video/Eduy5QAoLE0/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 4 - Calculating Landscape Curvature from a DEM [8 min, 48 sec]: th-cam.com/video/HcMp-bckWd0/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 5 - Calculating the Topographic Position Index (TPI) from a DEM [12 min, 9 sec]: th-cam.com/video/v7TQ4n5HPPg/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 6 - Using the Reclassify Tool to Reclassify Aspect [15 min, 21 sec]: th-cam.com/video/eJ77vIx0Cjc/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 7 - Calculating Zonal Statistics [11 min, 19 sec]: th-cam.com/video/S1elPBNQvIM/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 8 - Using the Extract Values to Points tool to get raster values at points [13 min, 43 sec]: th-cam.com/video/1v92fRVGr6I/w-d-xo.html
• Optional Lab Exercise 9 - Calculating NDVI and NDWI from a Landsat Image [12 min, 39 sec]: th-cam.com/video/IK6CjWHWj9Y/w-d-xo.html
• Optional Lab Exercise 10 - Implementing the Swiss Method on a Hillshade, Part 1: Applying Hypsometric Shading [7 min, 26 sec]: th-cam.com/video/iymM__vq9QE/w-d-xo.html
• Optional Lab Exercise 11 - Implementing the Swiss Method on a Hillshade, Part 2a: Multiple Sun Locations [9 min, 55 sec]: th-cam.com/video/qVh5LPrv78g/w-d-xo.html
• Optional Lab Exercise 12 - Implementing the Swiss Method on a Hillshade, Part 2b: MDOW (Multidirectional Oblique-Weighted) [22 min, 52 sec]: th-cam.com/video/DP309q778Vw/w-d-xo.html
• Optional Lab Exercise 13 - Implementing the Swiss Method on a Hillshade, Part 3: Blurring the Hillshade [8 min, 38 sec]: th-cam.com/video/SJ6S0KgKlJQ/w-d-xo.html
For those who are interested, please feel free to view all my ArcGIS Pro lessons, including class data, videos, lab exercise documents, PowerPoints, videos and other odds and ends, at this location:
• PDF: drive.google.com/file/d/1ylY0jw8ZOFvIW7T6be03kHQa1LJTunM9/view?usp=sharing
• MS Word: docs.google.com/document/d/1bPZq91EhDASOhkumcM-v1UDVCiVm5RyH/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=113601434494391531497&rtpof=true&sd=true
This lab exercise is one of a series of 13 that explore basic raster analysis and surface analysis in ArcGIS Pro. The full lecture and lab exercise document can be downloaded here:
• PDF Format: drive.google.com/file/d/1mn554a10cGSfNJCZLdHIz_GCsx7y3UfC/view?usp=sharing
• MS Word: docs.google.com/document/d/17aprxHBEb76n5ghTQgGfEBtWz84xponb/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=113601434494391531497&rtpof=true&sd=true
Here are a few ModelBuilder tools that perform some of the functions demonstrated in these labs, including Swiss Method modifications for hillshades, TPI, NDVI and NDWI: drive.google.com/file/d/1MDMLqwZolsCLVpKiy9i75aQceRI-gIPw/view?usp=sharing
For related videos discussing specialized types of raster analysis, take a look at:
• Basic Hydrologic Analysis in ArcGIS Pro: th-cam.com/video/9rWtpahmzdw/w-d-xo.html
• Common Wildlife Analytical Functions, Lecture 1: Environmental Envelopes and Minimum Convex Polygons: th-cam.com/video/gil4U3SmVb8/w-d-xo.html
• Common Wildlife Analytical Functions, Lecture 2: Kernel Densities: th-cam.com/video/qY7KVH4MT18/w-d-xo.html
Class Data:
• ZIP Format: drive.google.com/file/d/16DYFSSrquBjTCfjOH7qvw-u-fyZu4-oJ/view?usp=sharing
• 7-Zip Format: drive.google.com/file/d/15-o52LTrJ-1Mk4ZLYoO3rCKcyotROLnA/view?usp=sharing
All Lectures and Lab Videos:
• Lecture Video Raster and Surface Analysis in ArcGIS Pro, Episode 1 (reclassification, zonal analysis, neighborhood analysis and math with raster layers) [20 min, 18 sec]: th-cam.com/video/rEbHQVchWkA/w-d-xo.html
• Lecture Video Raster and Surface Analysis in ArcGIS Pro, Episode 2 (Slope and Aspect) [21 min, 51 sec]: th-cam.com/video/AqYRgKN-UZQ/w-d-xo.html
• Lecture Video Raster and Surface Analysis in ArcGIS Pro, Episode 3 (Solar insolation, Hillshades and Curvature) [23 min, 07 sec]: th-cam.com/video/h4eqsvrM7AI/w-d-xo.html
• Lecture Video Raster and Surface Analysis in ArcGIS Pro, Episode 4 (Common issues we have with analyzing raster data) [17 min, 11 sec]: th-cam.com/video/C5YovY3lpPY/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 1 - Calculating Aspect from a DEM [8 min, 41 sec]: th-cam.com/video/XwAl9xIzkpo/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 2 - Calculating Slope from a DEM [8 min, 25 sec]: th-cam.com/video/E6P8qtDnTxg/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 3 - Calculating a Hillshade from a DEM [6 min, 47 sec]: th-cam.com/video/Eduy5QAoLE0/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 4 - Calculating Landscape Curvature from a DEM [8 min, 48 sec]: th-cam.com/video/HcMp-bckWd0/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 5 - Calculating the Topographic Position Index (TPI) from a DEM [12 min, 9 sec]: th-cam.com/video/v7TQ4n5HPPg/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 6 - Using the Reclassify Tool to Reclassify Aspect [15 min, 21 sec]: th-cam.com/video/eJ77vIx0Cjc/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 7 - Calculating Zonal Statistics [11 min, 19 sec]: th-cam.com/video/S1elPBNQvIM/w-d-xo.html
• Lab Exercise 8 - Using the Extract Values to Points tool to get raster values at points [13 min, 43 sec]: th-cam.com/video/1v92fRVGr6I/w-d-xo.html
• Optional Lab Exercise 9 - Calculating NDVI and NDWI from a Landsat Image [12 min, 39 sec]: th-cam.com/video/IK6CjWHWj9Y/w-d-xo.html
• Optional Lab Exercise 10 - Implementing the Swiss Method on a Hillshade, Part 1: Applying Hypsometric Shading [7 min, 26 sec]: th-cam.com/video/iymM__vq9QE/w-d-xo.html
• Optional Lab Exercise 11 - Implementing the Swiss Method on a Hillshade, Part 2a: Multiple Sun Locations [9 min, 55 sec]: th-cam.com/video/qVh5LPrv78g/w-d-xo.html
• Optional Lab Exercise 12 - Implementing the Swiss Method on a Hillshade, Part 2b: MDOW (Multidirectional Oblique-Weighted) [22 min, 52 sec]: th-cam.com/video/DP309q778Vw/w-d-xo.html
• Optional Lab Exercise 13 - Implementing the Swiss Method on a Hillshade, Part 3: Blurring the Hillshade [8 min, 38 sec]: th-cam.com/video/SJ6S0KgKlJQ/w-d-xo.html
For those who are interested, please feel free to view all my ArcGIS Pro lessons, including class data, videos, lab exercise documents, PowerPoints, videos and other odds and ends, at this location:
• PDF: drive.google.com/file/d/1ylY0jw8ZOFvIW7T6be03kHQa1LJTunM9/view?usp=sharing
• MS Word: docs.google.com/document/d/1bPZq91EhDASOhkumcM-v1UDVCiVm5RyH/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=113601434494391531497&rtpof=true&sd=true
มุมมอง: 45
วีดีโอ
Raster Lab 11: Hillshades with Swiss Method effects in ArcGIS Pro; Multiple Sun Positions
มุมมอง 2119 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Here we’ll look at how to construct a hillshade using multiple sun positions. This is another one of the Swiss Method modifications to hillshades that can make them more visually interesting, and this one can also help bring out topographic details that are lost, or kind of washed out in a simple hillshade. This lab exercise is one of a series of 13 that explore basic raster analysis and surfac...
Raster Lab 12: Hillshades with Swiss Method effects in ArcGIS Pro; MDOW
มุมมอง 19วันที่ผ่านมา
One of the Swiss Method hillshade modifications is to generate a single hillshade using multiple sun positions. In Raster Lab 11 we saw how to do this by simply generating multiple hillshades and adding them together. In this exercise we'll see a more sophisticated and interesting approach that weights 4 hillshades based on how directly they face the sun. This method is called the Multi-Directi...
Raster and Surface Analysis in ArcGIS Pro, Episode 3: Insolation, Hillshades and Curvature, v. 2
มุมมอง 98วันที่ผ่านมา
In this lecture we’ll continue our discussion of surface analysis in ArcGIS Pro, looking at solar insolation, hillshades and landscape curvature, and reviewing several common ways to analyze them. We will see how solar insolation often captures everything we are hoping for with Aspect, and usually better. We'll discuss how hillshades are often used simply for aesthetic purposes, and go over the...
Raster Lab 10: Hillshades with Swiss Method effects in ArcGIS Pro; Hypsometric Shading
มุมมอง 100หลายเดือนก่อน
Here we’ll start trying some of the Swiss Method modifications to hillshades to make them more visually interesting. This first Swiss Method effect is called Hypsometric Shading, and basically means to make the lower elevations darker, giving your map more depth, and giving it a more shaded, mysterious or even gloomy effect that can be really interesting. It’s a really easy effect to apply, too...
Raster Lab 9: Calculating NDVI and NDWI in ArcGIS Pro
มุมมอง 170หลายเดือนก่อน
Here we’ll see how to use ArcGIS Pro to calculate the NDVI, or Normalized Difference Vegetation Index, and the NDWI, or Normalized Difference Water Index, from a Landsat raster image. This demonstration will show some interesting ways we can use mathematical operations on raster layers using the Raster calculator tool, and we'll also see how to force our NDVI and NDWI into a decimal format so t...
Raster Lab 8: Extracting Raster Values at Point Locations in ArcGIS Pro
มุมมอง 97หลายเดือนก่อน
Here we see how to use the Extract Values at Points tool to get raster values at point locations, which is something we do quite often with raster data. We will also explain and discuss the difference between "Exact Values" and "Bilinear Interpolation". This lab exercise is one of a series of 13 that explore basic raster analysis and surface analysis in ArcGIS Pro. The full lecture and lab exer...
Raster Lab 7: Using the Zonal Statistics as Table tool in ArcGIS Pro
มุมมอง 112หลายเดือนก่อน
In this exercise we’ll try out another of our general ArcGIS Pro raster tools that we discussed in Lecture Video 1, the Zonal Statistics as Table tool, and we’ll see how to calculate descriptive statistics from raster cells within an analysis area polygon. We’ll also do it two ways, first with continuous data such as elevations, curvatures, slopes and TPIs, and again with circular data from our...
Raster Lab 6: Using the Reclassify tool in ArcGIS Pro
มุมมอง 109หลายเดือนก่อน
In this exercise we’ll try out one of our general raster tools that we discussed in Lecture Video 1, the Reclassify tool, and we’ll also see one way to clip a raster dataset to a polygon using the Extract by Mask tool. We will reclassify our Aspect raster from Lab Exercise 1 into North, East, South and West-facing categories, plus flat areas, and then we’ll calculate the areas and proportions o...
Raster Lab 5: Calculating TPI, or the Topographic Position Index, in ArcGIS Pro
มุมมอง 251หลายเดือนก่อน
Here we’ll make use of two of our general ArcGIS Pro raster tools, the Focal Statistics tool and the Math with Raster Layers functions, to create a dataset called the Topographic Position Index, or TPI. The TPI is a really useful way to identify hills and valleys in the landscape based on a DEM, or Digital Elevation Model raster. This lab exercise is one of a series of 13 that explore basic ras...
Raster Lab 4: Calculating Curvature in ArcGIS Pro [Updated Oct. 18, 2024]
มุมมอง 151หลายเดือนก่อน
Here we’ll see how to generate a several types of Curvature rasters from a DEM using the Surface Parameters tool in ArcGIS Pro. In particular, we are going to generate a Profile curvature, which tells us whether water would speed up or slow down as it flows over a cell, tangential curvature, which tells us whether water would be converging or diverging if it flows over a cell, and Mean curvatur...
Raster Lab 3: Calculating Hillshades from a DEM in ArcGIS Pro
มุมมอง 85หลายเดือนก่อน
Here we discuss how to create a Hillshade in ArcGIS Pro. Hillshades are cool, and they actually show the shape of the land a lot better than the original DEM. This lab exercise is one of a series of 13 that explore basic raster analysis and surface analysis in ArcGIS Pro. The full lecture and lab exercise document can be downloaded here: • PDF Format: drive.google.com/file/d/1mn554a10cGSfNJCZLd...
Raster Lab 2: Calculating Slope in ArcGIS Pro
มุมมอง 129หลายเดือนก่อน
Here we’ll see how to generate a Slope raster from a DEM using the Surface Parameters tool in ArcGIS Pro, and we’ll also take a look at how you can remind yourself of how you set up a tool by looking in the metadata. For example, suppose you generate your slope raster and then forget whether you created it in Degrees or Percent. You can find out by looking at the Geoprocessing History in the me...
Raster Lab 1: Calculating Aspect in ArcGIS Pro
มุมมอง 138หลายเดือนก่อน
Here we’ll see how to generate an Aspect raster from a DEM using the Surface Parameters tool in ArcGIS Pro, and we’ll also review how ArcGIS symbolizes Aspect rasters. And for those who are unfamiliar with Aspect, this is just a dataset where every cell values shows the compass direction that cell is facing. This lab exercise is one of a series of 13 that explore basic raster analysis and surfa...
Raster and Surface Analysis in ArcGIS Pro, Episode 4: Common Issues with Raster Analysis
มุมมอง 102หลายเดือนก่อน
In this lecture we’ll discuss a few issues that we run into occasionally with the ArcGIS Pro raster tools. We’re going to look at issues with geographic rasters, including what happens when we don’t use geodesic methods to analyze them. We’ll look at what a Z-factor is, and when it is appropriate to use. And then we’ll go over some common mistakes people make with neighborhood focal statistics,...
Raster and Surface Analysis in ArcGIS Pro, Episode 2: Slope and Aspect
มุมมอง 117หลายเดือนก่อน
Raster and Surface Analysis in ArcGIS Pro, Episode 2: Slope and Aspect
Raster and Surface Analysis in ArcGIS Pro, Episode 1: Common Raster Analytical Methods
มุมมอง 149หลายเดือนก่อน
Raster and Surface Analysis in ArcGIS Pro, Episode 1: Common Raster Analytical Methods
Change Text Format of Legend Items, and Changing Legend Column Widths in ArcGIS Pro
มุมมอง 3853 หลายเดือนก่อน
Change Text Format of Legend Items, and Changing Legend Column Widths in ArcGIS Pro
Preventing Labels from Covering Features in ArcGIS Pro
มุมมอง 5413 หลายเดือนก่อน
Preventing Labels from Covering Features in ArcGIS Pro
Using ArcGIS Pro to Calculate Mathematical Operations in Labels
มุมมอง 523 หลายเดือนก่อน
Using ArcGIS Pro to Calculate Mathematical Operations in Labels
Advanced Label Formatting in ArcGIS Pro Using Multiple Attribute Fields and FormattingTags
มุมมอง 4763 หลายเดือนก่อน
Advanced Label Formatting in ArcGIS Pro Using Multiple Attribute Fields and FormattingTags
Exploring Common Map Components in ArcGIS Pro
มุมมอง 883 หลายเดือนก่อน
Exploring Common Map Components in ArcGIS Pro
Basic Labeling in ArcGIS Pro: Creating and Formatting Labels in a Feature Layer
มุมมอง 4203 หลายเดือนก่อน
Basic Labeling in ArcGIS Pro: Creating and Formatting Labels in a Feature Layer
Complex Symbology in ArcGIS Pro: Constructing the 'Unimproved Road' symbol used by the USGS
มุมมอง 1043 หลายเดือนก่อน
Complex Symbology in ArcGIS Pro: Constructing the 'Unimproved Road' symbol used by the USGS
Building a Complex Polygon Symbol in ArcGIS Pro
มุมมอง 2333 หลายเดือนก่อน
Building a Complex Polygon Symbol in ArcGIS Pro
Symbolizing a Polygon Feature Class in ArcGIS Pro, Part 2
มุมมอง 933 หลายเดือนก่อน
Symbolizing a Polygon Feature Class in ArcGIS Pro, Part 2
Symbolizing a Polygon Feature Class in ArcGIS Pro, Part 1
มุมมอง 1043 หลายเดือนก่อน
Symbolizing a Polygon Feature Class in ArcGIS Pro, Part 1
Vertical Units in ArcGIS Pro, and the "Input dataset doesn't have a vertical unit" warning
มุมมอง 575ปีที่แล้ว
Vertical Units in ArcGIS Pro, and the "Input dataset doesn't have a vertical unit" warning
Great thanks for such great video. I couldn't open models which you shared in database
Thanks for the kind words! I appreciate it. Regarding the models, can you tell me more? Did you get an error message? If so, maybe it's a software version problem. If you're running ArcGIS Pro v. 2.x, they might not open. Otherwise, the normal way to open a model to see what is inside it is to right-click on it and select "Edit". If you can tell me more about what symptoms you are experiencing, I'll try to help solve this problem.
@jennessenterprisesadventur5081 thank you for very quick response.I think also the version is problem.Which version did you used in this analysis?
I created those models in ArcGIS Pro v. 3.3.2. If it helps, I've made you some alternative versions for ArcGIS Pro 2.7 and 3.0, but I can't guarantee they'll run. The tool that exports toolboxes to earlier versions gave me some warnings. Maybe you'll at least be able to open and modify them, though. drive.google.com/file/d/1dtf6w0Mx6YpF9YVHKxaQNSfPeOhF4VUj/view?usp=sharing Hope this helps! Take care - Jeff
Thanks so much for generously sharing this wonderful content.
Thanks so much for the kind words! I'm glad the video helped.
These are great and so helpful. I'm taking a GIS class as an older student and trying to watch what the instructor is doing displayed across the room on a large monitor on the wall doesn't help with seeing the detail. And watching you do these various queries again and again with some variations along the way really gets the methods across.
Thanks again! Your kind words are making this a better day. I appreciate you taking the time to let me know. And best of luck with your GIS class! I'm an older student myself in a few areas so I know what you're feeling. GIS can really be a lot of fun once you get comfortable with it, so please don't give up. I have a few more videos and GIS topics at drive.google.com/file/d/1ylY0jw8ZOFvIW7T6be03kHQa1LJTunM9/view?usp=sharing. I'm sure you have lots of good material to work with in your class, but there might be a few things in that document that you would enjoy.
Hi..thank you so much for this informative video, can I request something please? The documents you are arenusingbif uts possibly
Certainly! All class data are compressed in a single zip file: • ZIP Format: drive.google.com/file/d/16DYFSSrquBjTCfjOH7qvw-u-fyZu4-oJ/view?usp=sharing • 7-Zip Format: drive.google.com/file/d/15-o52LTrJ-1Mk4ZLYoO3rCKcyotROLnA/view?usp=sharing Also, I have a document with links to this class data zip file, plus links to all other modules and associated documents, located here: • PDF: drive.google.com/file/d/1ylY0jw8ZOFvIW7T6be03kHQa1LJTunM9/view?usp=sharing • MS Word: docs.google.com/document/d/1bPZq91EhDASOhkumcM-v1UDVCiVm5RyH/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=113601434494391531497&rtpof=true&sd=true Hope this helps! Take care - Jeff
I'm thrilled that this video is so recent and informative! It's exactly the sort of thing I was hoping to find. I'm used to just coming across screen recordings with no dialogue or useful explanation.
Thanks so much! That means a lot to hear, so thank you for taking the time to let me know. Jeff
Hi there, any reason I might not be getting a count of the number of raster cells within my polygon?
Hey Matt, No, I can't think of a good reason. Do you even get an attribute field named "Count" at all? If so, is it a null value? Do you get any other statistics in the table? I am confused as well! I've got a few things going on this weekend, but maybe we can do a Zoom sesson or something early next week? It might help if I could take a look at it. Let me know. You can reach me at jeffj@jennessent.com Jeff
Hi Matt, I can't think of a good reason offhand. Do you get any other statistics? Do you get a table at all? If you get a table, does it have a field for "Count", but there just isn't any data there? In this case, does it give you a "Null" value, or does it give you a Zero? If you're getting a Zero, maybe the polygon doesn't actually intersect the raster. Or possibly you have your Processing Extent environment set so that the polygon is excluded. That happened to me once; I'd set my processing extent to cover the region of a large forest fire I wanted to analyze, then later moved on to a different fire but forgot to reset the extent and all my analyses said nothing was happening in that other fire. Anyway, it's hard to say without more information. Please let me know if any of these ideas help! Take care - Jeff
Thank you for providing this lab exercise!
Thanks for letting me know, Ruben! I appreciate the kind words.
Thank you for the valuable content
Thanks so much for the kind words! I appreciate you letting me know. Jeff
Great stuff Jeff
Thanks so much! I appreciate the kind words. Jeff
This is an excellent resource, thank you so much for making this video! I am having an issue with the Set Null function. It will not accept a 1 for the "Input false raster or constant value", eventhough the information box specifically states that this option can be any interger. I tried to use the image analyst tool after the spatial analyst tool didn't work, but ran into the same problem. I tried to use several other numbers in this box, but none were accepted. What would you suggest I input here in order to proceed with this tool? Thanks again for this video!
Hi Isabella, Thanks so much for the kind words! That's always a good thing to hear. As for the problem: Hmm. Can you tell me more about how it's behaving? Are you simply unable to type a "1" into the box? If so, then the first thing to try is saving your project, closing down ArcGIS Pro, then restarting it. It could be that some of the code that checks values as you type them into the tool parameters window is misbehaving, and restarting ArcGIS Pro should clear it up. Alternatively, does the tool just crash when you run it? If so, can you let me know what the error message is? And I'm curious if you can run the tool through Python. If so, then it's just the code that runs the tool parameters window that is the problem. Here's some sample Python code to try (and replace the path names and name of your raster as appropriate): #------< Sample Code >--------------------- with arcpy.EnvManager(scratchWorkspace=r"D:\Path_to_Scratch_GDB\ScratchGDB.gdb"): out_raster = arcpy.sa.SetNull( in_conditional_raster="MyRasterToAnalyze", in_false_raster_or_constant=1, where_clause="" ) out_raster.save(r"D:\Path_to_GDB\MyGeodatabase.gdb\MyNewRaster") #-------------------------------------------- Let me know if this helps, Isabella! We can try a Zoom session if you like to figure it out. You can reach me at jeffj@jennessent.com Take care - Jeff
hey! This has been a really helpful video! Would it be possible to share you word documents? 😅😊
Thanks Nicola! And yes, you can certainly have the word doc and class data. I'll update all my video descriptions soon with these links, so thank you for the reminder. In the meantime, I have a single document with links to everything (including the Projections and Datums lab exercises), and you can find that here: • PDF Format: drive.google.com/file/d/1Wxn6CW6sW9b8RirsyjEaAZ6grd_YytgK/view?usp=sharing • MS Word: docs.google.com/document/d/17y77MNk6laADu28VOl0L0mwtRaoW46Nl/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=113601434494391531497&rtpof=true&sd=true Class Data: • ZIP Format: drive.google.com/file/d/16DYFSSrquBjTCfjOH7qvw-u-fyZu4-oJ/view?usp=sharing Hope this helps!
@@jennessenterprisesadventur5081 Thanks! I really find your way of teaching very good. I would love to have more content and playlists about different themes. For example now I am studying predictive modelling and RASTER data. Huge effort for newbies like me Hahahahha. Keep it up
@@nicolaconte4839 Cool! Raster stuff is fun. I'm actually right in the middle of putting together a series of lectures and labs on general raster analysis and surface analysis, so I hope you get to see them when they're done! Probably in a couple of weeks. I'm kind of excited about them. I'll update that document at the link I sent you with the new info when it's ready. Thanks again Nicola! Today is a better day now. Take care - Jeff
You are a life saver. I am the least mathematical person ever, and my IT- 242 class is terrifying me with arcGIS Pro. thank you for braking this stuff down for me
Thanks so much for the kind words! I'm glad the video helped out.
Thank you for this video, very clear, understandable and easy to follow through each point
Thank you for the kind words! I appreciate you taking the time to let me know.
Dude, you just saved my sanity. I've been trying to rewrite a python script for Pro and the Slope tool wouldn't run anymore. It was because of the vertical units. Worked fine in 10.x. Even defining units as METERS in the Slope parameters didn't work. Had to use your fix. Took me 3 days to figure this out. Absolutely infuriating, but thank goodness for you video.
Thanks for letting me know! Yeah, probably not the last time either of us will be infuriated by Pro, but it's great when it works!
educative presentation. Thank you
Thank you for the kind words! I appreciate it.
Bruh , do you have any idea on PIHM model?
No, I'm afraid not! Never used that one.
do you mean PennState model?
@@unmaroolable Yesss.. please
thanks bud
Cool, and thanks for letting me know!
Your tutorial saved me from collapsing, haha. Thank you! Pd. It'd be good to specify that the tutorial might be helpful not only for NAU students but also for other students around the globe who have an Advanced license (I guess this is why the tutorial worked for me?) Cheers
Good idea, and thanks for the suggestion! I'll try to remember that for the future. It's kind of fun thinking that people around the globe are trying it out!
Thank you for your content. It really helped me with my project. At the end, you show the maps of the proportion of volume under the curve or the 25%, 50%, and 75% UDs. Do you have any tutorials on this? Or any suggestions on where I could find similar resources? I need something exactly like this for my project but find it difficult to know where to get started. Any help or ideas would be appreciated. Thank you!
Oh, sorry. Does the comment below apply to this too?
Hey, my apologies for taking so long to respond! Yes, hopefully the comment below explains how to do it. So far ArcGIS Pro doesn't have any tools to do this directly, so you'll either need to write code to do it manually or try the workaround described below. Hope this helps! Take care - Jeff
@@jennessenterprisesadventur5081 Thank you! I know that's maybe too much to ask, but did you ever written a code, so I can take a look at this. I do not find a lot of information on this somewhere else. If not, I will give it a try with Excel.
Again, my apologies for the delay! I actually have written code for this, and I use it all the time, but it's in VBA for ArcMap, and uses ArcObjects. ArcGIS Pro doesn't use ArcObjects at all, so the VBA code would be very hard to translate to anything ArcGIS Pro uses. One of these days I plan to do it in C#, but I'm having trouble getting anything to work in the ArcGIS Pro SDK in Visual Studio. I'd have no idea how to do it in Python. If you have access to ArcMap, and have a VBA license, I'd be happy to send you an MXD with the code in it. Let me know; you can reach me at jeffj@jennessent.com. Take care - Jeff
Hi, can i get your help with something?
Possibly. What did you have in mind?
How do you then convert this to Polylines, while preserving the original values?
Hi Steavi, That's a good question. It's difficult since every cell has a different flow accumulation value. I can think of two possibilities, both assuming you've already created your polylines (see Lab 7; th-cam.com/video/LPGMt3y5fQQ/w-d-xo.html): 1) Do you really need every flow accumulation value along the stream segment recorded? If you only need the maximum value along the segment, then you can use the "Zonal Statistics as Table" tool to generate a table of Flow Accumulation statistics for each segment, then join that table to you your stream segments feature class. Then you'd have maximum, minimum, etc. flow accumulation for every segment. 2) If you do need a separate segment for each unique flow accumulation value, the you could convert your Flow Accumulation raster to a polygon feature class (which will likely produce a very large feature class), then intersect your stream segments with those polygons. This will clip every segment to the flow accumulation cell boundaries and attach that flow accumulation value to the clipped segment. Hope this helps Steavi! Take care - Jeff
@@jennessenterprisesadventur5081 Thank you so much! I watched Lab 7, it gave me exactly what I needed. I also tried the Raster to Polygon as an alternative and it also was exactly what I was looking for, and the intersect worked out perfectly for me. thank you so much!
@@steaviswinson7895 Cool, and thanks for letting me know! I'm glad I could help. Take care - Jeff
This program makes me feel so dumb when I can't see obvious menus
Yeah, and Esri keeps changing the menus with each new version. It's a challenge!
can you please mention what will be the unit of the output density data?
Certainly Rajat. I believe these videos calculated density in units of Points per Square Kilometer.
@@jennessenterprisesadventur5081 as do I, but there is a difference between believing and knowing, So do you believe or know?
At this point I only believe. To know I'd have to go find the rasters I generated in that lab exercise and look at the metadata, and that would take some time. The parameters I used would be recorded in the geoprocessing history. I suspect that you really care more about the units of your own analysis than my example in this video, so remember that you choose the output units you want when you run the tool. So there really is no mystery about the output, other than the general complexity of kernel density analysis itself. Of course, it is easy to forget what units you chose after you've run the tool (as well as the bandwidth you chose, or any other parameter). This is definitely a common problem. Fortunately all that information is stored in the kernel density raster metadata. Regarding the metadata: ArcGIS Pro stores a great history of all geoprocessing operations that have been applied to a dataset, in a section called "Geoprocessing History". However, by default ArcGIS Pro only shows you a small subset of all the metadata available on that dataset, and that subset does not include the geoprocessing history. You need to change your metadata style to anything other than "Item Description" in order to see the geoprocessing history (see roughly 5:50 in the video th-cam.com/video/4IVuyEqtOeA/w-d-xo.html for a demonstration on how to change your metadata style). I hope this helps Rajat! Take care - Jeff
@@jennessenterprisesadventur5081 surely did help. Thank you Jeff.
thank you
I'm glad it helped! Thanks for letting me know.
Hello! Super informative video - thanks! I'm mapping caribou in northern BC. I'm just wondering how you shifted the location data of the spotted owls in ArcGIS to preserve the real data?
Thanks Sean! I'm glad it was useful, and I appreciate the kind words. Regarding the owls, it's been a while but I'm pretty sure I went into the feature class in code and just subtracted a constant value from each X- and Y-coordinate. I wanted to put the two owls side-by-side (in map space), so I made sure that my subtraction value put them in that space relative to each other. I also clipped out the background imagery and topo maps and shifted them by the same amount. I had to do some editing on the topo map to remove identifying labels (road numbers, topographic names, etc.) I think you could do this easier than I did, though, by opening up an edit session and just selecting the owl locations, then dragging the entire set to some new location. It might be tricky getting the imagery to shift by exactly the same amount, but not impossible. And of course I did all this on a copy of the data; I still have the original locations, since that was my own research. Does this answer it? Please let me know! Take care - Jeff
@@jennessenterprisesadventur5081 Awesome! Thanks for the quick and thoughtful reply! I ended up using the 'Shift' tool which essentially uses your method to move my rasters based on X and Y coordinates. Thanks again!
thank you very much, you are amazing
Thanks for the kind words Abdulrhman! This was a good start to the day!
Thank you very much!
I'm glad it helped, and thanks for letting me know!
hello and thanks for your efforts in making this great video. I need to download the data and images used in this video. Can you send them to me please?
Certainly Ghassan! I have links to all the class data, lab documents, powerpoints and videos in this Word document: docs.google.com/document/d/1bPZq91EhDASOhkumcM-v1UDVCiVm5RyH/edit?usp=drive_link&ouid=113601434494391531497&rtpof=true&sd=true Thanks for the kind words, and I hope the lab exercises are useful! Take care - Jeff
i need the data and sattelite image for this video
Can you tell me more about which datasets you need? The satellite imagery is just the standard Esri background imagery, although I occasionally use USDA NAIP imagery. The NAIP imagery is only within the United States, though. Do you need those rectangles and hexagons I used to demonstrate the vector geoprocessing tools? I'm happy to share, but I'm not sure offhand where they are. I can find them for you if it's important, though. Let me know.
@@jennessenterprisesadventur5081 yes please i need those rectangles and hexagons used in demonstrating the vector geoprocessing tools and also if you have sattelite image i could use for additional practise i will be thanksful if you can send it. Thanks in advanced
@@jennessenterprisesadventur5081 May i know if these materials will be sent to me on my email ?
Thank you for the videos! They have been really helpful for me to refer to while I am writing my thesis. Do you have any resources on how to rescale density? I have three time frames that I am trying to compare and each sample size is different. Thank you!
Thanks for the kind words! I'm glad they've been useful. By "rescale", do you mean to convert the density surface values into units that are easier to compare between different analyses, such as cumulative volume under the curve? In this case, you could identify the region in which that object you are studying spends, say the top 50% or 90% of its time. That's the strategy I usually take when I want to compare different animal home ranges. If so, then so far ArcGIS doesn't offer any tools to do that (at least as of today, in April 2024). I've written my own code to do it, but it only works in ArcMap. I think AdeHabitat (in R) can do this. However, if you are patient and willing to spend a little time, you can get a very close approximation of the true volumes under the curve doing a few steps in ArcGIS Pro and Excel. I outline the steps in this document: docs.google.com/document/d/12W_8TYul1P35h17mZNc7HYBsg2Irk5dm/edit?usp=drive_link&ouid=113601434494391531497&rtpof=true&sd=true Please let me know if this answers it for you, or if I am misunderstanding your question. Thanks again for the kind words! That is always a good way to start the day. Jeff
JUST BRILLIANT! THANKS FOR SHARING
Thank you so much Mariola! Your comment lightened my day!
هل بسطاعتك عمل تحليل في مزرعتنا نحن بحاجة كبيرة للمياه نحن في جفاف لسبعة اعوام ارجو منك مساعدتي
أتمنى لو أستطيع! لكنني أظن أنه يمكنك القيام بعمل أفضل مما أستطيع فعله لمجرد أنك تعرف مزرعتك. ليس لدي أي طريقة للتنبؤ بالمكان الأفضل لحفر البئر، لأن ذلك يتطلب معرفة طبقة المياه الجوفية الأساسية. إذا كان لدينا نموذج تفصيلي للارتفاع، فيمكننا أن نوضح أين ستتدفق المياه على السطح، ولكن مرة أخرى أظن أنك ربما تستطيع رؤية ذلك بنفسك من خلال تواجدك هناك. أنا آسف لأنني لا أستطيع تقديم المزيد من المساعدة! لكنني لا أعرف ما الذي يمكنني فعله، ولا يمكنك القيام به بشكل أفضل.
@@jennessenterprisesadventur5081 هل تسطيع عمل تحليل هيدرولوجي للمنطقة التي اعيش فيها
A strange pause-less, monologue - with no stress, review or clarity which distinguishes fact, instruction and comment. Context setting in impenetrable, but things improve after 4 minutes where he gets specific about steps. No doubt he is an expert but he is not a great teacher, at least not for relative beginners.
Sorry it didn't work for you! Fortunately there are lots of people out there trying to explain this stuff, so hopefully you'll find someone else who suits your learning syle better.
May I know what version is your ArcGIS Pro?
Hmm. Good question. I should probably add that info to future videos, shouldn't I? This was probably done with ArcGIS Pro 3.1.0 or 3.1.1. Possibly 3.1.2. It wouldn't have been 3.0 or earlier. Hope this helps! Take care - Jeff
@@jennessenterprisesadventur5081 Thanks. Because I tried using your data and it works with my 3.0.1 version but not with data that I got from my colleague (which is below version 3.0)
Wow. Your directions were very simple to understand; you explained with only as much detail as I needed! Your graphics were very well done and high quality. This was an excellent video!
Thanks so much Gabe! I appreciate you letting me know. Today is a better day now!
Very good!
Thanks so much Giancarlo! I much appreciate the feedback.
thank you very much for your videos! I would like to ask how to manage the raster projection if the raster of our study area is in geographic coordinates? or is there any available web where we can obtain projected rasters in UTM from other places of the world, besides the US?
Thanks Cissy! I much appreciate the feedback! For global DEMs, I've used the SRTM (Shuttle Radar Topography Mission) and ASTER (Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission Reflectometer) data (both of which you should be able to find at earthexplorer.usgs.gov/). I had some issues with the ASTER data, though, because it appeared to map canopy height instead of ground height. This wasn't a problem when I just wanted elevations of locations, but it made it difficult to get accurate slope, curvature and hydrological data. I've head good things about the JAXA ALOS (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency [JAXA] Advanced Land Observing Satellite [ALOS]) data (see www.eorc.jaxa.jp/ALOS/en/dataset/aw3d_e.htm), but I've never tried it. I've also downloaded lots of data in the past from UN agencies like FAO, but I don't think I've downloaded any DEMs from them. I've also occasionally found data by looking up the local administrative websites (like county, state or municipality websites) and searching for GIS data. In general, though, it might be difficult to find data that aren't in geographic coordinates. If you just can't find any, and if the tools you use to process them don't offer geodesic options, then you will just have to project them. If you do, make sure you use bilinear interpolation when you project! It'll modify your topography a little, sort of like smoothing it with sandpaper, but probably won't do any critical damage. Hope this helps! Thanks again for the kind words. Take care - Jeff
Very instructive man, thank you! I'm biologist working with endangered primates in Brazil and this video help me a lot
Thanks so much Orlando! Your message was a good way to start the day. And what a place to be a biologist! One of these days I hope to see Brazil!
thank you so much :)
I'm glad I could help! Thank you for letting me know.
Nice video! Can you tell me from where did you downloaded the lab data from?
Thanks Joban! I appreciate the comments. You can download the Wildlife Lab data at drive.google.com/file/d/14EjFKmBLyIvO_x6w-SKHArvHeDYqRZlc/view?pli=1 (and there's also a link to it in the description below the video. If you like, you can view links to all my lectures and lab videos here: docs.google.com/document/d/1bPZq91EhDASOhkumcM-v1UDVCiVm5RyH/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=113601434494391531497&rtpof=true&sd=true ... and the full set of data for all the lab exercises is available here (and you'll need 7-Zip to uncompress it): drive.google.com/file/d/15-o52LTrJ-1Mk4ZLYoO3rCKcyotROLnA/view?usp=sharing Enjoy! Jeff
thanks for the reply! I just wanted to know how did you downloaded the lab data from? did you download it from USGS? was it converted to proper format? that's my question.@@jennessenterprisesadventur5081
basically what is the source of the data, any conversion between data format was done
For this example, the Canopy Cover came from an NAU Ecological Restoration Institute (eri.nau.edu/) dataset from many years ago; I doubt it is online anymore. The DEM came from the USGS National Elevation Dataset (see www.usgs.gov/3d-elevation-program), and I calculated the Slope directly from the DEM. The Coconino National Forest boundary came from the US Forest Service GIS Data Clearinghouse (see data.fs.usda.gov/geodata/). The environmental envelope threshold examples I use here are arbitrary; my goal is to show how to use the raster calculator to develop alternative envelopes more than it is to teach about Mexican spotted owl habitat use. Does this answer it? Please let me know!
thank you so much for the help! it helps a lot. @@jennessenterprisesadventur5081
excellent resource, thank you and really really some of the best gis info ive found anywhere, superb, thanks you again ))
Thanks so much Allan! I much appreciate the kind words.
Thank you for this super helpful video! However, for my dataset it barely gives any junction points, do you perhaps have any idea where that could have gone wrong?
Hi Nina, My apologies for taking so long to respond! I'm not quite sure why you are not getting many junction points. Are there visible places where streams connect, but no junction point is created? Or are there just very few stream segments? If the latter, then you might be able to get more streams by choosing a lower "stream accumulation" threshold when you're initially identifying stream locations. If that's not the solution, then I'd need to see what you're seeing. You can reach me at jeffj@jennessent.com. Hope this helps! Take care - Jeff
Lifesaver. Thank you!
Glad I could help Bradley!
how to create animation like this. th
Thanks! I actually made the animations in ArcMap. For the watershed video I wrote an algorithm in ArcObjects that does what the Watershed tool does, growing the watershed cell-by-cell using the Flow Direction raster, and at each step I had it export a map. I symbolized the cells by how "old" they were in the process, shading from light blue to dark blue. I also had it zoom the map out a tiny bit at each step, and I had the background basemaps fade out as the scale changed, revealing another basemap underneath. At the end of the process I had about 1,000 maps exported, then I just treated each map as a single frame in a 30 fps video. I used Adobe Premiere Pro to combine the maps, and I think Adobe Bridge does this as well. For the demonstration of sinks, I used Camtasia to manipulate multiple images and graphics, having each appear and fade out over a short time period. Camtasia is actually pretty easy to use for this kind of animation. It makes video creation feel like playing a video game.
Can I be one of your student? Holy smokes this format is so much better than what I am currently learning from! Thank you so much... Hours wasted watching other videos.
Thanks so much for the kind words! This was a good message to start the day with. I'm glad the videos are working for you and thank you for letting me know.
Very cool! Do you have any existing tutorials on how to do this in ArcGIS?
Thanks Kaitlyn! I'm sorry to say I do not. I did all this using custom ArcObjects code in ArcMap, and I haven't found equivalent tools in Pro yet that'll do it. Sorry I don't have any better answers!
Wow cool! I'm just thankful for the tutorials you do have. I'm working on a fish movement project (ironically on steams up in your neck of the woods) and they've been extremely helpful. Thanks!
That's good to hear Kaitlyn, and thanks for letting me know! This week is starting off on a good note now.
Have you had issues with running this Stream Order tool? I have tried to run this tool several times, and each time it gets stuck on 8% and does not progress. I have let it try to process for several hours, with no progress.
Hello J, My apologies for taking so long to respond! I am sorry to say I have not had this experience, so I am not sure what might be the problem! If you'd like me to take a look, please email me at jeffj@jennessent.com and we can try to figure it out.
Have you had any luck with this? My situation seem to be the same as yours, where during the stream order processing, it gets stuck at 8%.
Thank you very much for your explanations, thanks to your videos it's easy to understand these tools, greetings from Spain!
Thank you so much, and my apologies for taking so long to respond! I am glad the videos are useful for you, and thank you for taking the time to let me know.
Hello Jenness, any chance you've got an idea how I can fix the bug that does not enable adding field to my raster. It says the table or feature class corresponding to this view is read-only. However, the raster was only reclassified as you have done in this video. Any tip to go pass this is highly appreciated. Thanks in advance:)
Update: I figured I could only add field using the geoprocessing too. PS: i'm using Arcgis pro 3.1 version! Hope this helps anyone who encounters this too.
Hi Mxzoe, Hmm. Could be a couple of things. Is there any chance anything in the geodatabase is currently in an "Edit" mode? Do you see any messages anywhere that say "Pending Edits"? If so, then that usually prevents you from adding an attribute field. I'm not used to that problem giving you a "Read-Only" message, though. Alternatively, try exporting your raster into a new file geodatabase. Maybe the current format is giving ArcGIS Pro grief, or maybe the current workspace has some issue with it. Putting it into a new file geodatabase might do the trick. And when all else fails, save your Pro project, close it, and reopen it. That might clear out whatever is causing the problem. Hope this helps! Take care - Jeff
What if you symbolized the Stream_to_feature with an arrow? Will the accurately tell the direction the stream in flowing?
My goal is to show the direction the effluent from WWTP is flowing too
I am so sorry to take so long to respond to you on this question! It slipped past me somehow, but I do apologize for my rudeness. If it is not too late to help, then yes, the stream polylines do accurately point downstream. The "StreamToFeature" tool requires the flow direction raster to run, and I suspect it uses this flow direction raster to correctly orient the stream polylines. You can symbolize the streams with arrows by adding an arrowhead-shaped marker symbol to the flowlines.
Hi sir, thank you for this great tutorial! I am struggling trying to estimate individual home ranges for marsupial populations and I was wondering if you would suggest if I should set up the analysis tools differently, as individuals have very different points density (as few how them have been predated sooner, so I have actually less points for them). When I get the kernel density I have very different values for individuals (like for example 0 to 2167 for one, 0 to 42861 for another) and it becomes really difficult for me to decide how to select the contour lines because they obviously reflects different information and I cannot (can't I?) pick the same density level as a standard. I was thinking about approaching the data in percentage, so selecting contour intervals by 10% (so it is individual-specific) and then select the third line of the contour or similar. Would you recommend something like this or might you have any other advice? Thank you in advance!
Yeah, I hear exactly what you are saying (and my apologies for taking so long to respond!). There is a solution (described in link below), but this is definitely a weakness of the ArcGIS density tools. So far they haven't offered a way to automatically convert the density values to anything describing the relative volume under the kernel density surface, so it is very difficult to choose a contour level that will describe the same activity level or usage for different animals. I've gotten around this in ArcMap by writing custom ArcObjects code to make true "Proportion Under Surface" rasters, from which it is easy to generate contours at any percentage-of-use level. You can get a good approximation of this without using any special code, though. It's a little tedious but you can do it with a combination of ArcGIS Pro and Excel. The basic strategy is to first identify the total volume under the curve, and then determine what density levels correspond with the percentile levels you are interested in. I've written up some instructions with illustrations here: docs.google.com/document/d/12W_8TYul1P35h17mZNc7HYBsg2Irk5dm/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=113601434494391531497&rtpof=true&sd=true Hope this helps! Take care - Jeff