Difference between revisions of "Georeferencing Raster Imagery in SAGA GIS"

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# Open Google Earth, and zoom to the area of interest of your choice. for this tutorial, we used the area around the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC, USA, but any location will suffice.
 
# Open Google Earth, and zoom to the area of interest of your choice. for this tutorial, we used the area around the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC, USA, but any location will suffice.
 
#In the '''Layers''' menu in the bottom left corner of your screen, uncheck all layers. Google earth renders terrain in 3d, and the perspective this creates can distort your exported imagery (See Figure 2).
 
#In the '''Layers''' menu in the bottom left corner of your screen, uncheck all layers. Google earth renders terrain in 3d, and the perspective this creates can distort your exported imagery (See Figure 2).
[[File:LAYERSSAGA.PNG|thumb|center|Figure 2: Layers Menu of Google Earth]]
+
##[[File:LAYERSSAGA.PNG|thumb|center|Figure 2: Layers Menu of Google Earth]]
 
#Ensure that your imagery is north-facing and vertically-angled by selecting '''View -> Reset -> Tilt and Compass''' in the menu bar at the top of the screen (See Figure 3)
 
#Ensure that your imagery is north-facing and vertically-angled by selecting '''View -> Reset -> Tilt and Compass''' in the menu bar at the top of the screen (See Figure 3)
[[File:TIltcompass.PNG|thumb|center|Figure 3: Resetting the Angle and Rotation of Google Earth]]
+
##[[File:TIltcompass.PNG|thumb|center|Figure 3: Resetting the Angle and Rotation of Google Earth]]
 
# Under '''Tools -> Options''', ensure that under '''Show Lat/Long, Universal Transverse Mercator''' is selected.
 
# Under '''Tools -> Options''', ensure that under '''Show Lat/Long, Universal Transverse Mercator''' is selected.
 
#Using the '''Add Placemark''' tool (See Figure 4), add four or more placemarks to your screen. make note of their coordinates and label them numerically. change their icon to one that is more precise, location-wise.
 
#Using the '''Add Placemark''' tool (See Figure 4), add four or more placemarks to your screen. make note of their coordinates and label them numerically. change their icon to one that is more precise, location-wise.
[[File:Placemarks.PNG|thumb|center|Figure 4: Adding Placemarks in Google Earth]]
+
##[[File:Placemarks.PNG|thumb|center|Figure 4: Adding Placemarks in Google Earth]]
 
# Save your image by selecting '''File -> Save -> Save Image''' in the menu bar at the top of the screen. then, press the '''Save Image''' Button (See Figure 5).
 
# Save your image by selecting '''File -> Save -> Save Image''' in the menu bar at the top of the screen. then, press the '''Save Image''' Button (See Figure 5).
[[File:Saveimage.PNG|thumb|center|Figure 5: Saving Your Image]]
+
##[[File:Saveimage.PNG|thumb|center|Figure 5: Saving Your Image]]
 
   
 
===Print Map===
 
===Print Map===

Revision as of 04:45, 20 December 2017

Introduction

Georeferencing

Raster data such as aerial photographs, toposheets, and print maps normally do not contain any spatial reference information. Other times, the image does not properly align with other data, and requires transformation in order to be used in conjunction with existing data. Georeferencing rasters is a means of accomplishing both courses of action, and is a common and important task in the field of geospatial analysis (especially when working with historical imagery or maps). ESRI defines Georeferencing as:

Aligning geographic data to a known coordinate system so it can be viewed, queried, and analyzed with other geographic data. Georeferencing may involve shifting, rotating, scaling, skewing, and in some cases warping, rubber sheeting, or orthorectifying the data. citation

This tutorial contains an introduction to the process of georeferencing imagery in the SAGA GIS software, as well as information on the fundamentals of the georeferencing process.

SAGA GIS

SAGAGIS.png

For the following tutorial, System for Automated Geoscientific Analyses, or SAGA GIS software will be used. SAGA GIS is a free, open-source geographic information system program, originally developed by a team from the Department of Physical Geography in the University of Gottingen, Germany. It is available for Windows, Linux, and FreeBSD operating systems. When the SAGA GIS team began development in 2001, the purpose of the software was aligned with the needs of the development team, such as the analysis of raster imagery, with a focus on digital elevation models (DEM). Over the years, however, the software has broadened in scope, as it has seen many feature contributions from it's world-wide user community (http://saga-gis.sourceforge.net/en/).

Documentation for the SAGA GIS tool library can be found in the SAGA-GIS Tool Library Documentation

Installation Instructions

The latest version of SAGA GIS can be downloaded on the SAGA GIS Sourceforge page. At the time of writing, the latest version of SAGA GIS is 6.1.0.

Data Acquisition

For the following tutorials, you will need to acquire imagery from two sources: Satelite imagery from Google Earth, and a PDF toposheet or scanned print map.

Google Earth

For this tutorial, we will be using imagery from google earth. to obtain this imagery, perform the following steps.

  1. ensure that you have downloaded and installed Google Earth on your computer
  2. Open Google Earth, and zoom to the area of interest of your choice. for this tutorial, we used the area around the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC, USA, but any location will suffice.
  3. In the Layers menu in the bottom left corner of your screen, uncheck all layers. Google earth renders terrain in 3d, and the perspective this creates can distort your exported imagery (See Figure 2).
    1. Figure 2: Layers Menu of Google Earth
  4. Ensure that your imagery is north-facing and vertically-angled by selecting View -> Reset -> Tilt and Compass in the menu bar at the top of the screen (See Figure 3)
    1. Figure 3: Resetting the Angle and Rotation of Google Earth
  5. Under Tools -> Options, ensure that under Show Lat/Long, Universal Transverse Mercator is selected.
  6. Using the Add Placemark tool (See Figure 4), add four or more placemarks to your screen. make note of their coordinates and label them numerically. change their icon to one that is more precise, location-wise.
    1. Figure 4: Adding Placemarks in Google Earth
  7. Save your image by selecting File -> Save -> Save Image in the menu bar at the top of the screen. then, press the Save Image Button (See Figure 5).
    1. Figure 5: Saving Your Image

Print Map

For this tutorial, we will be using a scan of a historical watershed boundary map of Alberta, made available through the Open Government License. the following pre-tutorial steps must be performed:

  1. Download the file from the following link. you can use any other PDF or raster map as long as it contains some sort of absolute location information.
  2. If necessary, convert the pdf to a raster TIF file. many free websites exist to perform this conversion, such as PDFaid.com. Ensure that the conversion is performed at a high enough DPI that all text is legible. for this tutorial, we chose 150 DPI.
  3. Save the converted file in a working directory of your choice.

Data Acquisition

Tutorial

Georeferencing

Rectification

Digitization