Browse by Tags

All Tags » Symbology » ArcGIS Methods » Map Data   (RSS)

Topo Thumb

The Mapping Center Team is pleased to announce some recent updates that have been incorporated into the World Topographic Map available on ArcGIS Online.

If you are not familiar with this online, multi-scale basemap, you might want to take a minute to read the Mapping Center blog post announcing it in July of 2009.

As mentioned in that blog, this basemap has been envisioned as a community-wide effort, and a community-wide effort it has been! Not only does the map use best available data from many public agencies, it also features large scale (1:9,000, 1:4000, 1:2,000, and 1:1,000) detailed maps using GIS data from a handful of cities. Read More...

We got a good question on Ask a Cartographer this morning.  The gist of the question was how to go about symbolizing street centerlines so they could be drawn using line symbol widths that reflected, at scale, the actual width of the road (as shown in the image to the left). This is a good cartographic solution because varying the line width adds hierarchy to the roads -otherwise it would be hard for you map reader to know which are wider or more heavily used. Read More...

If you're making a map that is either a large format print map or a map that will be served via ArcGIS Server, squeezing every bit of wasted time out of drawing performance is critical. Don't get tired of sitting there drinking extra cups of coffee watching the word "Drawing", all your layer names, and that little blue globe. If you're finding it stressful to explain when updates will be coming, or the timing for caching the map you are serving, or your map services generate complaints about poor performance, then try the two tips in this entry. Read More...

In the United States, the Public Land Survey System (PLSS) is a way of subdividing land. The USGS topographic map symbols for displaying PLSS data are an excellent way to symbolize PLSS data on not only topographic maps, but because the topographic symbols are  so well recognized, the same symbols can be used on many other kinds of maps. In the image to the left, the "plus" marker symbol shows where a found corner is located, however, if no corner has been found, then no marker should be shown, leaving a gap that signifies the doubtful location of the corner. Next we will describe how to use cartographic representations to symbolize township, range, or section lines to leave a gap at the corners, allowing corners to be added (as point features) or gaps to be shown. Read More...