wildwalks wrote:Shall we just build our own data set???
wildwalks wrote:We could use OSM as a base. I have a pretty good 30m DEM that for contours.
wildwalks wrote:I also have access too Google Earth Engine so we could generate some vegetation layers.
wildwalks wrote:I have played with it a bit and done sections of NSW like this. Check out the maps on Wildwalks iphone app.
wildwalks wrote:Maybe we do a Bushwalkers.com topo map set
Will take a fair bit of effort but could be fun
Matt
wildwalks wrote:Hi Colin
Happy to do an open source licence of some kind -- probably run with the same as OSM to keep life easy.
wildwalks wrote:"Google Earth Engine" is different from Google earth -- Googles naming convention is a bit confusing. It is a very powerful GIS platform that allows analysis of Landsat and other data. I have already done some training of NSW vegetation -- but still a fair bit of work to get it great -- it is good now. We can then export the regions in a shape file then make tweaks of the areas in a OSM type environment over time.
wildwalks wrote:I am trying to get some 2.5m sat data onto to system that would open up some great options.
Cliff detection is hard based on DEM alone - the results are messy. Maybe useful to highlight areas that need tracing then trace with Bing of Australian Geographic Image data might be the best way to go.
wildwalks wrote:Have a look at the hydro lines on the wildwalks app maps (different data set from the website). The hydro is derived from water drop analysis using the DEM. We can train this system a bit -- but generally it will give us creeks that we then need to improve based on field research.
wildwalks wrote:The DEM is a 1arc sec from the SRTM. But I have also done some splicing of data from Japan's DTM project to fix up the huge errors in the Grose Valley. Then done some work tweak the overall DEM to be closer to some known points. I do have the NSW LPI DEM as well but the licence is a bit limited as you point out -- I will need to look at it a bit more to see how we might be able to us it if at all.
wildwalks wrote:It is a huge amount of work -- but we could do one map sheet at a time -- working the handful of most popular areas first. We could take a snapshot of OSM and have our own trusted environment. Or work within OSM itself which could also get messy in it own way.
If there is a enough interest in doing this -- we could organise a get together in Syd to scope it out. I have a few other projects chewing up a lot of time at the moment so I will need delay the start of my time a bit.
wildwalks wrote:Sounding good Colin
Do you have info on the second NASA DEM - I have not heard of it.
wildwalks wrote:I would like to come up with a method for improving a base DEM based on user contributed altitude points and from tweaked contour lines - if you know of any software or methods todo this it would be handy.
wildwalks wrote:Lets grabs meal in a few weeks and scope this out more fully.
Maybe we could trial a small area and work out the effort involved - then organise workshops to focus on keys map areas.
tom_brennan wrote:It's disappointing we can't get the LPI DEM as a starting point. I've had a play with the SRTM DEM a couple of times, and it was pretty hopeless, at least for bushwalking. That said, it was the 3 arc second one - I haven't seen any 30m DEM available for Australia.
tom_brennan wrote:While the LPI contours/creeks are a bit rough in places, they are mostly good enough. That's the data that really can't be crowdsourced easily. Much of the other stuff is already in OSM. Cliffs can easily be added - I've done a lot of cliffs around Katoomba/Medlow Bath just off the aerials and knowledge.
tom_brennan wrote:I've looked at using GPS for altitude previously, and it's seemed pretty useless. I have a new GPS so I had a look at my log from the weekend. Some places look ok, other places it goes up 50m as I'm descending.
tom_brennan wrote:Realistically the contours should be all I need. Shading, and even watercourses should just be byproducts of the contours. That's why the contours need to be accurate. And while it's well known that the LPI maps do have issues, by and large they're pretty good.
tom_brennan wrote:For comparison, here's a nearby area. The first image is just the LPI contours, the second is the Contours Australia contours. It's pretty clear there's a marked difference in quality between the two. Many of the small gullies are obvious from the LPI contours, and the creeks all flow downhill.
tom_brennan wrote:The largely correct hydrology is the main area that the LPI data has over data derived from SRTM.
tom_brennan wrote:For me the bottom line is that LPI as it currently stands is "good enough". SRTM is not, and I think there's too much work to try and get it to a similar standard to LPI. Could be wrong!
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