¸Ô±¾ÊÓƵ

The Department of Geography curriculum uses Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and associated software extensively for research and learning.

Student Summer Research

Selected GEOG245 Projects

GIS Coursework

CORE103S - Remote Sensing of the Environment
GEOG245 - Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
GEOG340 - GIS and Society
GEOG346 - Advanced GIS
GEOG347 - Satellite Image Analysis

Equipment

  • 18 Personal computers
  • 1 Instructor's station
  • 1 Black/white laser printer
  • 1 Color laser printer

Software

  • Microsoft Office Suite
  • SPSS (IBM SPSS Statistics) 29
  • ArcGIS 10.8.1 (Desktop Advanced install)
  • ArcGIS Pro 3.0
  • MaxQDA 2024
  • QGIS 3.32
  • R i386
  • RStudio
  • Adobe Creative Suite

 

(faculty and staff please contact mkong@colgate.edu)

Additional Resources

Originally developed for GEOG245: Geographic Information Systems, Department of Geography, ¸Ô±¾ÊÓƵ, Hamilton, New York

 

International Data Clearinghouses

National Data Clearinghouses

  • - Orthophoto, elevation, digital raster graphic, and many more
  • - Several types of data
  • - By U.S. state. Includes links to attribute data as well as geospatial data
  • - Historical U.S. Census data (1790-2000)
  • - From ESRI Census Bureau Maps - U.S.
  •  - Includes up-to-date boundary files
  • - CDC, useful for public health data and maps. Also contains some tutorials and software.

Regional and Local Area

By Agency

International data

  •  - List of many external, international GIS data sources.

Useful Links

  •  - Links to many useful GIS data sites
  •  - Short Java script method
  •  -  includes almost a billion records from U.S. censuses from 1790 to the present and over a billion records from the international censuses of over 100 countries
  • University Consortium for Geographic Information Science (): digital body of knowledge (textbook) for higher education
  • (pdf file)

 

Images and Art Work

  •  - Access given through ¸Ô±¾ÊÓƵ Libraries

How do I network to the geography server?
Once you've been given access, you can download these instructions (PDF).

How long is saved work available on lab computers/servers?
As a best practice, back up files to personal media or network storage — especially at the end of every term.

As a rule of thumb:

  • Ho 203 and Ho 213 computer hard drives are wiped before the beginning of every term.
  • Read-and-write access for the geography server (GEOGSV02) will be given for only the term of the course it is taught.
  • Read-only access may be given for up to a year, depending on the course. All student data will be removed from the server a year after the course requiring the space began.
  • Special permissions may be granted for longer periods of time. Please consult with faculty as soon as possible.
  • Data is safe for these terms unless something potentially damaging occurs (i.e. mechanical failure, physical upgrade, virus infestation, abuse of resource, etc.).
  • Access to ArcGIS Online will be for as long as the student email is retained.  Thereafter, no support will be provided.

This policy may be revisited at any time and may change without notice. Drafted 10/15/2014, updated 01/17/

 

How do I fix printing errors?
Most errors are due to font, formatting, or image incompatibility with printers.

Try changing the font for the entire document to Arial or Times New Roman (or other, older, commonly used computer fonts). For anything with complicated formatting, print to a PDF and then printing the PDF. Download instructions for this.

What is an *.e00 file?
A *.e00 file is an ESRI Interchange file. This is a coverage that has been compressed in a proprietary ESRI format.

How do I import a *.e00 file in ArcGIS 10.x?

.

What's this exclamation point next to my file mean?
If there's a red exclamation point to the right of the filename when you open up your map document (*. aprx), that means ArcPro can't find your data files.

How do I get rid of the exclamation point?

  • Right-mouse click on the file name that has the exclamation point. You'll get a long menu.
  • Go to the bottom of the menu and click 'Properties.' A big window will pop up.
  • Click on the Source tab. There will be an inset area named 'Data Source' which gives you a lot of information about your data file, including where the file was the last time you saved your map document (*. aprx).
  • Click the small button on the bottom left of the window called 'Set Data Source.' Another window will pop up that will allow you to navigate to the current location of your data file. (If the data is not on the disk or computer that you are currently working on, go back to the last computer or disk you were working on and get the data from there. More information on this is under the FAQ heading "How do I avoid getting the exclamation point?")
  • After finding your data file, click Add and that window will disappear.
  • Click OK on the Properties window. The exclamation point should go away and your data file should appear.

How do I avoid getting the exclamation point?
Always make sure that you save all data files associated with the map document (*.aprx). Don't move any of your data files around. Most GIS information is comprised of many files and every file is important so that the data is viewed properly, and this varies from file type to file type. The only way to know which files are associated together is to look at the names — almost all files that are associated have the same name, just with different suffixes. For example, in a shapefile, there are a minimum of 3 files, and up to 8 files, that comprise the working data — so while you're looking at "hamilton.shp" — hamilton.shx, hamilton.dbf, hamilton.shb, hamilton.prj, and a bunch of other files are working to make that view possible. Coverages are very complicated, and they come in their own folders. They add another folder — 'info' — to any place they're located. Or, if there's already an info folder, they'll add data to that folder. Tiff files tend to come with the image, plus projection files.

 (courtesy of Peggy Minnis, Pace University)

A simple interface (by Mapbox) to see how geojson formatted data is created, can export out results.  geojson.io

Simple online mapping: felt.com

  Note: at this time, you will need to be invited to join ¸Ô±¾ÊÓƵ's ArcGIS Online organization.  If you wish to be added, please contact mkong@colgate.edu

 

 

 

 

NOTE: Access to ArcGIS Online will be for as long as the student email is retained.  No support will be provided thereafter.