All 2 entries tagged Mapping

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October 23, 2013

Tracking the data trail of 'Spatial Humanities'

Following an excellent introduction to GIS and corpus linguistics in the Spatial Humanities project through this week's working lunch (storifyed here) with guest speaker from Lancaster, Ian Gregory. I enjoyed the way he sharing the process of getting from the text to the maps that could tell a visual story. Mapping the Lakes: A Literary GISminisite for project will show you the results.

I know many in the room were keen to know what is actually likely to be involved. I felt that a visual recipe or workflow of how you bring the corpus linguistics and geography disciplines together in this way would be helpful in order to see at a simplistic level, what steps are involved. Having not yet done any of this myself, this is an observed workflow from what I understood from Ian's project. Doing this, I felt somewhat uneasy in simplifying what is evidently often an iterative and exploratory process.

Each of the steps identified is in itself a sub-process (or collection of) with decision points and often multiple routes and tools that could be applied. Some of these may be the topic of further exploration. I have pulled out one example with annotation/abstraction/analysis as an example. And this one can indeed be broken down yet further.

Spatial Humanities Workflow


October 02, 2013

Have you heard about? The Down Survey of Ireland

Writing about web page http://downsurvey.tcd.ie/

The website is the major output from a project funded by the Irish Research Council under its Research Fellowship Scheme, which ran from 1 October 2011 to 31 March 2013. First, surviving copies of county, barony and parish maps were identified and digitised. Then, they were combined with nineteenth century OS maps and twenty-first century satellite images (from google earth) to provide a multiple-scale seamless map of Ireland

Down Survey Map

These digitised maps provide the backbone of the project, and are a resource in themselves, but to my mind the most interesting thing is the data that has been overlaid onto them from sources such as the 1659 census and 1641 depositions (which have themselves been transcribed and digitised- http://1641.tcd.ie/). This, as in the example below, allows us to “see” land ownership by religion in 1641 and 1670:

Ownership by religion

Basically, it’s a great example of what Historical GIS can do.

And for the technophiles among you- the sections on Historical GIS (http://downsurvey.tcd.ie/historical-gis.html) contain an admirable amount of information both on the construction of the dataset and the user interface.

If you are interested in a similar project, get in touch with the Digital Humanities team and see how we can assist.


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