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Mastering  QGIS

You're reading from   Mastering QGIS Go beyond the basics and unleash the full power of QGIS with practical, step-by-step examples

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786460370
Length 486 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Tools
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Authors (5):
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John Van Hoesen, GISP John Van Hoesen, GISP
Author Profile Icon John Van Hoesen, GISP
John Van Hoesen, GISP
Kurt Menke, GISP Kurt Menke, GISP
Author Profile Icon Kurt Menke, GISP
Kurt Menke, GISP
Paolo Corti Paolo Corti
Author Profile Icon Paolo Corti
Paolo Corti
Richard Smith Jr., GISP Richard Smith Jr., GISP
Author Profile Icon Richard Smith Jr., GISP
Richard Smith Jr., GISP
Luigi Pirelli Luigi Pirelli
Author Profile Icon Luigi Pirelli
Luigi Pirelli
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. A Refreshing Look at QGIS FREE CHAPTER 2. Creating Spatial Databases 3. Styling Raster and Vector Data 4. Preparing Vector Data for Processing 5. Preparing Raster Data for Processing 6. Advanced Data Creation and Editing 7. Advanced Data Visualization 8. The Processing Toolbox 9. Automating Workflows with the Graphical Modeler 10. Creating QGIS Plugins with PyQGIS and Problem Solving 11. PyQGIS Scripting Index

Georeferencing imagery


Maps and aerial photographs in hard copy have a lot of valuable data on them. When this data needs to be brought into a GIS, they are digitally scanned to produce raster imagery. The output of a digital scanner has a coordinate system, but it is a local coordinate system created by the scanning process. The scanned imagery needs to be georeferenced to a real-world coordinate system before it can be used in a GIS.

Georeferencing is the process of transforming the coordinate reference system (CRS) of a raster dataset into a new coordinate reference system. Often, the process transforms the CRS of a spatial dataset from a local coordinate system to a real-world coordinate system. Regardless of the coordinate systems involved, we'll call the coordinate system of the raster to be georeferenced the source CRS and the coordinate system of the output the destination CRS. The transformation may involve shifting, rotating, skewing, or scaling the input raster from source coordinates...

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