7 datasets found
  1. d

    GIS2DJI: GIS file to DJI Pilot kml conversion tool

    • search.dataone.org
    • borealisdata.ca
    Updated Feb 24, 2024
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    Cadieux, Nicolas (2024). GIS2DJI: GIS file to DJI Pilot kml conversion tool [Dataset]. https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256%3Ad201e0d38014f27dece7af97f02f913e6873df90ffad67aceea4a221ef02d76f
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 24, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Borealis
    Authors
    Cadieux, Nicolas
    Description

    GIS2DJI is a Python 3 program created to exports GIS files to a simple kml compatible with DJI pilot. The software is provided with a GUI. GIS2DJI has been tested with the following file formats: gpkg, shp, mif, tab, geojson, gml, kml and kmz. GIS_2_DJI will scan every file, every layer and every geometry collection (ie: MultiPoints) and create one output kml or kmz for each object found. It will import points, lines and polygons, and converted each object into a compatible DJI kml file. Lines and polygons will be exported as kml files. Points will be converted as PseudoPoints.kml. A PseudoPoints fools DJI to import a point as it thinks it's a line with 0 length. This allows you to import points in mapping missions. Points will also be exported as Point.kmz because PseudoPoints are not visible in a GIS or in Google Earth. The .kmz file format should make points compatible with some DJI mission software.

  2. B

    Shapefile to DJI Pilot KML conversion tool

    • borealisdata.ca
    • search.dataone.org
    Updated Jan 30, 2023
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    Nicolas Cadieux (2023). Shapefile to DJI Pilot KML conversion tool [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5683/SP3/W1QMQ9
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    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Jan 30, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Borealis
    Authors
    Nicolas Cadieux
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This Python script (Shape2DJI_Pilot_KML.py) will scan a directory, find all the ESRI shapefiles (.shp), reproject to EPSG 4326 (geographic coordinate system WGS84 ellipsoid), create an output directory and make a new Keyhole Markup Language (.kml) file for every line or polygon found in the files. These new *.kml files are compatible with DJI Pilot 2 on the Smart Controller (e.g., for M300 RTK). The *.kml files created directly by ArcGIS or QGIS are not currently compatible with DJI Pilot.

  3. Sentinel-2 UTM Tiling Grid (ESA)

    • catalogue.eatlas.org.au
    • researchdata.edu.au
    Updated Feb 1, 2016
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    Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) (2016). Sentinel-2 UTM Tiling Grid (ESA) [Dataset]. https://catalogue.eatlas.org.au/geonetwork/srv/api/records/f7468d15-12be-4e3f-a246-b2882a324f59
    Explore at:
    www:link-1.0-http--related, www:link-1.0-http--downloaddata, ogc:wms-1.1.1-http-get-mapAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 1, 2016
    Dataset provided by
    Australian Institute Of Marine Sciencehttp://www.aims.gov.au/
    Area covered
    Description

    This dataset shows the tiling grid and their IDs for Sentinel 2 satellite imagery. The tiling grid IDs are useful for selecting imagery of an area of interest.

    Sentinel 2 is an Earth observation satellite developed and operated by the European Space Agency (ESA). Its imagery has 13 bands in the visible, near infrared and short wave infrared part of the spectrum. It has a spatial resolution of 10 m, 20 m and 60 m depending on the spectral band.

    Sentinel-2 has a 290 km field of view when capturing its imagery. This imagery is then projected on to a UTM grid and made available publicly on 100x100 km2 tiles. Each tile has a unique ID. This ID scheme allows all imagery for a given tile to be located.

    Provenance:

    The ESA make the tiling grid available as a KML file (see links). We were, however, unable to convert this KML into a shapefile for deployment on the eAtlas. The shapefile used for this layer was sourced from the Git repository developed by Justin Meyers (https://github.com/justinelliotmeyers/Sentinel-2-Shapefile-Index).

    Why is this dataset in the eAtlas?:

    Sentinel 2 imagery is very useful for the studying and mapping of reef systems. Selecting imagery for study often requires knowing what the tile grid IDs are for the area of interest. This dataset is intended as a reference layer. The eAtlas is not a custodian of this dataset and copies of the data should be obtained from the original sources.

    Data Dictionary:

    • Name: UTM code associated with each tile. For example 55KDV
  4. Geographical and geological GIS boundaries of the Tibetan Plateau and...

    • zenodo.org
    • explore.openaire.eu
    Updated Apr 12, 2022
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    Jie Liu; Jie Liu; Guang-Fu Zhu; Guang-Fu Zhu (2022). Geographical and geological GIS boundaries of the Tibetan Plateau and adjacent mountain regions [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6432940
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 12, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    Zenodohttp://zenodo.org/
    Authors
    Jie Liu; Jie Liu; Guang-Fu Zhu; Guang-Fu Zhu
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Tibetan Plateau
    Description

    Introduction

    Geographical scale, in terms of spatial extent, provide a basis for other branches of science. This dataset contains newly proposed geographical and geological GIS boundaries for the Pan-Tibetan Highlands (new proposed name for the High Mountain Asia), based on geological and geomorphological features. This region comprises the Tibetan Plateau and three adjacent mountain regions: the Himalaya, Hengduan Mountains and Mountains of Central Asia, and boundaries are also given for each subregion individually. The dataset will benefit quantitative spatial analysis by providing a well-defined geographical scale for other branches of research, aiding cross-disciplinary comparisons and synthesis, as well as reproducibility of research results.

    The dataset comprises three subsets, and we provide three data formats (.shp, .geojson and .kmz) for each of them. Shapefile format (.shp) was generated in ArcGIS Pro, and the other two were converted from shapefile, the conversion steps refer to 'Data processing' section below. The following is a description of the three subsets:

    (1) The GIS boundaries we newly defined of the Pan-Tibetan Highlands and its four constituent sub-regions, i.e. the Tibetan Plateau, Himalaya, Hengduan Mountains and the Mountains of Central Asia. All files are placed in the "Pan-Tibetan Highlands (Liu et al._2022)" folder.

    (2) We also provide GIS boundaries that were applied by other studies (cited in Fig. 3 of our work) in the folder "Tibetan Plateau and adjacent mountains (Others’ definitions)". If these data is used, please cite the relevent paper accrodingly. In addition, it is worthy to note that the GIS boundaries of Hengduan Mountains (Li et al. 1987a) and Mountains of Central Asia (Foggin et al. 2021) were newly generated in our study using Georeferencing toolbox in ArcGIS Pro.

    (3) Geological assemblages and characters of the Pan-Tibetan Highlands, including Cratons and micro-continental blocks (Fig. S1), plus sutures, faults and thrusts (Fig. 4), are placed in the "Pan-Tibetan Highlands (geological files)" folder.

    Note: High Mountain Asia: The name ‘High Mountain Asia’ is the only direct synonym of Pan-Tibetan Highlands, but this term is both grammatically awkward and somewhat misleading, and hence the term ‘Pan-Tibetan Highlands’ is here proposed to replace it. Third Pole: The first use of the term ‘Third Pole’ was in reference to the Himalaya by Kurz & Montandon (1933), but the usage was subsequently broadened to the Tibetan Plateau or the whole of the Pan-Tibetan Highlands. The mainstream scientific literature refer the ‘Third Pole’ to the region encompassing the Tibetan Plateau, Himalaya, Hengduan Mountains, Karakoram, Hindu Kush and Pamir. This definition was surpported by geological strcture (Main Pamir Thrust) in the western part, and generally overlaps with the ‘Tibetan Plateau’ sensu lato defined by some previous studies, but is more specific.

    More discussion and reference about names please refer to the paper. The figures (Figs. 3, 4, S1) mentioned above were attached in the end of this document.

    Data processing

    We provide three data formats. Conversion of shapefile data to kmz format was done in ArcGIS Pro. We used the Layer to KML tool in Conversion Toolbox to convert the shapefile to kmz format. Conversion of shapefile data to geojson format was done in R. We read the data using the shapefile function of the raster package, and wrote it as a geojson file using the geojson_write function in the geojsonio package.

    Version

    Version 2022.1.

    Acknowledgements

    This study was supported by the Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences (XDB31010000), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (41971071), the Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences, CAS (ZDBS-LY-7001). We are grateful to our coauthors insightful discussion and comments. We also want to thank professors Jed Kaplan, Yin An, Dai Erfu, Zhang Guoqing, Peter Cawood, Tobias Bolch and Marc Foggin for suggestions and providing GIS files.

    Citation

    Liu, J., Milne, R. I., Zhu, G. F., Spicer, R. A., Wambulwa, M. C., Wu, Z. Y., Li, D. Z. (2022). Name and scale matters: Clarifying the geography of Tibetan Plateau and adjacent mountain regions. Global and Planetary Change, In revision

    Jie Liu & Guangfu Zhu. (2022). Geographical and geological GIS boundaries of the Tibetan Plateau and adjacent mountain regions (Version 2022.1). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6432940

    Contacts

    Dr. Jie LIU: E-mail: liujie@mail.kib.ac.cn;

    Mr. Guangfu ZHU: zhuguangfu@mail.kib.ac.cn

    Institution: Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences

    Address: 132# Lanhei Road, Heilongtan, Kunming 650201, Yunnan, China

    Copyright

    This dataset is available under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0).

  5. India Railways (OpenStreetMap Export)

    • data.humdata.org
    geojson, geopackage +2
    Updated Feb 7, 2025
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    Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team (HOT) (2025). India Railways (OpenStreetMap Export) [Dataset]. https://data.humdata.org/dataset/hotosm_ind_railways
    Explore at:
    kml(8368062), geopackage(13345958), geopackage(343539), shp(13326524), shp(404406), geojson(8599732), kml(286962), geojson(289065)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 7, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team
    OpenStreetMap//www.openstreetmap.org/
    License

    Open Database License (ODbL) v1.0https://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This theme includes all OpenStreetMap features in this area matching ( Learn what tags means here ) :

    tags['railway'] IN ('rail','station')

    Features may have these attributes:

    This dataset is one of many "https://data.humdata.org/organization/hot">OpenStreetMap exports on HDX. See the Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team website for more information.

  6. Switzerland Railways (OpenStreetMap Export)

    • data.humdata.org
    geojson, geopackage +2
    Updated Mar 20, 2025
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    Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team (HOT) (2025). Switzerland Railways (OpenStreetMap Export) [Dataset]. https://data.humdata.org/dataset/hotosm_che_railways
    Explore at:
    shp(4472380), geopackage(4486603), geojson(2683191), shp(59145), geopackage(52533), kml(42553), geojson(41416), kml(2624476)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 20, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team
    OpenStreetMap//www.openstreetmap.org/
    License

    Open Database License (ODbL) v1.0https://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Switzerland
    Description

    This theme includes all OpenStreetMap features in this area matching ( Learn what tags means here ) :

    tags['railway'] IN ('rail','station')

    Features may have these attributes:

    This dataset is one of many "https://data.humdata.org/organization/hot">OpenStreetMap exports on HDX. See the Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team website for more information.

  7. Digital Geologic-GIS Map of Virgin Islands National Park, Virgin Islands...

    • catalog.data.gov
    • datasets.ai
    • +2more
    Updated Jun 5, 2024
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    National Park Service (2024). Digital Geologic-GIS Map of Virgin Islands National Park, Virgin Islands (NPS, GRD, GRI, VIIS, VIIS digital map) adapted from a U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper map by Rankin (2002) [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/digital-geologic-gis-map-of-virgin-islands-national-park-virgin-islands-nps-grd-gri-viis-v
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 5, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    National Park Servicehttp://www.nps.gov/
    Area covered
    U.S. Virgin Islands
    Description

    The Unpublished Digital Geologic-GIS Map of Virgin Islands National Park, Virgin Islands is composed of GIS data layers and GIS tables in a 10.1 file geodatabase (viis_geology.gdb), a 10.1 ArcMap (.mxd) map document (viis_geology.mxd), individual 10.1 layer (.lyr) files for each GIS data layer, an ancillary map information document (viis_geology.pdf) which contains source map unit descriptions, as well as other source map text, figures and tables, metadata in FGDC text (.txt) and FAQ (.pdf) formats, and a GIS readme file (viis_geology_gis_readme.pdf). Please read the viis_geology_gis_readme.pdf for information pertaining to the proper extraction of the file geodatabase and other map files. To request GIS data in ESRI 10.1 shapefile format contact Stephanie O'Meara (stephanie.omeara@colostate.edu; see contact information below). The data is also available as a 2.2 KMZ/KML file for use in Google Earth, however, this format version of the map is limited in data layers presented and in access to GRI ancillary table information. Google Earth software is available for free at: http://www.google.com/earth/index.html. Users are encouraged to only use the Google Earth data for basic visualization, and to use the GIS data for any type of data analysis or investigation. The data were completed as a component of the Geologic Resources Inventory (GRI) program, a National Park Service (NPS) Inventory and Monitoring (I&M) Division funded program that is administered by the NPS Geologic Resources Division (GRD). Source geologic maps and data used to complete this GRI digital dataset were provided by the following: U.S. Geological Survey. Detailed information concerning the sources used and their contribution the GRI product are listed in the Source Citation section(s) of this metadata record (viis_geology_metadata.txt or viis_geology_metadata_faq.pdf). Users of this data are cautioned about the locational accuracy of features within this dataset. Based on the source map scale of 1:24,000 and United States National Map Accuracy Standards features are within (horizontally) 12.2 meters or 40 feet of their actual location as presented by this dataset. Users of this data should thus not assume the location of features is exactly where they are portrayed in Google Earth, ArcGIS or other software used to display this dataset. All GIS and ancillary tables were produced as per the NPS GRI Geology-GIS Geodatabase Data Model v. 2.3. (available at: https://www.nps.gov/articles/gri-geodatabase-model.htm). The GIS data projection is NAD83, UTM Zone 20N, however, for the KML/KMZ format the data is projected upon export to WGS84 Geographic, the native coordinate system used by Google Earth. The data is within the area of interest of Virgin Islands National Park.

  8. Not seeing a result you expected?
    Learn how you can add new datasets to our index.

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Cadieux, Nicolas (2024). GIS2DJI: GIS file to DJI Pilot kml conversion tool [Dataset]. https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256%3Ad201e0d38014f27dece7af97f02f913e6873df90ffad67aceea4a221ef02d76f

GIS2DJI: GIS file to DJI Pilot kml conversion tool

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Feb 24, 2024
Dataset provided by
Borealis
Authors
Cadieux, Nicolas
Description

GIS2DJI is a Python 3 program created to exports GIS files to a simple kml compatible with DJI pilot. The software is provided with a GUI. GIS2DJI has been tested with the following file formats: gpkg, shp, mif, tab, geojson, gml, kml and kmz. GIS_2_DJI will scan every file, every layer and every geometry collection (ie: MultiPoints) and create one output kml or kmz for each object found. It will import points, lines and polygons, and converted each object into a compatible DJI kml file. Lines and polygons will be exported as kml files. Points will be converted as PseudoPoints.kml. A PseudoPoints fools DJI to import a point as it thinks it's a line with 0 length. This allows you to import points in mapping missions. Points will also be exported as Point.kmz because PseudoPoints are not visible in a GIS or in Google Earth. The .kmz file format should make points compatible with some DJI mission software.

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