Data quality of the river network in Switzerland: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen
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[[Bild:WaterWayMap Switzerland Screenshot.jpg|500px||right|link=https://waterwaymap.org/#map=7.74/46.645/8.124]] | [[Bild:WaterWayMap Switzerland Screenshot.jpg|500px||right|link=https://waterwaymap.org/#map=7.74/46.645/8.124]] | ||
Water is essential to life for us, and our ecosystems and water bodies can be sensitive to drought. Our landscape is criss-crossed by rivers that form river systems and water networks. | Water is essential to life for us, and our ecosystems and water bodies can be sensitive to drought. Our landscape is criss-crossed by rivers that form river systems and water networks. This is a small research project (2025) by Prof. Stefan Keller, who uses WaterWayMap to study the water network of Switzerland and the data quality of OpenStreetMap. | ||
[https://www. | === What is WaterWayMap? === | ||
[https://www.waterwaymap.org WaterWayMap] by Amanda McCann is an interactive map with a data set that shows the connections between rivers and waterways based on the unique OpenStreetMap data. It offers a topological view that shows how watercourses are connected. It can display the lengths of the waterways on the one hand, and on the other hand, it can group the waterways according to their confluence. This provides a better understanding of catchment areas and watersheds. WaterWayMaps.org, like OpenStreetMap, is open source. | |||
WaterWayMap serves several purposes: | |||
* It helps cartographers to find and correct errors in the OpenStreetMap data. | * It helps cartographers to find and correct errors in the OpenStreetMap data. | ||
* It provides researchers and water managers with a useful tool for analysing river systems. | * It provides researchers and water managers with a useful tool for analysing river systems. | ||
* It serves as a visualisation for anyone interested in geography and hydrology. | * It serves as a visualisation for anyone interested in geography and hydrology. | ||
A | === What makes river networks special? === | ||
Almost all geospatial analysis tasks using OpenStreetMap require the data to be post-processed. Many related graph processing algorithms - such as breath first search or strahler order - require, for example, zero cycles in a directed graph. If you don't remove them all, the algorithms won't work. A tiny little mistagged path somewhere can cut off half a continent. That's a unique problem. | |||
Now OpenStreetMap is "99.999% accurate, but not 100%" (quoting Amanda McCann in an interview [https://blog.opencagedata.com/post/openstreetmap-interview-waterwaymap interview 2025-01]). The visualization of the WaterWayMap helps and encourages users to continue to clean up OpenStreetMap. | |||
Version vom 26. Januar 2025, 23:06 Uhr
Water is essential to life for us, and our ecosystems and water bodies can be sensitive to drought. Our landscape is criss-crossed by rivers that form river systems and water networks. This is a small research project (2025) by Prof. Stefan Keller, who uses WaterWayMap to study the water network of Switzerland and the data quality of OpenStreetMap.
What is WaterWayMap?
WaterWayMap by Amanda McCann is an interactive map with a data set that shows the connections between rivers and waterways based on the unique OpenStreetMap data. It offers a topological view that shows how watercourses are connected. It can display the lengths of the waterways on the one hand, and on the other hand, it can group the waterways according to their confluence. This provides a better understanding of catchment areas and watersheds. WaterWayMaps.org, like OpenStreetMap, is open source.
WaterWayMap serves several purposes:
- It helps cartographers to find and correct errors in the OpenStreetMap data.
- It provides researchers and water managers with a useful tool for analysing river systems.
- It serves as a visualisation for anyone interested in geography and hydrology.
What makes river networks special?
Almost all geospatial analysis tasks using OpenStreetMap require the data to be post-processed. Many related graph processing algorithms - such as breath first search or strahler order - require, for example, zero cycles in a directed graph. If you don't remove them all, the algorithms won't work. A tiny little mistagged path somewhere can cut off half a continent. That's a unique problem.
Now OpenStreetMap is "99.999% accurate, but not 100%" (quoting Amanda McCann in an interview interview 2025-01). The visualization of the WaterWayMap helps and encourages users to continue to clean up OpenStreetMap.