Yesterday I pinged a quick email to some folks from MapAction because they have 
decided to send some people to Paraguay in response to flooding there, but 
actually this is ongoing since April, so not a screaming urgent new disaster. 
And I think on the whole, because the area affected is large, it's not well 
suited to a big OpenStreetMapping response. For a more focussed mapping 
challenge see previous emails about mapping the Niger river in Mali. Plus the 
job in Gao of course:http://tasks.hotosm.org/job/43



But if you're interested in Paraguay...

The specific thing they're working on is digitising areas mapped as marshes 
from some russian raster maps. I'm not familiar with Mapstor, but I notice the 
croatian OSMers have worked with it. I'm guessing it's quite low scale mapping. 
Probably more trouble than it's worth to try to bring this into editors, but 
maybe someone feels differently. Anyway the MapAction guys are making good 
progress with digitising it (they showed me a map of marshes half-finished) 

Floods are mostly hitting the two regions highlighted here: 
http://reliefweb.int/disaster/fl-2012-000056-pry  They sent me another map, but 
it's just highlighting those same two big regions. That's here on the map: 
http://osm.org/go/M3di5  The bing imagery coverage analyser 
http://bit.ly/Oc1B0o  isn't well filled-in, but look there's a bit more hi-res 
imagery appeared making the boundary way out-of-date, but still funny strips 
missing. As we see throughout the world, there's a fair amount road mapping to 
be done in rural Paraguay (the little airports tend to have major looking dirt 
tracks leading to them for example), and loads of river mapping which works 
well even using Landsat.


Harry


----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Matt Sims
Sent: Monday, 2 July 2012, 17:16
Subject: RE: OSM meet-up + paraguay floods

Hi Harry and thanks Andy,

Having problems with emails, so you might get this again.

As Andy has mentioned we have a team on their way to Paraguay, arriving 
shortly. The team leader, Philip Moore, has asked if we could get create some 
vectors from the Russian topo maps of the marsh areas, as he has found them 
useful in the past to predicted potential areas of flood, assuming they are not 
under water already. If your or anyone else would like to look at this, this 
would be great.

Affected area: Attached is a map of Paraguay with the known flood extents. The 
floods have been ongoing since April. The main affected Departmentos are 
Borqueron and Presidente Hayes, but the El Chaco region also includes Alto 
Paraguay. Flooding has also been reported around Concepcion. The insert map 
shows population density.

The second map shows the marshes (dark blue) that Karl and Ming have managed to 
digitalise so far within the affected area. I?m told the Mapstor sheets left 
area - sheets are xf21_3 and xg21_1.

Settlement data would also be useful. We have some quite good sets already but 
anything that OSM can find (or anything else) would be a useful addition.

Many thanks,

Matt

From: Andy Kervell 
Sent: 02 July 2012 14:18
To: Harry Wood; Ian Holt (Google)
Subject: RE: OSM meet-up + paraguay floods

Hi Harry

Great to hear from you, and good to catch up at the GeoDrinks the other month.  
I have forwarded on your offer of assistance to Matt Sims in MapAction who is 
coordinating Support Base today for Paraguay.  We do have a possible 
requirement to capture areas of marsh as vectors, which your team may be able 
to help with and update OSM at the same time?

I will let Matt coordinate/request this though (cc'ed) so I don't ask for 
conflicting data.  A good source for this data could be from U.S. National 
Imagery and Mapping Agency maps available on this website:

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/paraguay.html

The three scales of topo mapping 1:1mill, 1:250k and 1:100k on this site all 
have marsh areas indicated and could be of use to the deployable team as 
vectors.

Anyway hopefully Matt will be in touch.

Speak soon

Andy Kervell


_______________________________________________
HOT mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/hot

Reply via email to