Re: [talk-au] National Park Marine Park boundaries

2008-12-18 Thread Hugh Barnes
On Thu, 18 Dec 2008 19:41:59 +1100
Matt White mattwh...@iinet.com.au wrote:


 I have a sneaking suspicion that National Parks and State Forests are 
 defined by acts of Parliament at the federal and state levels 
 respectively, so the co-ord are probably in Hansard somewhere...
 

Well, Hansard is just the transcriptions of parliament. I guess you
mean the legislation. And you'd be right, but …

We spoke about this at the 2nd Brisbane Mapping party. Apparently it's
not as unambiguously phrased as you might hope. Perhaps someone else can
fill in the details there.

Here are the legislations listed:

http://www.naa.gov.au/records-management/create-capture-describe/describe/agls/encoding-scheme-jurisdiction.aspx#section2

Cheers

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Re: [talk-au] National Park Marine Park boundaries

2008-12-18 Thread Matt White
Hugh Barnes wrote:
 On Thu, 18 Dec 2008 19:41:59 +1100
 Matt White mattwh...@iinet.com.au wrote:

   
   
   
 I have a sneaking suspicion that National Parks and State Forests are 
 defined by acts of Parliament at the federal and state levels 
 respectively, so the co-ord are probably in Hansard somewhere...

 

 Well, Hansard is just the transcriptions of parliament. I guess you
 mean the legislation. And you'd be right, but …

   
Too true. Guilty of emailing when pissed, your honour...


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Re: [talk-au] National Park Marine Park boundaries

2008-12-17 Thread Liz
On Wed, 17 Dec 2008, Matt White wrote:
 How are people mapping National Park (or state forest or other
 government mandated areas)? It seems that in a lot of cases, there is no
 way of actually doing an on the ground survey - a lot of the boundaries
 aren't marked, the areas can be massively inaccessible etc.

 Add to that things like marine park boundaries, or no fishing areas
 which are often defined on marine maps as just a set of GPS locations
 (and there is obviously no way of physically mapping those areas), and
 it seems there are a lot of things that we have to rely on getting the
 data from other sources for.(I include marine park/no fishing areas as
 my partners father asked about it - I see no good reason why such
 features couldn't be added to OSM)

 Question is: is it legit to use park/forest boundaries taken from
 government sources? If not, how on earth are we going to solve this
 little problem?

 Matt

My significant other is trying to obtain national park data as defined lat and 
long co-ordinates.
I think that putting points in on co-ordinates which are defined does not 
infringe anyone's copyright.

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[talk-au] National Park Marine Park boundaries

2008-12-17 Thread Matt White
How are people mapping National Park (or state forest or other 
government mandated areas)? It seems that in a lot of cases, there is no 
way of actually doing an on the ground survey - a lot of the boundaries 
aren't marked, the areas can be massively inaccessible etc.

Add to that things like marine park boundaries, or no fishing areas 
which are often defined on marine maps as just a set of GPS locations 
(and there is obviously no way of physically mapping those areas), and 
it seems there are a lot of things that we have to rely on getting the 
data from other sources for.(I include marine park/no fishing areas as 
my partners father asked about it - I see no good reason why such 
features couldn't be added to OSM)

Question is: is it legit to use park/forest boundaries taken from 
government sources? If not, how on earth are we going to solve this 
little problem?

Matt

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Re: [talk-au] National Park Marine Park boundaries

2008-12-17 Thread Matt White
b.schulz...@scu.edu.au wrote:
 As it stands this hasn't really been addressed. Generally I just mark 
 what's on the ground, ie the natural=wood boundary as this tends to 
 give a reasonable indication of the national park boundary anyway. 
 Obviously this has limits, but unless some government authority grants 
 us use of their maps there's nothing we can really do about it.

 It's worth noting that I don't believe that anyone's actually tried 
 approaching a government body about it.

 As for marine boundaries go, why isn't a set of GPS co-ordinates 
 sufficient to map out various zones? Unless there's some form of 
 copyright on the location of the zone itself it should be ok just to 
 draw onto the map purely based on these numbers.

I guess the issue is similar to using street names off a government 
provided source - we would have to copy factual information, rather 
than get out on the ground. I've found a few goverment agencies that 
provide the polygons of national parks etc, but they seem to want to 
charge for it

An example - Marine park list from DSE: 
http://www.google.com/url?sa=tsource=webct=rescd=1url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.parkweb.vic.gov.au%2Fresources%2F17_1990.pdfei=r-FISbr6FKWsswK39MHyDQusg=AFQjCNEVG5JGEpjq8PJHhy4WjcDiUBi9Cgsig2=qzkD4ifwSoyvytO9n3P_sw

On a similar note, does anyone have polygons of the Oz states. Would 
like them to use to extract the OSM data for the garmin map creation 
prcoess, rather than the oversized square approach I'm using at the moment.

Matt


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