Results 1 to 7 of 7

Thread: How to Create HD Rebound GreenLand Map from Image Data

  1. #1

    Default How to Create HD Rebound GreenLand Map from Image Data


  2. #2
    Administrator waldronate's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    The High Desert
    Posts
    3,610

    Default

    Did you try emailing the authors to see if they have a higher-resolution version that they might be willing to share?

    When you tried the software suggested in the README.md on that page, what was the result?
    Last edited by waldronate; 05-17-2024 at 02:15 AM.

  3. #3

    Default

    It looks like the "topography change" parameter in each netcdf file is the data you want, so you'd need to take current bedrock topography data of these areas (think that's included in the etopo1 dataset), project it to the same projection as these datasets, as listed in the readme (I think this should be possible with Qgis), and then add this data (and perhaps subtract ~65 meters of global sea level rise).

  4. #4

    Default

    I am still trying how to learn the software but they didn't give any detailed break down on how they combined the images so its taking a while.

    I don't exactly need the rebound greenland, tho I guess it won't hurt to ask. I want to use some of their image data on some Oligocene Greenland map I found a while ago and I want to know how they used it so I don't go making stupid mistakes.

  5. #5

    Default

    "so you'd need to take current bedrock topography data of these areas (think that's included in the etopo1 dataset)" sorry, can you elaborate?. Like a text data in etopo?.

    "project it to the same projection as these datasets" Okay, I have reprojected them and got these image data, the .TIFF files project like that also, when I input them in GIS over the ETOPO layer but I don't know how to then "add" it or "subtract 65 metres" is like a code function? cuz I haven't gotten into coding(its call GDAL, right?) in QGIS yet.

  6. #6

    Default

    I didn't have an exact sequence of steps in mind, just in general that's how you'd have to approach the problem, and indeed that may require putting scripts together to work with the data arrays rather than trying to make it all work through image processing.

  7. #7
    Administrator waldronate's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    The High Desert
    Posts
    3,610

    Default

    https://docs.qgis.org/3.34/en/docs/t...g/no_data.html might be helpful for using QGIS to add two layers and a constant together. The tool seems to be called the "raster calculator".

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •