ArcView your data

Our strategy in this lab is as follows:

First, get you up and running in ArcView, and have you load in some of their data (US counties). A query will get you to a data set containing only the Illinois counties.

We will then add in additional data layers: both the data you downloaded last time for Illinois counties, plus some of Geoff Jacquez's Illinois cancer data. You will choose one data set (there are 30 cancers or so), although if you finish early, you are welcome to do more.

Finally, you will carry out some of the elementary analyses discussed in the last lecture, including overlays and buffering, and print your resulting map.

Getting Started: IL Counties

The Attribute table

Joining and adding tables

We are now ready to add in Geoff's Illinois cancer data. There are two different kinds of data that you will want to add:
  1. one is disease data (by county);
  2. the other is a site file containing the locations of the nuclear power plants (which bear no particular relation to the counties).
In the case of the disease data, we will join it to the attribute data for the illco.shp file. You are essentially adding attributes to the counties (disease rates).

In the case of the nuclear sites, we are simply adding an additional point data set (or point theme) to the project, which can be overlaid on the vector county theme. Here are the steps:

Buffering

Now to an actual analysis: to find all county centroids within 60 miles of a nuclear plant. "Centroids" are "centers of areas" (although they are not necessarily in the center of the areas in any real sense. Illinois centroids are contained in the countya.csv file, so we'll use that theme and the nuclear sites for this analysis.

If you're feeling adventurous...

try out the following:

Otherwise, return to the main lab page

and don't forget to evaluate the lab.
Website maintained by Andy Long. Comments appreciated.
aelon@sph.umich.edu