Print

Print


I'm working with a professor of American History who is interested in
developing a mapping exercise for her students which will enable them to
more deeply explore African-American life in Chicago in the first half of
the 20th century.  This project (at the moment) will involve doing research
in archives, newspapers, the census, and other sources, and attempting to
map the dense web of African-American life in Chicago after the "Great
Migration" and before WWII.

Currently we are looking at ESRI StoryMaps for this project, because a)
this is a 100-level course, so the instructor wants something accessible
(and won't take a lot of time away from teaching the content of the
course); b) we have a site license for ESRI and have set up enterprise
login, plus AGOL has the ability to allow work on maps in small groups; c)
the StoryMaps templates will look nice as final projects.

Since there has been so much change in Chicago in the 20th century (urban
renewal, major highways, clearing neighborhoods to build the U of I), we
are thinking of using Sanborn maps as the basemaps for this project so that
the students can work with something closer to the actual geography of the
earlier 20th century than modern basemaps show.  We did find a source from
the U of I that has the Sanborn maps for our study area digitized and
available for download as jpegs.  Yay!

So I georeferenced the image of a sample page and was able to create both a
hosted service layer and a tile layer which can be added to the web map for
a Map Tour and indeed, does appear on the right-hand side over the default
basemap.  But then I noticed that I can only zoom in to a certain level
(about 1:9000).

I opened a case with ESRI to see if there was any way to get to, say 1:500
so that students can zoom in and easily see individual buildings.  It seems
that the only way to do this involves tiling so that the layer will take
over 6 GB to display.  That seems like a lot of storage that we'd have to
"pay" for from service credits, plus we would need four or five of these
Sanborns for all the groups in the class.  Then in my last communication
with ESRI, it seems that adding these additional scale levels would require
us to create a custom map rather than one of the existing Story Maps, so
that's an additional level of complexity we were hoping to avoid.

So, my questions to you-all are:  1)  is there any other way to add a
georeferenced image to the basemap of a Story Map that wouldn't require
huge amounts of storage or creating a custom map; and 2) does anyone have
any other ideas of how to approach this project other than using ESRI Story
Maps?

Thanks for any insights and/or experience,
Deborah Reichler
Hamilton College

------------------------------------------------------------------------- This list (NEARC-L) is an unmoderated discussion list for all NEARC Users.

If you no longer wish to receive e-mail from this list, you can remove yourself by going to http://s.uconn.edu/nearcsubscribe.