- Rubbersheeting
In
cartography , rubber-sheeting refers to the process by which a layer is distorted to allow it to be seamlessly joined to an adjacent geographic layer of matching imagery, such assatellite imagery (most commonly vector cartographic data) which are digital maps. This is sometimes referred to as image-to-vectorconflation . Often this has to be done when layers created from adjacent map sheets are joined together. Rubber-sheeting is necessary because the imagery and the vector data will rarely match up correctly due to various reasons, such as the angle that the image was taken at, thecurvature of the surface of the earth, minor movements in the imaging platform (such as asatellite oraircraft ), and other errors in the imagery.Applications in history and historical geography
Rubber-sheeting is a useful technique in
Historical GIS , where it is used to digitize and add old maps as feature layers in a modernGIS . Before aerial photography arrived, most maps were highly inaccurate by modern standards. Rubber-sheeting may improve the value of such sources and make them easier to compare to modern maps.oftware for Rubber-sheeting
* ESRI's
ArcGIS 8.3+ has the capability of rubber-sheeting vector data, and ArcMap 9.2+ may also rubber-sheet raster layers.
* AutoCAD'sLand Desktop allows a user to rubber sheet raster data.
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