GIS in Water Resources
Fall 2013
CE 394K.3 University of Texas Tue - Thur, 12:30-2 PM, ETC 5.148 Unique Num: 16035 |
CEE 6440 Tue- Thur, 11:30-1 PM, ENGR 401 Optional Lab Friday 11.30 to 12.30 ENGR 305 Catalog Number: 41182 |
Instructors:
David Maidment Office: ECJ 8.610 University of Phone: (512) 471-0065 Fax: (512) 471-0072 Office Hours: Tuesday - Thursday, 2PM - 3:30PM http://www.caee.utexas.edu/prof/maidment Email: maidment@mail.utexas.edu |
David Tarboton Office: ENGR 230, Utah State University Phone: (435) 797-3172 Office Hours: Tuesday, Thursday 1-2 PM. http://www.neng.usu.edu/cee/faculty/dtarb/giswr/2013/ Email: dtarb@usu.edu |
Course Description
Application of Geographic Information Systems in Water Resources. Digital
mapping of water resources information. Spatial coordinate systems. Hydrologic
terrain analysis using digital elevation models. River and watershed networks.
Soil and land use mapping. Flood hydrology modeling and flood plain mapping. Integration of time series and geospatial
data. Hydrologic Information Systems.
Prerequisites
Graduate standing in engineering or a related discipline.
Course Objectives
The six course exercises are intended to enable you to be able to:
University of Texas.
Public web site: http://www.caee.utexas.edu/prof/maidment/giswr2013/giswr2013.htm This contains the course outline, PowerPoint
presentations, class exercises for the course and University of Texas specific
information such as UT student work and term papers.
An archive of the video of each class in Windows Media format will be provided: http://utwired.engr.utexas.edu/maidment13/
Utah State University.
http://www.engineering.usu.edu/dtarb/giswr/2013.
This contains copies of the course outline, PowerPoint presentations, class
exercises, and other USU specific information such as USU term paper and
student work.
Term Project
The purposes of the
term project are:
The steps in carrying
out the project are:
If you would like to
work in a group to pursue a term project, that is fine, but you must carry out
a particular section of the project on which you will present your oral and
written report. Generally team-based term projects are hard to unscramble at
the end when it comes time to present the oral and written versions of your
term project, so it is probably best to just do an individual term project.
Archives are
available showing the reports from more than 300 term papers done by students
in this course from Spring 1997 to last year. See: http://www.caee.utexas.edu/prof/maidment/giswr2013/docs/termpaperlibrary.htm
http://www.engineering.usu.edu/dtarb/giswr/
Course Computer Environment
This course uses the ArcGIS version 10.2 software. The
Spatial Analyst and 3D Analyst extensions of ArcGIS will also be used in the
course. These programs run under the Windows operating system.
Texas. ArcGIS is available in the Civil Engineering
Learning Resource Center. You may want to get a magnetic card so that you can
enter the LRC in the evenings or weekends. If you work at the LRC, you'll be
assigned a standard amount of disk space for your personal use. You will also
be issued a license file to authenticate ArcGIS Desktop 10.2 operating on your
own desktop computer.
Utah. ArcGIS is available in the Engineering PC lab, ENGR
305.
If
you have access to the software elsewhere, you can do the computer assignments
at that location. You should plan to back up your work on a removable drive
(e.g. zip or thumb) to avoid complications from lack of disk space in your
personal area.
Course Readings
Readings
for this course will be given out as in-class handouts, links to resources on
the web, and written synopses of class lectures.
Method of Evaluation
Course grades will be based on a
weighted average of results as follows:
Homework 20%
Term Project Written Report 30%
Term Project Oral Presentation 10%
Midterm Exam 20%
Final Exam 20%
The midterm exam will be an in class exam. The final exam will be a take home distributed in class on Thursday Dec 5 and due in a week later. Special arrangements for submitting the solution electronically for students travelling during that that week can be established. The final exam will include project type GIS analysis as well as essays and short reports that synthesize material from the class and from the term projects of other students in the class.
Letter grades will be
assigned as follows:
A = 95 - 100%
A- = 90 - 95%
B+ = 87 - 90%
B = 83 - 87%
B- = 80 - 83%
C+ = 77 - 80%
C+ = 73 - 77%
C- = 70 - 73%
C- = 60 - 70%
F < 60%
There will be no make-up exams or incomplete
grades in this course. We reserve the right to change the date of an exam with
notice in advance. Class attendance will not be recorded in this class and will
not form part of the criteria for establishing grades. All lectures are
videotaped and the lecture can be viewed from the archive whose web address is
given elsewhere in this syllabus.
Course/Instructor Evaluation Plan
Course/Instructor evaluation will be conducted
separately at each University according to the policies of each University.
Texas. Forms will be distributed during the final lecture period. A student
from the class will be asked to distribute and collect the evaluation forms,
and to return them to the Department of Civil Engineering office on the 4th
floor of ECJ.
Utah. USU will use the IDEA system for student evaluations. You will receive
email from the university with instructions for how to fill out evaluations
online.
We also encourage students to speak to us
during the semester, and are open to suggestions relating to the course.
Texas. The University of Texas at Austin provides upon request
appropriate academic accommodations for qualified students with
disabilities. For more information, contact the Division of
Diversity and Community Engagement, Services for Students with Disabilities,
471-6259 (voice) or 232-2937 (video phone) or http://www.utexas.edu/diversity/ddce/ssd
Utah. Students with ADA-documented physical, sensory, emotional or medical impairments may be eligible for reasonable accommodations. Veterans may also be eligible for services. All accommodations are coordinated through the Disability Resource Center (DRC) in Room 101 of the University Inn, (435)797-2444 voice, (435)797-0740 TTY, or toll free at 1-800-259-2966. Please contact the DRC as early in the semester as possible. Alternate format materials (Braille, large print or digital) are available with advance notice.
Course Drop Policies
University of Texas
From
the 1st through the 4th class day, graduate students can drop a course via the
web and receive a refund. During the 5th through 12th class day, graduate
students must initiate drops in the department that offers the course and
receive a refund. After the 12th class day, no refund is given. No
class can be added after the 12th class day. From the 13th through the
20th class day, an automatic Q is assigned with approval from the Graduate
Advisor and the Graduate Dean. From the 21st class day through the last
class day, graduate students can drop a class with permission from the
instructor, Graduate Advisor, and the Graduate Dean. Students with
20-hr/week GRA/TA appointment or a fellowship may not drop below 9 hours.
Utah
State University
Students may drop courses without notation on the permanent record through the first 20 percent of the class. If a student drops a course following the first 20 percent of the class, a W will be permanently affixed to the student record. Under normal circumstances, a student may not drop a course after 60 percent of the class is completed. (Check the Registration Calendar http://catalog.usu.edu/content.php?catoid=6&navoid=1180 for exact dates.)
Class |
Day and Date |
Subject |
Lecturer |
0 |
Tue, Aug 27 |
Introduction USU |
Tarboton |
1 |
Thu, Aug 29 |
Introduction to GIS in Water
Resources. Review the course curriculum, course outline. |
Maidment |
2 |
Tue, Sep 03 |
Introduction to ArcGIS. |
Maidment |
3 |
Thu, Sep 05 |
Exercise 1: Introduction to
ArcGIS |
Maidment |
4 |
Tue, Sep 10 |
Data sources for GIS in water
resources |
Maidment |
5 |
Thu, Sep 12 |
Exercise 2: Building a base map |
Maidment |
6 |
Tue, Sep 17 |
Geodesy, map projections and
coordinate systems |
Maidment |
7 |
Thu, Sep 19 |
Spatial analysis using grids |
Tarboton |
8 |
Tue, Sep 24 |
Exercise 3: Spatial analysis in
hydrology |
Tarboton |
9 |
Thu, Sep 26 |
Digital Elevation Based
Watershed and Stream Network Delineation. |
Tarboton |
10 |
Tue, Oct 01 |
Exercise 4: Watershed and Stream
Network Delineation. |
Tarboton |
11 |
Thu, Oct 03 |
Water resources data in space
and time. 1 page Term project proposal due |
Maidment |
12 |
Tue, Oct 08 |
Exercise 5: Geospatial and
Temporal Data |
Maidment |
13 |
Thu, Oct 10 |
Review |
Maidment |
14 |
Tue, Oct 15 |
Midterm Exam |
All |
15 |
Thu, Oct 17 |
Arc Hydro for Groundwater [USU
Fall Break, class optional for USU students] |
Maidment |
16 |
Tue, Oct 22 |
Automating GIS Workflows,
Modelbuilder and Python |
Tarboton |
17 |
Thu, Oct 24 |
Exercise 6. Automating GIS
Workflows Exercise |
Tarboton |
18 |
Tue, Oct 29 |
GIS Data Sharing and ArcGIS
Online Term project status report due - posted on your web site. |
Maidment |
19 |
Thu, Oct 31 |
Hydrologic Information Systems |
Tarboton |
20 |
Tue, Nov 05 |
Global Water Information System |
Maidment |
21 |
Thu, Nov 07 |
Lidar data in Water Resource Applications |
Passalacqua |
22 |
Tue, Nov 12 |
Network analysis, Arc Hydro, and
NHDPlus |
Maidment |
23 |
Thu, Nov 14 |
River Geometry and Hydrologic
Models (RiverML) |
Maidment |
24 |
Tue, Nov 19 |
Presentation of Term Papers |
Students |
|
Thu, Nov 21 |
Presentation of Term Papers |
Students |
25 |
Tue, Nov 26 |
Presentation of Term Papers |
Students |
26 |
Thu, Nov 28 |
Thanksgiving!! |
Students |
27 |
Tue, Dec 03 |
Presentation of Term Papers |
Students |
28 |
Thu, Dec 05 |
Presentation of Term Papers,
Course evaluation, discussion of final exam |
Students |