One of the love/hate relationships I have had in my GIS work has been working with soil data. They are these huge datasets with a wealth of information that I have used repeatedly in analyses of agriculture and settlement patterns. Over the 15+ years I've been doing this, I have always struggled with remembering how to link NRCS soil shapefiles with the tables I need to add soil texture in a GIS. I figured instead of the sticky note with instructions that I keep losing, I'll make a video! And, this way anyone else who loves soil texture as much as I do, can also do this. Soil texture plug: it is the key to everything.
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For everyone out there interested in our work, we'll begin posting short videos and links on any an all things archaeology related. This will hopefully be useful for students, friends and family working with us and along side us, collaborators, and anyone else out there. It will include GIS tips and guides, quick descriptions of field and lab work, and guides for presenting, publishing, and getting funding for research. The first video – with a great freeze frame of Eric's face – is a testimonial for poster presentations that is part of a poster at this year's SAA meetings in Chicago. The poster is: Mikayla Gonzales, Caroline Watson, Emily Hull, Emmanuel Macias, and Amy E. Thompson, Why Should Students Present Posters at the SAA Annual Meetings? |
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Posts by any and all SERG participants ArchivesCategories |