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Archiving Geospatial Data: Background to the Problem Area

How Would You Describe Your Current Geospatial Archive? ... through Internet Archive. Findings from Survey of Archiving Practice in NC Local Agencies

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Archiving Geospatial Data: Background to the Problem Area

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    Slide 1:Archiving Geospatial Data: Background to the Problem Area State Government Users Committee October 16, 2008 Steve Morris, NCSU Libraries

    Slide 2:How Would You Describe Your Current Geospatial Archive?

    Slide 3:Digital Preservation Points of Failure Data is not saved, or … can’t be found, or … media is obsolete, or … media is corrupt, or … format is obsolete, or … file is corrupt, or … meaning is lost

    Slide 4:Problem: Temporal Data Unavailability Industry focus on “latest and greatest” data “Kill and fill” as a common approach to data management (past versions of vector data lost) Not just data loss, also: Loss of memory about data Of superceded county orthophoto flights in NC: Only 22% recorded in the state’s GIS inventory Only 30% available on county map servers

    Slide 5:Findings from Survey of Archiving Practice in NC Local Agencies

    Slide 6:Value in Older Data: Cultural Heritage

    Slide 7:Value in Older Data: Solving Business Problems

    Slide 8:Different Ways to Approach Preservation Technical solutions: How do we preserve acquired content over the long term? Cultural/Organizational solutions: How do we make the data more preservable—and more prone to be preserved—from point of production?

    Slide 9:Spatial Data Infrastructure:Where Does Archiving Fit? Metadata standards and outreach metadata quality, best practices Inventories Reduce “contact fatigue”, shareable info store Content exchange networks Leverage more compelling business reasons to put data in motion Automate process, add technical & administrative metadata Framework data communities Snapshot frequency, schemas, format strategies

    Slide 10:Technical Challenges with Geospatial Data Complex vector formats: multi-file, multi-format No non-commercial, well-supported format Shift to web services-based access Data ephemeral, how to record decisions? Often: Inadequate or nonexistent metadata Impedes discovery and use Increasing use of spatial databases for data management The whole is greater than the sum of the parts but the whole is very hard to preserve Content packaging No geospatial industry standard

    Slide 11:Preservation Approaches: Original Data vs. “Desiccated” Data State governments have limited resources to make changes to infrastructure to ensure permanent public access to digital information States typically have few format standards, increasingly decentralized publishing practices among agencies, and lack a single point of controlState governments have limited resources to make changes to infrastructure to ensure permanent public access to digital information States typically have few format standards, increasingly decentralized publishing practices among agencies, and lack a single point of control

    Slide 12:Changes in the Domain: New Location-based Content State governments have limited resources to make changes to infrastructure to ensure permanent public access to digital information States typically have few format standards, increasingly decentralized publishing practices among agencies, and lack a single point of controlState governments have limited resources to make changes to infrastructure to ensure permanent public access to digital information States typically have few format standards, increasingly decentralized publishing practices among agencies, and lack a single point of control

    Slide 13:Changes in the Domain: Geospatial PDF State governments have limited resources to make changes to infrastructure to ensure permanent public access to digital information States typically have few format standards, increasingly decentralized publishing practices among agencies, and lack a single point of controlState governments have limited resources to make changes to infrastructure to ensure permanent public access to digital information States typically have few format standards, increasingly decentralized publishing practices among agencies, and lack a single point of control

    Slide 14:North Carolina Data Archiving Initiatives NC Geospatial Data Archiving Project (NCGDAP) Part of Library of Congress’ National Digital Infrastructure and Preservation Program (NDIIPP) NCSU Libraries, CGIA: 2004 - 2009 GICC Archival and Long-Term Access Committee Charged Feb. 2008; report to GICC Nov. 2008 Geospatial Multistate Archival and Preservation Partnership (GeoMAPP) Part of NDIIPP Multistate initiative NC (lead: CGIA and State Archives), KY, and UT Nov. 2007 - Dec. 2009

    Slide 15:Thank You! Steve Morris Head, Digital Library Initiatives NCSU Libraries Steven_Morris@ncsu.edu (919) 515-1361 http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/ncgdap/

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