OSM & Britain’s Most Upwardly-Mobile Village
Postat per alexkemp a 11 de mai 2018 en English Darriera actualizacion de 22 de mai 2018You may have missed the reports in April about Willand, a pretty little village in Devon that is 2cm (0.7 inches) closer to god each year (from the heliocentric view, of course), yet no-one knows why:
The connection to OSM is a little tortuous, but real.
The University of Nottingham has a Geography department, and it has spun off a commercial company called Geomatic Ventures Limited (GML). GML has created a United Kingdom Relative Deformation Map using results from the Sentinel-1 satellite. Here is the blurb from the mangomap site:
A relative deformation map of the United Kingdom, generated from ~ 2000 Sentinel-1 images acquired between October 2015 - October 2017. The data was processed using the Intermittent Small Baseline Subset (ISBAS) InSAR method. Each pixel represents the average vertical height change over the period of observations in millimetres per year.
There is an extensive history of coal-mining throughout Britain, almost all of which is now defunct. The seam that Gedling Pit, Nottinghamshire was following eastwards just before closure in 1991 runs under Nottingham itself; in fact, Dowson Street (just round the corner from me) is the very street above where they stopped underground. Most of those mines were continuously pumped to keep them free of water, and that stopped at closure. There are thus both blue areas on the GVL mangomap (rising ground) due to re-flooding and red areas (falling ground) due to collapsing seams within those former mining areas.
The point of Willand is:
- It has the fastest rise in Britain
- No-one has a clue as to why!
What has OSM got to do with this?
There is a flyout within the map that allows you to add a Base Map to the Deformation Map, and the first two choices are both OSM. Very nice.
2018-05-22: Added OSM / Wikipedia links for Willand, Gedling, Dowson Street & Nottingham.
Discussion
Comentari de Alan Bragg lo 11 de mai 2018 a 10:52
Welcome back! Missed reading your posts.
Comentari de alexkemp lo 11 de mai 2018 a 11:12
@Alan: I’ll try to post more often, but no promises.
Comentari de andy mackey lo 16 de mai 2018 a 05:50
Alex i have enjoyed your articles in the past. Welcome back.
Comentari de zarl lo 16 de mai 2018 a 07:30
I´m also always eagerly waiting for your stories, comments, sightings and observations you share with us. Thanks!
Comentari de Riccardo Stagni lo 21 de mai 2018 a 14:36
Yup, thank you for your articles! :)