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Geographic Names In the United States. The National Map & Other Applications. FGDC Briefing Roger L. Payne. U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey. BLM/USFS GIS Symposium 2005. Agenda – Standardization U.S. Board on Geographic Names
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Geographic Names In the United States The National Map & Other Applications FGDC Briefing Roger L. Payne U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey
BLM/USFS GIS Symposium 2005 • Agenda – Standardization • U.S. Board on Geographic Names • Geographic Names Information System • Support for The National Map & Other Applications; Partner Data
Standardization not Regulation • Why Standardize Geographic Names? • National Security • Emergency Preparedness & Response • Regional & Local Planning • Site Selection & Analysis • Cartographic Application • Environmental Problem-solving • Tourism • All Levels of Communication
Need for Names Standardization • In the 1800’s, there were numerous scientific and exploration expeditions of the United States by the Federal Government • Many agencies recorded different names, resulting in confusion • Geographic names is a key component of the National Spatial Data Infrastructure for the United States • Consistency is a key attribute of a common set of base geographic information
The Solution • 4 September 1890 – U.S. Board on Geographic Names established by Presidential Executive Order • 25 July 1947 – Board re-established by Public Law
U.S. Board on Geographic Names • Provides for uniformity in geographic nomenclature and orthography throughout the Federal government • Formulates principles, policies, and procedures to be followed with reference to both domestic and foreign geographic names • Promulgates in the name of the Board…, decisions with respect to geographic names and principles of geographic nomenclature and orthography
U.S. Board on Geographic Names • No Federal agency may CHANGE or ADD unilaterally any name on any product for any reason without BGN approval • An agency may choose to leave the name off a map or out of a publication
U.S. Board on Geographic Names • Principles • Policies • Procedures
U.S. Board on Geographic Names • Some Committees are Empowered by the Board to Set Policy and Establish Procedures • The Domestic Names Committee (DNC) processes names for the United States. • The Foreign Names Committee (FNC) processes names for all other countries for use by the United States.
U.S. Board on Geographic Names • Advisory Committees Make Only Recommendations to the Board for Decision • Advisory Committee on Antarctica (ACAN) • Advisory Committee on Undersea Features (ACUF) • Advisory Committee on Extraterrestrial Features (ACEF) – not active
The Geographic Names Information System (GNIS) & The National Map One of the Eight Layers of The National Map • Data Content • Goal - complete in every category • More complete than any topographic map or any individual product, digital or conventional
Geographic Names Information System (GNIS) • In 1987, the U.S. Board on Geographic Names designated the Geographic Names Information System (GNIS) as the only official vehicle for domestic geographic names used by the Federal government • Therefore, GNIS is the only source for applying geographic names to Federal maps and other products depicting areas under U.S. jurisdiction
Geographic Names Information System (GNIS) Electronic Maintenance Program Since 1987 • U.S. Board on Geographic Names • U.S. Geological Survey • U.S. Forest Service (1997) • Office of Coast Survey (1997) • National Hydrographic Data Set Partners – synchronized (NHD – 1997) • National Park Service (1999) • Bureau of Land Management (Monday, April 18, 2005) • Fish & Wildlife Service (soon) • GNIS staff processed updates regularly from other agencies
Geographic Names Information System (GNIS) • Maintenance by States • Delaware (2002) • Hawaii (2003) • West Virginia (2004) • North Carolina (2004) • Florida (2005) • Oregon (2005) • Nevada (startup) • New Mexico (not yet active) • Missouri (pending) • More Agreements in Discussion
Names Standards – Partners: • Submit names data for approval & entry into GNIS prior to registration in the Catalog • Non-natural feature names & coords accepted from responsible source • Natural features, canals, reservoirs reviewed • Include as a minimum feature name, primary point • May include feature geometry/boundary • Encouraged to submit secondary attributes • Secondary points, variants, history, description • Include the GNIS Feature ID in source databases • To synchronize and maintain names data in GNIS
GNIS Website • http://geonames.usgs.gov/ • Approximately 40,000 accesses per day or more than 1,000,000 per month • Approximately 100 gazetteers downloaded per day
Names in The National Map Viewer http://nationalmap.usgs.gov Names/GNIS
GNIS Data Submission • Online data entry & Edit • For authorized users and partners • Batch file submission • Most standard formats • Partner tools for direct submission • Developed in coordination with partner • Using web services and tools
Partnerships NamesDesign Team & (GNIS) Maintenance Begun 1987 BGN Develop Further State/Local GISAuthorities Maintenance Begun 1997 Long Standing Interdepartmental Body Federal Agencies State NamesAuthorities Develop Further
GNIS - Integrating Partner Data Web Maintenance Forms Temporary Table Commit to Database Quality Assurance (Staff)
GNIS - Integrating Partner Data Data Foundations Team Other State & Local Partners Partner Files Resolution Algorithms
GNIS - Integrating Partner Data Exception List (no match) Match Rookie Toponymists New Names (not in GNIS) Apply GNIS ID To Partner Data Rookie Resolve Conflict (Requires Training & Experience) Add to GNIS (Staff) Referred to Staff (Resolution) Assign GNIS ID Return ID to Partner Reject Partner Data