-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 34
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
[BUG] Why, unlike EnvO are Elevation (a length) and Depression (a geometrical object) conceptualized very differently in SWEET? #245
Comments
Elevation is strictly not a length, it is a coordinate. It is defined as an offset with respect to a vertical datum, a spheroid, approximating the Geoid which varies with lateral position. |
The lowest point of a depression is an elevation as well and could be represented with a coordinate. A 'depression' is a geospatial feature that would include, I am guessing, other criteria for its definition as well (slope, size, etc). I think Gaurav uses the term 'eminence' as the antonym of 'depression.' |
So do we say that there is a Geometric Depression and geospatial feature
called a Depression that is described, in part, by a
Geometric Depression? Another characteristic of the geospatial
feature's Geometric Depression is that it has an elevation coordinate.
Gary Berg-Cross
Potomac, MD
240-426-0770
…On Mon, Sep 13, 2021 at 5:16 PM Dalia Varanka ***@***.***> wrote:
The lowest point of a depression is an elevation as well and could be
represented with a coordinate. A 'depression' is a geospatial feature that
would include, I am guessing, other criteria for its definition as well
(slope, size, etc)
—
You are receiving this because you authored the thread.
Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub
<#245 (comment)>, or
unsubscribe
<https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/ACIMQIWI7HJDBD6XTV4VUO3UBZSZNANCNFSM4ZX6EUJA>
.
Triage notifications on the go with GitHub Mobile for iOS
<https://apps.apple.com/app/apple-store/id1477376905?ct=notification-email&mt=8&pt=524675>
or Android
<https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.github.android&referrer=utm_campaign%3Dnotification-email%26utm_medium%3Demail%26utm_source%3Dgithub>.
|
If there are no other comments, I say we should make this change. |
Yes, I agree.
Gary
…On Wed, Mar 15, 2023, 5:23 PM rduerr ***@***.***> wrote:
If there are no other comments, I say we should make this change.
—
Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub
<#245 (comment)>, or
unsubscribe
<https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/ACIMQIX4ZEKQVXHIY37YAOTW4IXMTANCNFSM4ZX6EUJA>
.
You are receiving this because you authored the thread.Message ID:
***@***.***>
|
looking at SWEET/depression in bioportal to try and understand what 'depression is supposed to be... its a subclass of representation/numerical entity/geometrical object. The implication being that 'geometric object' is a representation of some geometry using numerical values. Then ... the subclasses of depression are 'basin' with a bunch of subclasses that are tectonic features-- kinds of sedimentary basins. The other subclass is 'depression' from the phenFluidDynamics namespace, a subclass of 'low pressure'-- which seems to me quite a different concept. as @dr-shorthair pointed out, elevation is " an offset with respect to a vertical datum". In trying to understand 'depression' as a geometric object, it seems to require conceptualizing a surface that has an indentation in it, and that indentation ('depression') has some point of maximum offset relative to a datum defined by some relationship to the surface that is indented. You could think of that offset as an 'elevation' relative to the datum defined by the indented surface. So a depression in that sense has an 'elevation' property (although most would call it a depth). Side bar about basin as a subclass of 'depression' so... a geometrical object/depression might be a numerical representation of the geometry of the older bounding surface of a sedimentary basin. Sedimentary basins should not be subclasses of 'sweet:depression'. A similar line of reasoning would apply to meteorological atmospheric low-pressure 'depressions' |
A bug report assumes that you are not trying to introduced a new feature, but instead change an existing one... hopefully correcting some latent error in the process.
Description
Please describe to the best of your ability what is wrong
What would you like to see changed?
Just as you've done for the above description, please describe as fully as possible, what your proposed fix is for the issue you've highlighted.
Attribution
If you would like a nano-attribution, please use the following guidance.
Labeling your issues
Please make use of our labels... this really helps us to better understand and prioritize your issue.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: