Area of Spatial Domain
In general, no you cannot say that this would be correct. It depends on where and how extensive the region is, so if you can tell us that I could put together something to show how valid it would be. You should reproject to a local equal area projection and then it's going to be valid, but even then you'd want to do some checks, depending, again on where and for what. Within 100s of kilometres is probably ok, but then it depends on the latitude you are at, *and* which zone you are using (it's easy to get this wrong believe it or not and UTM is one of those *defaults* that can cause problems because it is a default - there's no good technical reason to use it if you can help it. Each zone is only 6 degrees wide, and if you are near a transition it's better to use a local one rather than a standard zone, which again begs the question of why it would be used). This also has relevance downstream if you are using a projection incorrectly so it's worth understanding well. There are plenty of resources on this out there. Cheers, Mike. It's safest to reproject to an appropriate equal area projection, and then
On Tue, Jun 25, 2013 at 6:38 AM, Moshood Agba Bakare <bakare at ualberta.ca> wrote:
Dear All,
Am I right to calculate the spatial region or domain by multiplying the
range of easting and northing coordinates? That is, I intend to find the
difference between the minimum and maximum values in meters for each of the
UTM coordinates (easting and northing) and get the product of the range as
area of spatial domain in square meters.
Please let me know if I am right or wrong.
Thank you.
Moshood
[[alternative HTML version deleted]]
_______________________________________________ R-sig-Geo mailing list R-sig-Geo at r-project.org https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-sig-geo
Michael Sumner Hobart, Australia e-mail: mdsumner at gmail.com