I enjoyed looking at your map. There is much more data for 2020 than I thought there would be. My favorite part that I wish I had put into my map would have to be the outline of Canada and the United States. It was a small thing I appreciated when looking at your visualization. I’m curious about how you approached obscured locations. I didn’t see it on the pop-up if it was obscured or not. I wonder if you just got rid of that data or ran into the fact that it didn’t matter specifically for 2020?
I may have forgotten to mention it but I did leave the obscured data. I made sure they were all data from 2020 but I didn’t change the format because the attribute I focused on for my ArcGIS map was the common name!
This map turned out great! distinguishing between the moose and wolves is really easy with your choices of colour, and the map itself is aesthetically pleasing. The one thing I would note is the scale of the map- it was difficult to read the information at such a small size, is it possible to scale up the embed?
I wasn’t originally sure how to change the size of the embedded map which is why I provided a link to it. But, I just figured it out so it should be much larger now. Thanks for the comment!!
You used the ArcGIS mapping really well! While it may be difficult to read zoomed out, if you focus on only a certain area, the map is really well done and easy to read. The key helped with differing between the different points. Additionally, the website was set up well and your explanations were great.
You really did a great job creating the map as it hits every point of digital humanities project being interactive. Furthermore its easy to navigate the website and retrieve valuable information with the filtering add-on you included.
I enjoyed looking at your map. There is much more data for 2020 than I thought there would be. My favorite part that I wish I had put into my map would have to be the outline of Canada and the United States. It was a small thing I appreciated when looking at your visualization. I’m curious about how you approached obscured locations. I didn’t see it on the pop-up if it was obscured or not. I wonder if you just got rid of that data or ran into the fact that it didn’t matter specifically for 2020?
I may have forgotten to mention it but I did leave the obscured data. I made sure they were all data from 2020 but I didn’t change the format because the attribute I focused on for my ArcGIS map was the common name!
This map turned out great! distinguishing between the moose and wolves is really easy with your choices of colour, and the map itself is aesthetically pleasing. The one thing I would note is the scale of the map- it was difficult to read the information at such a small size, is it possible to scale up the embed?
I wasn’t originally sure how to change the size of the embedded map which is why I provided a link to it. But, I just figured it out so it should be much larger now. Thanks for the comment!!
You used the ArcGIS mapping really well! While it may be difficult to read zoomed out, if you focus on only a certain area, the map is really well done and easy to read. The key helped with differing between the different points. Additionally, the website was set up well and your explanations were great.
You really did a great job creating the map as it hits every point of digital humanities project being interactive. Furthermore its easy to navigate the website and retrieve valuable information with the filtering add-on you included.