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Relief Presentation on US National Park Service Maps Tom Patterson US National Park Service Harpers Ferry Center [email protected] Chapter excerpt from: Mountain Cartography. 16 Years ICA Commission on Mountain Cartography. http://carto.univie.ac.at/index.php?id=194016 Introduction This chapter examines the evolution of relief presentations on maps developed by Harpers Ferry Center, the media service center of the US National Park Service (NPS). Harpers Ferry Center produces standardized “Unigrid” brochures, which include the maps used by park visitors. What follows is a general overview of five park maps, each with a distinctive relief style and mode of production. They appear in rough chronological order of their development. Recent relief presentations are generally more detailed, colorful, and realistic than those from earlier years. Changing technology is largely responsible for the different relief styles found on park maps. Some relief treatments today were not possible, or imaginable, in 1977 when the NPS established the brochure program in its modern phase. Landscape heterogeneity is another factor behind the development of different relief styles. With over 400 park sites ranging from the glacial mountains of Alaska to the rolling piedmont of Virginia, a one-style-fits-all approach cannot adequately depict all landscapes. NPS maps serve some 300 million park visitors each year. Our ongoing effort to make understandable maps for this diverse audience has further spurred experiments in relief presentation. The relief presented on NPS maps is generally not as important as visitor information: points of interest, facilities, roads, trails, etc. To reflect this context, the relief examples that follow are excerpts from published park maps containing all classes of information. They are also exclusively planimetric, since delving into the intricacies of 3D relief presentation is well beyond the scope of one chapter.
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Page 1: Relief Presentation on US National Park Service Maps · Relief Presentation on US National Park Service Maps Tom Patterson US National Park Service Harpers Ferry Center ... , the

ReliefPresentationonUSNationalParkServiceMaps

TomPattersonUSNationalParkServiceHarpersFerryCentertom_patterson@nps.gov

Chapterexcerptfrom:MountainCartography.16YearsICACommissiononMountainCartography.http://carto.univie.ac.at/index.php?id=194016IntroductionThischapterexaminestheevolutionofreliefpresentationsonmapsdevelopedbyHarpersFerryCenter,themediaservicecenteroftheUSNationalParkService(NPS).HarpersFerryCenterproducesstandardized“Unigrid”brochures,whichincludethemapsusedbyparkvisitors.Whatfollowsisageneraloverviewoffiveparkmaps,eachwithadistinctivereliefstyleandmodeofproduction.Theyappearinroughchronologicalorderoftheirdevelopment.Recentreliefpresentationsaregenerallymoredetailed,colorful,andrealisticthanthosefromearlieryears.Changingtechnologyislargelyresponsibleforthedifferentreliefstylesfoundonparkmaps.Somerelieftreatmentstodaywerenotpossible,orimaginable,in1977whentheNPSestablishedthebrochureprograminitsmodernphase.Landscapeheterogeneityisanotherfactorbehindthedevelopmentofdifferentreliefstyles.Withover400parksitesrangingfromtheglacialmountainsofAlaskatotherollingpiedmontofVirginia,aone-style-fits-allapproachcannotadequatelydepictalllandscapes.NPSmapsservesome300millionparkvisitorseachyear.Ourongoingefforttomakeunderstandablemapsforthisdiverseaudiencehasfurtherspurredexperimentsinreliefpresentation.ThereliefpresentedonNPSmapsisgenerallynotasimportantasvisitorinformation:pointsofinterest,facilities,roads,trails,etc.Toreflectthiscontext,thereliefexamplesthatfollowareexcerptsfrompublishedparkmapscontainingallclassesofinformation.Theyarealsoexclusivelyplanimetric,sincedelvingintotheintricaciesof3Dreliefpresentationiswellbeyondthescopeofonechapter.

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Map1:ManualShadedRelief

Figure1.DinosaurNationalMonument,UtahandColorado,featuringanairbrushedshadedreliefbyBillvonAllmen,1983.Over35yearsagowhentheNPSUnigridprogramlaunched,oneofthemaingoalswastobringparkmapsoutof“thedarkagesofline-workcartography”accordingtoVincentGleason,thenChiefofPublications(Hanna,1988).Hisvisionwastorepresentterrainonmapswithuser-friendlyshadedreliefinsteadofhachuringorcontourlines.UnderGleason’sguidance,RRDonnelleyCartographicServices,thefirmhiredtodevelopparkmapswithanentirelynewlook,producedthefirstshadedreliefmaps.Soonafterwards,theNPStappedcartographerBillvonAllmen(1928-2013)tobethein-houseshadedreliefartist(Figure1).HespentsixweekstrainingattheSwissFederalOfficeofTopography(nowcalledswisstopo),andthenwentontoproduceover80shadedreliefsbeforeretiringin1990.TomPatterson,hiredin1992toreplacevonAllmen,hand-drew12reliefspriortoswitchingtodigitalproductioninthemid-1990s.ExamplesfrombothartistsareavailableontheShadedReliefArchivewebsite(seereferencesforURL).VonAllmen’stoolofchoicewasthePaascheABairbrush,withwhichhesprayedamistofinkonmetalmount,atypeofpaperadheredtoanaluminumsheetfordimensionalstability.Heworkedfromcontourlinesappliedtothemetalmountasa

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temporaryblueemulsion.Asalaststephewouldsprayammoniaonthecompletedarttoremovethecontours,withoutdamagingtheairbrushwork.Bycomparison,Pattersondrewreliefswitha4HpencilonDupontCronaflexUC-4draftingfilm.Thericestarchsurfaceonthisfilmwasreceptivetosmudgingwithstumps,finelypointedsticksmadefromrolledcardboardthatabsorbgraphite.Acontourbasemapcouldbereadthroughthetranslucentdraftingfilm.Byslidingawhitesheetofpaperunderthedraftingfilm,Pattersoncouldseetheshadedreliefhewasdrawingwithoutthecontourlines.Regardlessoftheproductionmethod,creatingmanualshadedreliefwasslowandpainstakingwork.Alargeparkreliefcouldtakeonemonthtocomplete.Manualshadedreliefoftenappearshighlygeneralizedbecauseaddingdetailandrefinementtotheartrequiresevenmoretime.Giventhegreateffortthatwentintocreatingmanualreliefart,thenaturaltendencywastofeatureitprominentlyonearlyNPSmaps,evenifitinterferedwithotherinformation.Printingoftheshadedreliefbecamelighteronsubsequentprintings.Onatypicalmapfromthaterathereliefwouldprintinblackandcombinewithflatareacolorsbuiltfromcyan,magenta,andyellow.Halftonescreen-printingwouldcontrolshadowdensitiesontheshadedrelief,simulatingcontinuoustones.Thedensestshadowswere15percentblack,flatareas4percent,andhighlights1percent.DinosaurNationalMonumentisoneofthefewremainingNPSmapsthatstillemploymanualshadedrelief(Figure1),althoughadigitalversionwillreplaceitin2015.Shadedreliefscreatedmanuallyreflectindividualartisticstyles,andtheyvaryinappearance(Figure2).Ifanartisthadtoredrawareliefofthesamearea,thesecondversionwouldlookslightlydifferentfromthefirst.Ontheotherhand,NPSshadedreliefartexhibitscommontraits,regardlessofwhodrewit.Modulatedlightandshadowscreatetheimpressionof3Dterrainonaflatsheetofpaper.Theilluminationsourceisfromthenorthwest(upperleft),andprominentfeaturesreceivemostemphasis.

Figure2.Manualreliefexamples:(Left)HotSpringsNationalPark,Arkansas,byRRDonnelley.(Center)GrandTetonNationalPark,Wyoming,byBillvonAllmen.(Right)CityofRocksNationalReserve,Idaho,byTomPatterson.

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Map2:DigitalShadedRelief

Figure3.DigitalshadedreliefofOlympicNationalPark,Washington.Theswitchfrommanualtodigitalcartographystartinginthe1990srevolutionizedNPSshadedreliefproduction.Whathadbeenthemostdifficultmapelementtoproduceeventuallywouldbecomeoneoftheeasiest,reducingproductiontimeforabasicrelieffromafewweekstoafewminutes.Theswitchtodigitaldidnothappenovernight.Inadequatesoftware,lackofanintegrateddigitalworkflow,andpoororunavailableelevationdatahamperedearlyproductionefforts.Forexample,USGSdigitalelevationmodels(DEMs)fromthattimesufferedfromterracingandstripingartifacts,whichyieldeduglyblemisheswhenrenderedasashadedrelief.Inaddition,thevalleybottomswereoftenoutofregistrationwithdrainagelines.UsingtheseflaweddatatoproduceabarelyacceptableshadedreliefrequiredhoursofeditinginAdobePhotoshop.Itwasoftenmoreconvenienttoscananoldmanualshadedreliefforanewparkmapotherwisemadefromdigitaldata.Nowadaysthesituationismuchimproved.TheNPSusesNaturalSceneDesignerProsoftwaretoefficientlyproduceshadedreliefsfromartifact-freeDEMsacquiredfromtheUSGSNationalElevationDataset.

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TheNPSinitiallypresenteddigitalreliefonmapsinthesamemannerasmanualrelief,lightlyprintingitasbackgroundblack(Figure3).Incontrasttomanualshadedrelief,afrequentproblemwithdigitalreliefisexcessivedetail(Figure4).TheDEMsfromwhichthereliefderivesoftencontainmoredetailthanthatnecessaryonavisitormap,inadvertentlyproducingvisualnoise.TheNPSalleviatesthisproblembydownsamplingDEMspriortorenderingshadedreliefs,thenapplyingthemedianfiltertotherenderedartafterwardsinPhotoshop.Themedianfiltereliminatessmallterraindetailswhilepreservingthelargerfeatures.TerrainSculptorsoftwareisanothermethodusedbytheNPStogeneralizeDEMsbeforereliefrenderingtakesplace(Leonowiczet.al.,2010).TheNPScompletesashadedreliefbyaddingcontrastathigherelevationstoincreasetheapparentthree-dimensionalityofmountains.UsingagrayscaleDEMasaPhotoshoplayermaskandapplyingextratonetomountaintopshadowsaccomplishesthisenhancement.TheaerialperspectiveeffectdevelopedforSwisstopographicmapsisthebasisforthistechnique(Imhof,1982).Arecenttrendistoprintdigitalreliefincolorsotherthanblack.Forinstance,usinglightbeigereliefforasouthwesterndesertparkevokesanaridenvironment.Beigereliefalsointerfereslesswithblacktypeandsymbols,improvingoverallmaplegibility.Printingshadedreliefsincolorsthatmimicthenaturalenvironmentintroducesthenexttopicofthischapter,naturalcolors.

Figure4.OlympicNationalPark,Washington.(Left)ManualshadedreliefcreatedbyBillvonAllmen.(Right)Digitalshadedreliefrenderedfroma90-meterDEM.

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Map3:NaturalColor

Figure5.KenaiFjordsNationalPark,Alaska,innaturalcolor.ThepopularizationofnaturalcolormapsstartedwithUSGScartographerHalShelton(1916-2004).Workingonhisowntime,Sheltondevelopedaseriesofroutemapsforairlinepassengersduringthe1950sand60s,whenairtravelwasfirstbecomingcommonplace(PattersonandKelso,2004).Hebelievedthatforhismapstobeeffectivetheyshouldusecolorsresemblingthosethatpassengerscouldseeonthegroundbelow.Withtheassistanceofateamofacademicgeographerswhocompiledlandcoverinformationonbasemaps(Earthmonitoringsatellitesdidnotexistthen),Sheltonpaintedbeautifulandrealisticmapsusinganaturalpalette.Ifanareawasconiferousforest,hepainteditdarkblue-green;ifitwasdeciduous,mediumgreen;grassland,lightyellow-green;andsoon.Shelton’sapproachtomappingwithcolorsfoundinnatureseemedapplicabletolargeexpanseslikeKenaiFjordsNationalPark,Alaska(Figure5).UnlikethetraditionalmapofDinosaurNationalMonument(Figure1),whichemploysanarbitrarycolorchoice,flatgreen,thevaryingcolorsontheKenaiFjordsmaphelpusersbetterunderstandlandcoverandtherelatednaturalenvironment.

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Creatinganaturalcolorparkmapisaccomplishedwithrasterlandcoverdata,suchasNationalLandCoverDataset(NLCD),availablefortheentireUSat30-meterresolution.Likepaintingbythenumbers,butusingpixelsinstead,thegarishcolorsoftheoriginallandcoverimageareswappedforanewpalettederivedfromnature(Figure6).Landscapephotographsavailableonpopularonlinesitesareagoodsourceforappropriatenaturalcolors—colorselectionisasimplematterofsamplingthemwiththe“eyedropper”toolinPhotoshop.Subtlecolorsworkbest.Inaddition,atlargermapscales,assigningorganictexturestothelandcovercolorsproducesamorerealisticappearance.Forexample,theKenaiFjordsmaphassubtletexturesrepresentingtreecanopyandglaciersurfaces.Asafinishingtouch,standardshadedreliefilluminatedfromthenorthwestdefinesthetopographicforms.Naturalcolormapsareasynthesisofsatelliteimagesandshadedreliefmaps.Althoughnaturalcolormapsoftenlookrealistic,theydifferfromaerialimagerybywhattheylack—haze,castshadows,clouds,andunneededphotographicdetail(Patterson,2002).Theyareessentiallyreconstitutedsatelliteimagesoptimizedforcartographicdepiction.Naturalcolormapsarenotwithoutproblems,however.Thenaturalworldcanbedisorganizedanduntidy,andsotooaresomenaturalcolormaps.Iftoohighlytexturedandboldlyprinted,overallmaplegibilitycansuffer.Andnaturalcolormapsdonotcombinewellwitharbitraryareacolorsrepresentinglandownership.Itisbesttodepictpropertyparcelswithsimpleboundinglinestoavoidcolorconfusion.

Figure6.KenaiFjordsNationalPark,Alaska.(Left)NationalLandCoverDataset.(Right)Naturalcolors,textures,andshadedreliefappliedtoNationalLandCoverDataset.

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Map4:TextureShading

Figure7.GlacierNationalPark,Montana,withrocktexturesappliedtosteepslopes.TextureshadinghasbecomeacommonelementofNPSreliefpresentationssincethe2010introductionofthetechnique(Brown,2014).TextureShadingisproducedbyTerrainTextureShader,softwarethatdetects,amplifies,andrendersslightvariationsinDEMsasimageswithincreasedcontrast(Figure8).Byitself,textureshadingistoodarkandcontrastingtohavecartographicutility.Butwhenmergedwithshadedrelief—therecommendedproportionsare60percentshadedreliefand40percenttextureshading—itenhancestheshadedrelief.Theadditionoftextureshadingrevealssubtledetailsonilluminatedslopesandinflatareasnotevidentontheoriginalshadedrelief(Figure9,center).Themergedresultshaveaflattertonalrangethatworkswellasabackgroundonmapsfilledwithothertouristinformation,especiallywhenthereliefislightenedandcolorized(Figure9,right).Textureshadingismostbeneficialinlow,irregulartopography,likeglacialdepositsanderodedbadlands.

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Figure8.GlacierNationalPark,Montana.(Left)AgrayscaleDEM.(Right)AtextureshadingcreatedfromtheDEMatdefaultsettings.

Figure9.GlacierNationalPark,Montana.(Left)Shadedrelief.(Center)Mergedshadedreliefandtextureshading.(Right)Themergedresultslightenedandcolorized.Mountainlandscapesalsocanbenefitfromthetextureshadingtechnique,whichcanyieldacceptablerocktexturesfromDEMsunderidealsituations(Patterson,2014).Mountainswithhorizontalrocklayers,suchasthoseatGlacierNationalPark,Montana,arebestsuitedtothetechnique(Figure7).Toproducerocktextures,onefirstmustrenderatextureshadingwithmaximumdetailandcontrast.ThisvisuallynoisyimageisthencombinedwithashadedreliefmadefromthesameDEMinPhotoshop,andwithaslopelayermasktoapplyitonlytothesteepestslopes.OtherenhancementstoGlacierNationalParkmapincludegreenlowlandhypsographyinthedeepestvalleys,yellowsunlightonilluminatedslopes,andcomplementarycoolblueonshadowedslopes.Swisstopographicmapsinspiredthecolorscheme.

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Map5:HybridGeospatialImages

Figure10.PetrifiedForestNationalPark,Arizona,featuringaLandsat8satelliteimagecombinedwithshadedrelief.AgrowingtrendonNPSmapsistheintegrationofgeospatialimages—satelliteimagesandaerialphotographs—withreliefpresentations.Theuseoftheseimageswasatfirstsparing.Forexample,naturalcolormapswereenhancedbyselectivelyborrowingglacierandforesttexturesfromaerialphotographs.Morerecently,theNPShasbegunusingimagesasthedominantcomponentinreliefpresentations(Figure10).Theincreasednumberofsourcesforfreeimagedatahasencouragedthisexperimentation.NationalAgriculturalImageryProgram(NAIP)andLandsat8aretheimagesusedmostoftenonNPSmaps.Usinggeospatialimagesinreliefpresentationsworksbestonlandscapeswithlowrelief,suchaslavaflows,braidedrivers,marshes,shallowwaterbodies,anddeserts.Forexample,themapofPetrifiedForestNationalPark,Arizona(Figure10)usesLandsat8,whichcapturestherichcolorsofthePaintedDesertandanetworkofdrystreambeds.Itgivesatruerpictureofthatdesertenvironmentbeyondwhatispossiblewithtraditionalcartography.Depictingthemanydrystreamswithconventionalbluelines,forexample,wouldimplymorewaterthanwhatnormallyexists.Landscapeswithlowreliefhaveanotheradvantageongeospatialimages:fewershadows.Shadowscastbythesunonlandscapesurfacesandembeddedinimagesareamajorproblemwhenmakingreliefpresentations.Thehighertheterrain,thedenserandmoreobscuringtheshadowsbecome.Acompoundingproblemisthelightdirectionongeospatialimages,typicallyfromthesoutheast(lowerright),

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whichplacesshadowsonnorthwest(upperleft)facingslopeswhenimagesarenorth-oriented.Theresultis“terraininversion”:Mountainsappearasvalleys,andviceversa.Removingembeddedshadowsfromimagesisnotfeasibleinmountainousterrainwiththedensestshadows—moredamagethangoodresultsfromimageeditingprocedures.However,onimageswithlowrelieforlimitedareasofhighrelief,shadowremovalisaworkableoption.Thebestimagestousearethosetakenaroundthesummersolsticewhenthesunishighestandshadowsareshortest.Afterremovingtheshadowsfromthegeospatialimage,onecanthenmergetheimagewithconventionalshadedrelieftocreateahybridproductwithpositivetraitsofboth;shadedreliefthatreadsproperly,plusrealisticandattractiveimagetextures(Figure11,right).TheNPSremoves,oratleastneutralizes,embeddedshadowsfromimagesusingtwoAdobePhotoshopprocedures.Thefirstprocedureworksbestonimageswithlightormoderateshadowdensities.ItinvolveslighteningtheshadowswithaBrightness/Contrastadjustment.Toselecttheshadowstoapplythisadjustment,onemustfirstcreateashadedreliefmaskfromaDEMofthesameareathatmatchesthesunangleandazimuthoftheimage.ThemetadatafileaccompanyingLandsat8imagesprovidesthisinformation.Thesecondprocedureappliestoimageswithboldshadowsthatcompletelyobscurelandsurfacetextures.TheNPSselectstheseshadowswithPhotoshop’sMagicWandtoolandusesContentAwareFilltoautomaticallyreplacethemwithtexturesborrowedfromelsewhereontheimage.Thisprocessispotentiallyinaccurateandmisleading.Aftermergingashadedreliefwiththedoctoredimage,however,thebrightlyilluminatedslopesonthereliefcompletelycoverimageareasthatwereformerlyshadows(Figure11).Printingthegeospatialimagelightlywhenmergedwithshadedreliefalsoamelioratesthisproblem.Theobjectiveistoshowahintofimagedetailonallbutthesteepestslopes.

Figure11.PetrifiedForestNationalMonument,Arizona.(Left)ALandsat8imagewithembeddedcastshadows.(Center)ShadedreliefcreatedfromaDEMofthesamearea.(Right)MergedLandsat8andshadedrelief.

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ConclusionTherelieffoundontoday’sNPSmapsreflectsanevolvingarrayofstylesandtechniques.Decidingwhichstyleofrelieftousedependsonmanyfactors,includingavailabledata,terrainandlandcovercharacteristics,mappurpose,andtimeconstraints.Forexample,creatinganelaboratenatural-colorreliefofGreatSmokyMountainsNationalParkinthesouthernAppalachianswouldservenousefulpurposebecauselittlelandcovervariationexists—theparkismostlywoodedfromvalleybottomtoridgetop.Abasicshadedreliefperhapscombinedwithtextureshadingcasewouldsufficeinthiscase.Recentlydevelopedstylesofreliefpresentationhavenotnecessarilysupplantedearlierstyles.Whilethe1970sand80sweretheheydayofmanualreliefshading,theNPSstillappliesmanualtouchupstodigitalreliefs—usingPhotoshopandaWacomtablet—tomeetdesignneedsnotpossiblethroughautomatedmeans.Forexample,theKenaiFjordsmap(Figure5)hasahand-drawnoceanbottombecausedigitalbathymetricdatawasnotyetavailableforthatareaatthetimeofmapproduction.Andsomenewermapscombinereliefpresentationstyles.CanyonlandsNationalPark,Utah,forexample,employsthreeofthestylesdescribedinthischapter(Figure12).Onthewhole,reliefpresentationonNPSvisitormapshaschangeddramaticallysincetheUnigridbrochureprogrambeganin1977,andcontinuestoevolve.Assoftwareanddataimprove,sotoowillthereliefpresentationsonparkmaps.ReferencesBrown,L.,2014.TextureShading:ANewTechniqueforDepictingTerrainRelief[presentation],9thICAMountainCartographyWorkshop,Banff,Canada.https://app.box.com/textureshadingHanna,J.1988.UpsandDownsofShadedRelief,Courier:NewsmagazineoftheNationalParkService,(11),23. Imhof, E. 1982. Cartographic Relief Presentation. Edited by H. J. Steward. Berlin: de Gruyter, 172. Leonowicz,A.,Jenny,B.,andHurni,L.2010.TerrainSculptor:GeneralizingTerrainModelsforReliefShading,CartographicPerspectives,(67),51–60. Patterson. T. 2002. Getting Real: Reflecting on the New Look of National Park Service Maps, Cartographic Perspectives, (43), 43-56.

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Patterson, T. and Kelso, N. 2004. Hal Shelton Revisited: Designing and Producing Natural-Color Maps with Satellite Land Cover Data, Cartographic Perspectives, (47), 28-55. Patterson,T.andJenny,B.2010.ShadedReliefArchive[accessedDecember6,2014].http://www.shadedreliefarchive.com/nps-reliefs.html


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