Atlas of Living Australia in the spotlight, again

Commenting on a comment on my slightly disappointed take on a couple of new spatial datasets yesterday, our regular reader Glenn Hyman, another CGIAR CGI uber-geek, muses thus:

If I was a young GIS geek, I think I would concentrate on how to create online applications for the non-expert.

Do you mean, Glenn, the kind of “online application for the non-expert” which the Atlas of Living Australia aspires, with considerable success, to be? Which coincidentally is being so actively discussed on Twitter just now. 1 And which I need to road test again very soon, as there have been significant changes since the last time I took it around the block.

Playing around with new spatial datasets

Kai Sonder, CGIAR GIS geek extraordinaire, alerts us to the release of a couple of cool new global geospatial datasets, on roads and urban expansion. You need GIS software to get the full benefit of these, but at least for the city one some of the data 2 are available in KML format. This is what you get when you map in Google Earth Yerevan’s present extent together with the location of wheat germplasm accessions from Genesys.

wheat yerevan

Clearly some of those samples must have been collected a while back, when the city was perhaps smaller. And this is what you get when you map Armenia’s roads, again with wheat, but this time in DIVA-GIS.

armenia wheat roads

A nice enough illustration of a bias towards collecting germplasm near roads that has been looked at in quite a lot of detail in another part of the world. But I just can’t help thinking these resources should be easier to play around with. Especially together.

LATER: Spurred on by Cedric and Jeremy, let me spell it out in more detail. What I would have liked is for both datasets to be available in their entirety in a format allowing easy upload to Google Earth. You will tell me that if you’re really, seriously interested in analyzing these datasets, together with others (like that Armenian wheat stuff from Genesys, say), you can do it by downloading the shapefiles, which is the standard format for such things, and opening them in any decent GIS software. And you’d be right. But isn’t there another kind of user? The one who wants to just, well, play around. Maybe even as a preliminary to more serious analysis, but initially just play around. That user is not well served by these resources. I know because I am that user, and I don’t feel well served.

Hedges, pledges and edges

Everybody’s calling the Nutrition4Growth at the weekend a great success, perhaps a game-changer.

The EC, The Gates Foundation, and the World Bank committed leverage the billions that are already spend on agriculture to impact on nutrition. These pledges are impressive — not least the eye popping $4bn from the EC.

Even, though with various caveats, the ever-cynical Laurence Haddad, from whose reality-checking post our title is nicked. Fingers crossed.

LATER: And here’s the CGIAR’s take on it all.

Featured: Peaches

Mary Winfree Found our post “Churros and peaches in the Canyon de Chelly” useful:

My back yard holds a sacred place and cemetery, we found it when a neighbor tried to build a road right up to my back door and the bones came up. We brought in Cadaver dogs who revealed a whole cemetery. It was a blessing in disguise because when we went to replant the bones of my little Indian Grandmother, there were more bones from the same tribe, that needed a home. They had been buried and then disturbed by a big hiway, and no place had been found for them. Now they will join the ones in my yard. We are holding a homecoming party for them. Songs both sad and happy, a BBQ and where they are replanted they are planting peach trees – now I know what that means…

We’re glad we were able to help a little.