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Subject:
From:
"Angie Cope, American Geographical Society Library, UW Milwaukee" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Maps, Air Photo, GIS Forum - Map Librarianship
Date:
Mon, 15 Oct 2012 08:22:46 -0500
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
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-------- Original Message --------
Subject: RE: geospatial data in institutional repositories?
Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2012 16:06:44 -0600
From: Kathryn Lage <[log in to unmask]>
To: 'Maps and Air Photo Systems Forum' <[log in to unmask]>


Hi Jon  and Maps-L folks,

First, I want to thank everyone for all the wonderful information and
thoughtful responses to me and to the list. I saw that I left out a word
or two in my initial request and still lots of people managed to glean
my meaning and respond! ;) I've had a number of requests to share my
presentation and/or a summary of the responses, which I will do as soon
as I can pull everything together. Thank you!

Now to a few comments on Jon's responses:
So UCSB has been collecting faculty geospatial dataset (on CDROM/DVD,
etc.)? Interesting! Any other maps-L folks doing that on an ad-hoc
basis? I'd wanted to do that back when I started at CU-Boulder, but we
were afraid we'd be inundated w/ requests and wouldn't be able to handle
it! Possibly true...

As to your comments (below) about institutional data in IRs, a lot of IR
software purports to be able to hold many types of data, but there just
aren't any special accommodation for making it searchable or accessible.
The Hydra/Fedora instances seem to be the most accommodating that I've
seen. DSPace the least... But I haven' t been taking a comprehensive
look at the technical functionalities, so I could be missing some
features of the different platforms.

I think you're right that subject repositories seem to have been more
successful than general institutional repositories. We'll see, as you
said, how things develop. As for data repositories (or data in IRs),
there is some pressure in the form of requirements from funding agencies
like NIH and NSF, to make funded research data openly available as well
as studies documented expressed data management/archiving needs. These
two things may make data repositories more necessary in the researcher's
mind than a repository for textual materials. We shall see!

-Katie

Katie Lage
Earth Sciences/Map Librarian, Acting Head
Jerry Crail Johnson Earth Sciences & Map Library
Sciences Department, University Libraries
184 UCB
University of Colorado
Boulder, CO 80309
303-735-4917
http://ucblibraries.colorado.edu/map/


-----Original Message-----
From: Maps, Air Photo, GIS Forum - Map Librarianship
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Angie Cope, American
Geographical Society Library, UW Milwaukee
Sent: Monday, October 08, 2012 9:49 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: geospatial data in institutional repositories?

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: geospatial data in institutional repositories?
Date: Mon, 08 Oct 2012 08:19:36 -0700
From: Jon Jablonski <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To: [log in to unmask]
To: Maps, Air Photo, GIS Forum - Map Librarianship <[log in to unmask]>


Katie:  I think your finding is valid.  Most IRs that I am familiar with
freak out when you start talking about anything other than PDFs and CSVs.

You WOULD think that with all the talk of data curation and support for
Big Data that there would be more actual data in IRs.  IMHO:  for now
most people charged with storing and organizing spatial data are
choosing to build dedicated spatial repositories.  The discovery and
access layers for spatial are so different that this might be the
situation for some time to come.

In their defense:  the data repositories and IRs haven't been around for
as long as spatial repositories.  Salim build MAGIS 5 or 6 years ago
now.  CuGIR and the Harvard Geospatial Library were there the very first
time I went looking for them in 2003--that's two or three years before
IRs really came on the scene.  In 2001-2002 there was that distributed
search engine with 5 or 6 nodes (NSDI?  Or was that the original GOS?)

What remains to be seen (again, IMHO) is whether any institutional data
repositories really take off.  So far, they have been restricted to
subject domains:  genomics and other sequence repositories; survey
research; demography (often with a spatial component); climate data.
Maybe spatial will remain by itself.

-j



On 10/8/2012 5:45 AM, Angie Cope, American Geographical Society Library,
UW Milwaukee wrote:
> -------- Original Message --------
> Subject:        geospatial data in institutional repositories?
> Date:   Sat, 6 Oct 2012 16:34:45 -0600
> From:   Kathryn Lage <[log in to unmask]>
> To:     'Maps and Air Photo Systems Forum' <[log in to unmask]>
>
>
>
> Hi all,
>
> I'm doing some preparation for a NACIS presentation the week after
> next and hoping to gather knowledge from the collective Maps-L mind!
>
> I'm investigating geospatial research data in open repositories. And...
> I'm not finding much at all. I had hoped that the recent increase in
> research data management and data repositories would be reflected in
> the geospatial world. That in itself is an interesting finding, but I
> can't talk about it for very long! So, I have two questions for Maps-L folks:
>
> 1.Does your institution have an IR that is planning to already holds
> research**GIS datasets?
>
> 2.Does your institution host a geoportal that contains institutional
> research data as well as commercial or government data?
>
> I'm doing more research on geoportals, government, and subject
> repositories, but thought I'd ask in case I'm missing something. It
> can be hard to pull out geospatial data. Thanks for any info you can provide!
>
> -Katie
>
> Katie Lage
>
> Earth Sciences/Map Librarian, Acting Head
>
> Jerry Crail Johnson Earth Sciences & Map Library
>
> Sciences Department, University Libraries
>
> 184 UCB
>
> University of Colorado
>
> Boulder, CO 80309
>
> 303-735-4917
>
> http://ucblibraries.colorado.edu/map/

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