On Wed, Sep 30, 2020 at 01:55:35AM -0700, stevea wrote: > On Sep 30, 2020, at 12:01 AM, Andrew Harvey <andrew.harv...@gmail.com> wrote: > > So it seems then that what you're mapping here isn't so much the active > > fire front, it's the burnt area given you want it to stick around after the > > flames are out. > > Neither of these two, really. Certainly not the active fire front: the fire > is out (for about a week now, but it burned for about six weeks). Nor “the > burnt area” exactly, but rather a polygon which represents the EXTENT of > where firefighters kept the fire limited by building a perimeter around it. > Some (I’d guess much or even most) of it IS burned, no doubt, but exactly > where is not fully yet known — but burned areas certainly ARE inside of this > polygon. This is useful because it shows not only where OSM mappers (like > me) will need to update landcover (and in some limited cases, landUSE, too) > as we update map data, but where map data consumers such as hikers in the > area (like me) will want to know “there may be closed roads, dangerous areas > and severely limited viewscapes, wildlife (both flora and fauna) et cetera to > enjoy were I to recreate here.” These are but two valuable reasons for this > fire=perimeter remaining in the map, until the polygon's usefulness > essentially becomes exhausted (there are no longer reasons for these data to > remain).
This is a classic case where you should set up a separate database to save the polygons and overlay them with OSM data. For one thing, the description sounds like it is not really suitable for OSM. It describes a past even ("the perimeter firefighters used weeks ago") which is likely not ground surveyable because I doubt that the firefighters have put red tape all along the perimeters. The description is really fuzzy. It just defines that the area is "of interest for something". We have traditionally rejected this kind of mapping, see e.g. recent discussions on no-go zones in cities. The problem with them is that you don't find two mappers really agreeing what they mean to represent. That is bad in two ways: a) data consumers shy away from using them because they cannot rely on that they mean what they think they mean and b) the features tend to rot in the database because most mapper don't dare to touch data they don't understand. The other thing is that this kind of data is really easy to merge with OSM data. You don't need to merge attributes into specific OSM objects. You just want to state "anything inside my polygon needs attention". Perfect for overlays. So there really is no need at all to burden the OSM database with it. Just to emphasize again: I'm not saying that the data is useless. I just think it is better put elsewhere. Sarah _______________________________________________ Tagging mailing list Tagging@openstreetmap.org https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging