I am interested in compiling places suitable for stargazing in the UK. It is currently noted as a custom map in Google Maps. I collected this info myself from events announcements, my own experience, and public news (such as the launch of a new observatory).
Thank you. asked 22 Nov '12, 09:54 ismangil |
Imho it would be more efficient to render a light pollution map based on the existence of places (villages, cities), the tag lit=yes and some wizardry (considering amongst others number of inhabitants, size of the places) to determine the distance in which the light pollution is small enough to allow a good view to the dark sky. answered 24 Nov '12, 00:01 malenki |
Yes, this fits into OSM, although it is sensitive to the rule that all data shall be verifiable on the ground. Please be bold in adding places. You will get a couple of complaints about new tags but that is common and no reason to worry. Hand-added data never amounts to significant data load, but people often confuse it with the (mostly useless) data created by automated scripts (bots) that often amounts to magnitudes of more data than all hand edits. The best way to go is
Please be careful with the wiki. There is a process called "Proposal" which was meant as a dicussion platform but turned out to be mostly an extremely bureaucratic impediment. A lot of "proposals" deferred the documentation of a tag by more than half a year. So it may be a good idea to document the tag only after the annoucement on the mailing list. The same applies to the tagging mailing list, which is more about minuscule differences in interpreation of a tag meaning than the introduction of new types of data. answered 23 Nov '12, 07:48 Roland Olbricht |
Hummm I don't think that kind of info would be suitable for OSM, even though it is tempting. My rationale is that it is a quantitative and continuous property. In other words, every place on Earth could be attributed a "dark sky rating" and we'd have to cover the whole map. This is the same problem as elevation data; we keep it out of OSM because it is not technically a good place to put that kind of data (as interesting and free as it may be). You could counter by saying that you only map the best spots, but that's still a relative value, and the best stargazing spots in UK are actually pretty bad compared to other (dryer, less populated) areas of the world. That said, if one of the spot is actually signposted / advertised on the ground, this is another story. In that case, I'd get inspiration from the viewpoint tag. answered 22 Nov '12, 10:52 Vincent de P... ♦ I understand. I suppose official sites like observatories are acceptable as a POI.
(22 Nov '12, 20:20)
ismangil
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Concerning elevation, I think this is wrong. First, according to tagwatch there are around 1.8 million entries of elevation in the database, often attachted to otherwise relevant nodes. They do no harm. Second, most geodata could be interpreted in several ways. Streets have a continuous curving, yet we map it as line string with vertices.
(23 Nov '12, 07:20)
Roland Olbricht
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Yes, "official" sites or indeed anything that is observably true can be tagged. If there's a pole in the ground with a sign saying there's a good star view from here - it's fine to tag the fact that there's a pole because it is undeniably there. It's just the subjective bits ("good view of Alpha Centauri from here at times") that are problematic.
(23 Nov '12, 11:15)
Frederik Ramm ♦
Hopefully most elevations are on specific points such as on mountain/hill peaks, mountain passes and possibly spot depths.
(24 Nov '12, 18:39)
robbieonsea
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