Masthead

Features, Themes, and Layers

Features are things on the ground that we represent within a GIS. Features include trees, buildings, roads, streams, and mountains. Features also include things that we have designated on the ground but cannot be viewed such as state boundaries. Examples of features would be:

  • Arcata
  • California
  • This room
  • The Pacific Ocean
  • General Sherman (the tree)
  • Eilean Donan castle
  • Your house
  • You!
The General Sherman Tree by Gerrit Ebert By © Guillaume Piolle /, CC BY 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=7558028

A theme is a group of features of a similar type. Thus you could have a feature that is a road and then a theme that is roads for Humboldt County. Themes include:

  • Cities
  • States
  • Rooms
  • Oceans
  • Sequoias
  • Castles
  • Houses
  • People
http://www.duskyswondersite.com/nature/trees/

 

Layers are typically of one theme (i.e. feature type) and are the main "chunk" of data that we work with in a GIS. When we load something from a file into a GIS, it is typically a layer containing data of one theme. A layer we might load into a GIS could be:

Layers

Layer: A spatial dataset containing a common feature type

Layer Defined

Layers are stacked together within a GIS

 

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