I have overlapping polygon data that I would like to 'combine' in ArcGIS and I'm running up against the 20 band maximum for rasters.
I'm interested in solutions using this basic method with Arc or other statistical software. Thanks in advance.
I have many overlapping polygons 300+ that represent ranges of animals within a large area 100,000+ Acres. I have many unique attributes for each polygon representing various characteristics for the individual. I also have 30m categorical raster data for vegetation, ownership, and several other layers. I attempted to look at this by trying to split up the feature class (.shp file) with the 300+ polys into individual files then convert feature -> raster, then obviously I run into the issue of too many
I'm beginning to think it would be easier to convert the raster layers (vegetation and ownership e.g.) raster - > polygon and then use the cross tabulation tool.
أكثر...
I'm interested in solutions using this basic method with Arc or other statistical software. Thanks in advance.
I have many overlapping polygons 300+ that represent ranges of animals within a large area 100,000+ Acres. I have many unique attributes for each polygon representing various characteristics for the individual. I also have 30m categorical raster data for vegetation, ownership, and several other layers. I attempted to look at this by trying to split up the feature class (.shp file) with the 300+ polys into individual files then convert feature -> raster, then obviously I run into the issue of too many
I'm beginning to think it would be easier to convert the raster layers (vegetation and ownership e.g.) raster - > polygon and then use the cross tabulation tool.
أكثر...