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Making Maps and Plotting Data With GMT and iGMT: Thorsten Becker

The document discusses GMT (Generic Mapping Tools) and iGMT, which is a graphical user interface for GMT. GMT is an open source suite of tools for producing maps and plotting data. It has over 65 tools and produces publication quality plots and maps. While powerful, GMT has a steep learning curve and command line interface. iGMT aims to provide a GUI and script generation for GMT plots to lower the barrier to entry. Examples are given of GMT scripts and maps it can produce.

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Wiguna Kurniawan
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
88 views25 pages

Making Maps and Plotting Data With GMT and iGMT: Thorsten Becker

The document discusses GMT (Generic Mapping Tools) and iGMT, which is a graphical user interface for GMT. GMT is an open source suite of tools for producing maps and plotting data. It has over 65 tools and produces publication quality plots and maps. While powerful, GMT has a steep learning curve and command line interface. iGMT aims to provide a GUI and script generation for GMT plots to lower the barrier to entry. Examples are given of GMT scripts and maps it can produce.

Uploaded by

Wiguna Kurniawan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Making maps and

plotting data with


GMT and iGMT

Thorsten Becker
University of Southern California
Los Angeles CA

April 2012
The problem
● Produce publication quality plots (including
x – y) and geographic maps
● Achieve flexibility and automated processing
(which requires modularity and script based
operation)
● Do it the open source way (low cost, high
transparency, high portability, high robustness)
The solution
● The Generic Mapping Tools (GMT)
● “~65 tools for manipulating geographic and
Cartesian data sets (including filtering, trend fitting,
gridding, projecting, etc.) and producing
Encapsulated PostScript File (EPS) illustrations”
● It has a somewhat steep learning curve, and no
graphical user interface
● iGMT: a GMT GUI and script generator
GMT
● Written by Paul Wessel and Walter Smith
● Version 4 is at 4.5.7, version 5 is beta (under
development) (as of 04/2012)
● UNIX based, C language, command line tool,
GPLed
● ASCII, NetCDF data input is projected, and
produces a PS
● Data processing, plotting, projections, etc.
● Flexible, powerful, complicated
● http://gmt.soest.hawaii.edu/
GMT produced examples
Examples
How to get it?
● Download from GMT web page and install
● http://gmt.soest.hawaii.edu/
● Requires Linux or OS-X
● prerequisites such as NetCDF
● Install via package manager (yum, fink)
● Install the USC Geodynamics Earth Science
Computing Environment at
● http://geodynamics.usc.edu/~becker/ugesce.html
GMT documentation
Running GMT
#!/bin/bash
# GMT EXAMPLE 07
#
# Purpose: Make a basemap with earthquakes and isochrons etc
# GMT progs: pscoast, pstext, psxy
# Unix progs: $AWK, echo, rm
#
ps=../example_07.ps
pscoast -R-50/0/-10/20 -JM9i -K -GP300/26 -Dl -Wthinnest -B10 -U~Example 7 in Cookbook~ > $ps
psxy -R -J -O -K -m fz.xy -Wthinner,- >> $ps
$AWK ’{print $1-360.0, $2, $3*0.01}’ quakes.xym | psxy -R -J -O -K -H1 -Sci -Gwhite -Wthinnest >> $ps
psxy -R -J -O -K -m isochron.xy -Wthin >> $ps
psxy -R -J -O -K -m ridge.xy -Wthicker >> $ps
psxy -R -J -O -K -Gwhite -Wthick -A >> $ps << END
-14.5 15.2
-2 15.2
-2 17.8
-14.5 17.8
END
psxy -R -J -O -K -Gwhite -Wthinner -A >> $ps << END
-14.35 15.35
-2.15 15.35
-2.15 17.65
-14.35 17.65
END
echo ~-13.5 16.5~ | psxy -R -J -O -K -Sc0.08i -Gwhite -Wthinner >> $ps
echo ~-12.5 16.5 18 0 6 LM ISC Earthquakes~ | pstext -R -J -O -K >> $ps
pstext -R -J -O -Sthin -Gwhite >> $ps << END
-43 -5 30 0 1 CM SOUTH
-43 -8 30 0 1 CM AMERICA
-7 11 30 0 1 CM AFRICA
END
rm -f .gmt*
WTF is happening here?
● UNIX uses shell/shell script interactions with the
OS system, traditionally
● This is a good thing, but can take some time to
get used to
● Check out some UNIX introduction, e.g.
● http://geodynamics.usc.edu/~becker/teaching/unix/lecture1.pdf
● http://geodynamics.usc.edu/~becker/teaching/unix/lecture2.pdf
Getting data into GMT
● cat data_file.xy |
psxy -Rw/e/s/n -Jxw/yh -Sa0.1 -P > tmp.ps
● Binary via NetCDF grd files
● Tools for import/export/handling
● grdinfo, grdmath
● xyz2grd, grd2xyz
● surface, nearneighbor
● Converters: kml2ascii, etc. 
Some GMT things
● Region:
● ­R125/130/20/30
● Projection:
● ­JM7i
● ­JH127.5/6c
● Line styles:
● ­W2,45/50/50
● ­Wthick,black,­
● Boundary annotation:
● ­Ba10f1
● ­Ba5f.5g1:”x”:/a10f1:”y”::.”plot title”:WeSn 
GMT problems and solutions
● K-O
1) Some-GMT-command -K > tmp.ps
2) Some-other-command -O -K >> tmp.ps
3) Yet-another-command -O -K >> tmp.ps
4) Some-last-command -O >> map.ps
● RTFM, the cookbook, or the tutorial
● Join the GMT help list (and google if someone
has experienced the same problem before)
● Get a working script and modify
● iGMT
Some nitty gritty stuff that matters
● PS bounding box can be off – modifybb
● PDF is more portable (but sometimes Illustrator
chokes nonetheless) -
● epstopdf
● ps2pdf
● eps2eps (...)
● PNG is sometimes more useful (but cannot edit
anymore)
● convert -density 150 file.ps file.png
Some GMT caveats
● There are bugs, sometimes (e.g. supp
packages)
● Not necessarily spherical (surface vs.
sphtriangulate)
● Hidden parameters in .gmtdefaults file
● Wrong scaling (-Jx100) will kill your machine
● Non interactive, not fully 3D
● However, it's the best and there's a large user
community
iGMT
Interactive mapping of
geoscientific datasets

● Written by Thorsten Becker and Alexander


Braun
● UNIX based, TclTk script graphical user
interfact for GMT
● Access to several Earth science datasets
● Produces GMT/bash scripts
● (development discontinued, in favor of python
based SEATREE)
● http://geodynamics.usc.edu/~becker/igmt/
● Installed on USC Geodynamics Earth Science
Computing Environment
iGMT produced maps
iGMT on desktop
Solid Earth Research and Teaching
Environment (SEATREE)
Python interface for GMT plots

(Only very rudimentary implementation; there are previous attempts on python-GMT, and
a proper interface is in the works.)

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