Abstract

Spatial soil data applications require sound geospatial data including coordinates and a coordinate reference system. However, when it comes to legacy soil data we frequently find them to be missing or incorrect. This paper assesses the quality of the geospatial data of legacy soil observations in Brazil, and evaluates geospatial data sources (survey reports, maps, spatial data infrastructures, web mapping services) and expert knowledge as a means to fix inconsistencies. The analyses included several consistency checks performed on 6,195 observations from the Brazilian Soil Information System. The positional accuracy of geospatial data sources was estimated so as to obtain an indication of the quality for fixing inconsistencies. The coordinates of 20 soil observations, estimated using the web mapping service, were validated with the true coordinates measured in the field. Overall, inconsistencies of different types and magnitudes were found in half of the observations, causing mild to severe misplacements. The involuntary substitution of symbols and numeric characters with similar appearance when recording geospatial data was the most common typing mistake. Among the geospatial data sources, the web mapping service was the most useful, due to operational advantages and lower positional error (~6 m). However, the quality of the description of the observation location controls the accuracy of estimated coordinates. Thus, the error of coordinates estimated using the web mapping service ranged between 30 and 1000 m. This is equivalent to coordinates measured from arc-seconds to arc-minutes, respectively. Under this scenario, the feedback from soil survey experts is crucial to improving the quality of geospatial data.

Highlights

  • A large quantity of soil data has already been produced in Brazil as part of soil surveys and research projects on the various aspects of soil science

  • Geospatial data inconsistencies We found inconsistencies of varied types and magnitudes in the geospatial data of the open legacy survey soil data downloaded from BDSolos (Table 1)

  • We found mistakes, both in original survey reports and data downloaded from BDSolos, to be the main reason for the misallocation of observations

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Summary

Introduction

A large quantity of soil data has already been produced in Brazil as part of soil surveys and research projects on the various aspects of soil science. Brazilian soil scientists have recently engaged in the design of a free soil data repository that uses community build standards, follows open data policies, and presses for ease of access, maintenance and use. Br/febr) is a centralized repository that stores accessible open soil data in a standardized and harmonized format for various applications. The Free Brazilian Repository for Open Soil Data These include the new Brazilian national soil survey program (PronaSolos), which aims at producing up-to-date, detailed spatial soil information using digital soil mapping (DSM) (Polidoro et al, 2016)

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