So this zone is actually some kind of island? Cool :) I'm happy for you or someone else to have a look at it to get it fixed Philippe!
Jorieke Op do 19 mrt. 2020 om 17:38 schreef Manfred A. Reiter <[email protected]>: > Hi did not checked it, > > but a connection between Orinoco and Amazonas exists! It's the > Cassiquiare. (Not sure about the correct wording) > > ## Manfred Reiter - mobile - > ## please excuse typos and brevity > ## http://weeklyOSM.eu > > Philippe Verdy <[email protected]> schrieb am Do., 19. März 2020, 12:28: > >> There's certainly a problem in the way the multipolygon for the >> Orinoco river was created, without importing the water tags to it. >> And there's a suspiscious connection between Orinono and the Amazon >> via a tributary, creating an "island" in it. This multipolygon >> requires fixes (Osmose and other QA tools can help detect where this >> happens). >> I suspect that the multipolygon for the Orinoco River was modifioed >> recently to add too many riverbeds in it and not really belonging to >> it. This multipolygon is certainly broken. >> I joined the OSM French talk list. There may be QA tools to do that >> (it's not easy to fix as this covers a very large area, only JOSM >> experts can locate it, with the help of QA tools to locate the broken >> areas and superfluous tags. This will require loading lot of data, and >> JOSM running in a 64-bit Java VM with enough memory, plus a solid PC. >> >> Le jeu. 19 mars 2020 à 18:20, Jorieke Vyncke >> <[email protected]> a écrit : >> > >> > Interesting! >> > So is this an issue that can be fixed by the Humanitarian layer OSM >> France team? Or is it just a matter of updating OSM and waiting for the >> humaniarian layer to render it correctly? >> > Thanks, Jorieke >> > >> > Op do 19 mrt. 2020 om 16:47 schreef Philippe Verdy <[email protected]>: >> >> >> >> Most probably this is the "water bassin" of the Amazone river, which >> >> was tagged incorrectly with some "water=*" that causes problems in >> >> this rendering. >> >> Water bassins for rivers (which do not include only riverbeds and >> >> lakes/ponds, but also all surrounding lands whose drained waters on >> >> soil are converging to rivers) should not use this tag. >> >> This does not cause a problem however in the OSM Carto rendering. If >> >> that tag was approved, then the rendering for humanitarian map should >> >> be fixed (it is maintained by OSM France). >> >> But if I look at the boundary, I only sea ways for small riverbeds. >> >> So it is likely that some multipolygon for riverbeds areas of some >> >> river has been broken and the renderers attempt to "close" it due to >> >> holes, or that someone joined all these riverbeds into a single >> >> multipolygon. >> >> Given the size of the relation where it is used, this cannot be fixed >> in iD. >> >> Note also that given the current delays in the OSM data servers for >> >> data replication, this may be temporary and caused by lack of >> >> synchronization of the slave database used by the French renderer for >> >> HOT. >> >> >> >> Le jeu. 19 mars 2020 à 17:11, Jorieke Vyncke >> >> <[email protected]> a écrit : >> >> > >> >> > Hello, >> >> > Is there someone who knows why several countries in Latin America >> look like ocean on the humanitarian layer on OpenStreetMap? Check here: >> https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=5/3.119/-61.436&layers=H >> >> > Can someone fix that? >> >> > Thanks! >> >> > Jorieke >> >> > >> >> > >> >> > _______________________________________________ >> >> > HOT mailing list >> >> > [email protected] >> >> > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/hot >> > >> > _______________________________________________ >> > HOT mailing list >> > [email protected] >> > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/hot >> >> _______________________________________________ >> HOT mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/hot >> >
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