Apr 25, 2024, 14:20 by fernando.treb...@gmail.com:

> Considering that requiring local surveys in Antarctica would lead to
> an empty map and that assuming that governments are always lying would
> prevent us from importing government data
>
please reread message you are responding to

"without any verification based on primary sources (local observations, 
satellite/aerial imagery, ground photos"

using satellite or aerial imagery or ground photos does not require visiting
such place in person

BTW, I think that at this point
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Antarctica/Tagging#Roads_and_routes
section should be removed.

("more intensively maintained than the other long distance routes" is not
enough to be highway=trunk)

> On Thu, 25 Apr 2024 at 04:51, Christoph Hormann <o...@imagico.de> wrote:
>
>>
>> I wanted to add some cautionary advice here.
>>
>> Mapping in the Antarctic in OSM is to a much larger part than on other 
>> continents fueled by 'imagined' things.  I am not talking about stuff here 
>> individually made up by mappers but more institutionally conjured ideas, 
>> projections and to some extent also political propaganda.  The percentage of 
>> things mapped in the Antarctic in recent years that is based on secondary 
>> sources (government/institutional publications, wikipedia etc.) without any 
>> verification based on primary sources (local observations, satellite/aerial 
>> imagery, ground photos) is rather high - in a way that in the long term 
>> would become a serious problem for OpenStreetMap.
>>
>> Having looked at a lot of satellite imagery from the Antarctic over the 
>> years i can clearly say that a lot of claims that are being made about 
>> 'roads' in the Antarctic - in OSM or in Wikipedia - do not hold up in 
>> scrutiny against primary source evidence.  And in such cases you'd have to 
>> ask yourself:  Do you want OSM to represent the observable reality on the 
>> ground or do you want it to reflect the major consensus narrative of a 
>> certain cultural sphere.
>>
>> As a basic definition a route of navigation on land has two requirements to 
>> qualify as a road/path in OSM:
>>
>> * it is physically manifested in some form, at least during those periods 
>> when it is used (in case of seasonal roads on seasonally dry/frozen 
>> lakes/rivers for example).
>> * it is used in the physically manifested form with some level of regularity 
>> and permanency.
>>
>> Two examples from outside the Antarctic that would probably not qualify:
>>
>> https://mc.bbbike.org/mc/?lon=10.713939&lat=17.952688&zoom=13&num=3&mt0=bing-satellite&mt1=mapnik&mt2=nokia-satellite
>> https://mc.bbbike.org/mc/?lon=14.069293&lat=22.547244&zoom=17&num=3&mt0=bing-satellite&mt1=mapnik&mt2=nokia-satellite
>>
>> The first simply lacks a physical manifestation (because the ground is too 
>> dynamically re-shaped by wind and the route used is too variable in its 
>> exact course).  The second visibly demonstrates that no single physically 
>> manifested track is commonly used by the different users of the route.  Both 
>> of these are evidently verifiable routes of navigation (a bit like ferry 
>> routes) - but, by established meaning of the road tags in OSM, not roads 
>> (though of course mappers are free to map them as such - as evidenced by the 
>> examples).
>>
>> Looking concretely at long distance supply routes in the Antarctic - those 
>> are largely quite comparable to the linked to cases outside the Antarctic - 
>> except that most of them are much more sparsely used for very specific 
>> purposes (supply of a specific remote location with certain goods that are 
>> impossible or much less cost efficient to transport via airplane).  By 
>> established conventions of functional road tagging in OSM these would almost 
>> all be service roads (no through-traffic to other destinations than the ones 
>> the route ends at).  The level of physical manifestation varies a lot 
>> depending on local snow and wind conditions and type and frequency of use.  
>> Some routes that have likely not been used for many years are clearly 
>> visible in images while others (some of which are claimed to be used with 
>> high frequency on Wikipedia and elsewhere) have clearly no physical 
>> manifestation.
>>
>> In general, it is unlikely that mappers at large can be convinced to refrain 
>> from inflating tagging in the Antarctic to compensate for the variable scale 
>> of the Mercator projection or to reproduce certain subjective believes of 
>> importance.  This applies to both routes of navigation and populated places. 
>>  The solution would be to create distinct tagging to account for the 
>> concrete features that exist and are practically verifiable specifically to 
>> be used in parallel with the subjectively inflated (and therefore 
>> semantically meaningless) mainstream tags.  In this specific case that would 
>> be tagging of routes of land navigation with sporadic use and 
>> permanently/regularly populated places that are not settlements in the sense 
>> that people individually settle there for a longer time, but that might 
>> still fulfill some of the functions settlements have elsewhere.  The 
>> criteria for such tagging should be chosen for practical verifiability based 
>> on available primary sources.
>>
>> --
>> Christoph Hormann
>> https://www.imagico.de/
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Tagging mailing list
>> Tagging@openstreetmap.org
>> https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging
>>
>
>
>
> -- 
> Fernando Trebien
>
> _______________________________________________
> Tagging mailing list
> Tagging@openstreetmap.org
> https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging
>

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