Create Grid in R for kriging in gstat

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青春惊慌失措
青春惊慌失措 2020-12-05 12:26
lat    long
7.16   124.21
8.6    123.35
8.43   124.28
8.15   125.08

Consider these coordinates, these coordinates correspond to weather stations th

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  • 2020-12-05 13:02

    If you have your study area as a polygon, imported as a SpatialPolygons, you could either use package raster to rasterize it, or use sp::spsample to sample it using sampling type regular.

    If you don't have such a polygon, you can create points regularly spread over a rectangular long/lat area using expand.grid, using seq to generate a sequence of long and lat values.

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  • 2020-12-05 13:02

    @yzw and @Edzer bring up good points for creating a regular rectangular grid, but sometimes, there is the need to create an irregular grid over a defined polygon, usually for kriging.

    This is a sparsely documented topic. One good answer can be found here. I expand on it with code below:

    Consider the the built in meuse dataset. meuse.grid is an irregularly shaped grid. How do we make an grid like meuse.grid for our unique study area?

    library(sp)
    data(meuse.grid)
    ggplot(data = meuse.grid)+geom_point(aes(x=x, y=y))
    

    Imagine an irregularly shaped SpatialPolygon or SpatialPolygonsDataFrame, called spdf. You first build a regular rectangular grid over it, then subset the points in that regular grid by the irregularly-shaped polygon.

    1. Make a rectangular grid over your SpatialPolygonsDataFrame

    grd <- makegrid(spdf, n = 100)
    colnames(grd) <- c('x','y')
    

    2. Convert the grid to SpatialPoints and subset these points by the polygon.

    grd_pts <- SpatialPoints(coords = grd, 
                             proj4string=CRS(proj4string(spdf)))
    
    # find all points in `grd_pts` that fall within `spdf`
    grd_pts_in <- grd_pts[spdf, ]
    

    3. Visualize your clipped grid, which can be used for kriging.

    # transform grd_pts_in back into a data frame
    gdf <- as.data.frame(coordinates(grd_pts_in)) 
    
    ggplot(gdf) +
      geom_point(aes(x=x,y=y))
    
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  • 2020-12-05 13:12

    I am going to share my approach to create a grid for kriging. There are probably more efficient or elegant ways to achieve the same task, but I hope this will be a start to facilitate some discussions.

    The original poster was thinking about 1 km for every 10 pixels, but that is probably too much. I am going to create a grid with cell size equals to 1 km * 1 km. In addition, the original poster did not specify an origin of the grid, so I will spend some time determining a good starting point. I also assume that the Spherical Mercator projection coordinate system is the appropriate choice for the projection. This is a common projection for Google Map or Open Street Maps.

    1. Load Packages

    I am going to use the following packages. sp, rgdal, and raster are packages provide many useful functions for spatial analysis. leaflet and mapview are packages for quick exploratory visualization of spatial data.

    # Load packages
    library(sp)
    library(rgdal)
    library(raster)
    library(leaflet)
    library(mapview)
    

    2. Exploratory Visualization of the station locations

    I created an interactive map to inspect the location of the four stations. Because the original poster provided the latitude and longitude of these four stations, I can create a SpatialPointsDataFrame with Latitude/Longitude projection. Notice the EPSG code for Latitude/Longitude projection is 4326. To learn more about EPSG code, please see this tutorial (https://www.nceas.ucsb.edu/~frazier/RSpatialGuides/OverviewCoordinateReferenceSystems.pdf).

    # Create a data frame showing the **Latitude/Longitude**
    station <- data.frame(lat = c(7.16, 8.6, 8.43, 8.15),
                          long = c(124.21, 123.35, 124.28, 125.08),
                          station = 1:4)
    
    # Convert to SpatialPointsDataFrame
    coordinates(station) <- ~long + lat
    
    # Set the projection. They were latitude and longitude, so use WGS84 long-lat projection
    proj4string(station) <- CRS("+init=epsg:4326")
    
    # View the station location using the mapview function
    mapview(station)
    

    The mapview function will create an interactive map. We can use this map to determine what could be a suitable for the origin of the grid.

    3. Determine the origin

    After inspecting the map, I decided that the origin could be around longitude 123 and latitude 7. This origin will be on the lower left of the grid. Now I need to find the coordinate representing the same point under Spherical Mercator projection.

    # Set the origin
    ori <- SpatialPoints(cbind(123, 7), proj4string =  CRS("+init=epsg:4326")) 
    # Convert the projection of ori
    # Use EPSG: 3857 (Spherical Mercator)
    ori_t <- spTransform(ori, CRSobj = CRS("+init=epsg:3857"))
    

    I first created a SpatialPoints object based on the latitude and longitude of the origin. After that I used the spTransform to perform project transformation. The object ori_t now is the origin with Spherical Mercator projection. Notice that the EPSG code for Spherical Mercator is 3857.

    To see the value of coordinates, we can use the coordinates function as follows.

    coordinates(ori_t)
         coords.x1 coords.x2
    [1,]  13692297  781182.2
    

    4. Determine the extent of the grid

    Now I need to decide the extent of the grid that can cover all the four points and the desired area for kriging, which depends on the cell size and the number of cells. The following code sets up the extent based on the information. I have decided that the cell size is 1 km * 1 km, but I need to experiment on what would be a good cell number for both x- and y-direction.

    # The origin has been rounded to the nearest 100
    x_ori <- round(coordinates(ori_t)[1, 1]/100) * 100
    y_ori <- round(coordinates(ori_t)[1, 2]/100) * 100
    
    # Define how many cells for x and y axis
    x_cell <- 250
    y_cell <- 200
    
    # Define the resolution to be 1000 meters
    cell_size <- 1000
    
    # Create the extent
    ext <- extent(x_ori, x_ori + (x_cell * cell_size), y_ori, y_ori + (y_cell * cell_size)) 
    

    Based on the extent I created, I can create a raster layer with number all equal to 0. Then I can use the mapview function again to see if the raster and the four stations matches well.

    # Initialize a raster layer
    ras <- raster(ext)
    
    # Set the resolution to be
    res(ras) <- c(cell_size, cell_size)
    ras[] <- 0
    
    # Project the raster
    projection(ras) <- CRS("+init=epsg:3857")
    
    # Create interactive map
    mapview(station) + mapview(ras)
    

    I repeated this process several times. Finally I decided that the number of cells is 250 and 200 for x- and y-direction, respectively.

    5. Create spatial grid

    Now I have created a raster layer with proper extent. I can first save this raster as a GeoTiff for future use.

    # Save the raster layer
    writeRaster(ras, filename = "ras.tif", format="GTiff") 
    

    Finally, to use the kriging functions from the package gstat, I need to convert the raster to SpatialPixels.

    # Convert to spatial pixel
    st_grid <- rasterToPoints(ras, spatial = TRUE)
    gridded(st_grid) <- TRUE
    st_grid <- as(st_grid, "SpatialPixels")
    

    The st_grid is a SpatialPixels that can be used in kriging.

    This is an iterative process to determine a suitable grid. Throughout the process, users can change the projection, origin, cell size, or cell number depends on the needs of their analysis.

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