John Snow’s Cholera data in more formats
In honour of the bicentenary of John Snow’s birth – and because I was asked to by someone via email – I have now released my digitisation of John Snow’s Cholera data in a few other formats: KML and as Google Fusion Tables.
To save you reading my previous blog posts on the subject, I’ll give a brief overview of my data. John Snow produced a famous map in 1854 showing the deaths caused by a cholera outbreak in Soho, London, and the locations of water pumps in the area. By doing this he found there was a significant clustering of the deaths around a certain pump – and removing the handle of the pump stopped the outbreak. This is a bit of a simplification (see Wikipedia or the John Snow Society for more details), but generally covers what happened.
Anyway, I digitised John Snow’s original data and georeferenced it to the Ordnance Survey co-ordinate system, so that I could overlay it on modern maps of that area, as below (using the OS OpenData StreetView data, containing Ordnance Survey data © Crown copyright and database right 2013):
while still being able to overlay it on John Snow’s original map:
Anyway, the data that is available is:
- Cholera Death locations (Vector) with attribute data giving the number of deaths at each point
- Pump locations (Vector)
- John Snow’s original map georeferenced to the Ordnance Survey National Grid (Raster)
- Current Ordnance Survey maps of the area (from those released under OS OpenData; Contains Ordnance Survey data © Crown copyright and database right 2013; Raster)
These are available for download/use in a number of formats:
- A zip file with the Vector data as Shapefiles and the Raster data as TIFF images
(this is the original data provided for download by me – and is probably what you want for importing into a GIS system)
Download - A zip file with the Vector data as KML files and the Raster data as TIFF images
(suitable for importing into Google Earth and other products that use KML files)
Download - Links to Google Fusion Tables with the vector data already imported
Cholera Deaths
Pumps
Deaths and Pumps together (this dataset has both pump and death points in the same table: pump points have Count values of -999, death points have Count values > 0 which give the number of Cholera deaths at that location)
The latter is particularly cool, I think as it allows you to very easily overlay the data on modern Google Maps data, and should allow some interesting ‘mashups’ to be created. All of the tables are set to be shared publically, so you could be able to copy them (using the Copy Table command in the File menu) and play around with them as much as you want! If you click the Example Map tab then you’ll see a very rudimentary map I’ve created using the data on top of Google Maps (see below) – I’m sure you’ll be able to do far better visualisations than that.
The folks at CartoDB have also used this data in one of their tutorials which shows you how to import the data to CartoDB and create a styled map to show the deaths with different sized markers – yet another way you can use the ‘first real GIS data’ in today’s modern web-based GIS tools.
So, enjoy – and please let me know (via the comments below) what you create!
Update: There was a problem with the KML files and Google Fusion Tables that I uploaded yesterday, caused by an incorrect co-ordinate transformation between the Ordnance Survey grid references and latitude/longitude. This has now been fixed and the downloads and tables have been updated. Sorry about this.
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This post originally appeared on Robin's Blog.
Categorised as: Academic, GIS, Python, R
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