I would like to plot a raster tiff (download-723Kb) using matplotlib Basemap. My raster's projection coordinates is in meter:
In [2]:
path = r'albers_5km.tif'
raster = gdal.Open(path, gdal.GA_ReadOnly)
array = raster.GetRasterBand(20).ReadAsArray()
print ('Raster Projection:\n', raster.GetProjection())
print ('Raster GeoTransform:\n', raster.GetGeoTransform())
Out [2]:
Raster Projection:
PROJCS["unnamed",GEOGCS["WGS 84",DATUM["WGS_1984",SPHEROID["WGS 84",6378137,298.257223563,AUTHORITY["EPSG","7030"]],AUTHORITY["EPSG","6326"]],PRIMEM["Greenwich",0],UNIT["degree",0.0174532925199433],AUTHORITY["EPSG","4326"]],PROJECTION["Albers_Conic_Equal_Area"],PARAMETER["standard_parallel_1",15],PARAMETER["standard_parallel_2",65],PARAMETER["latitude_of_center",30],PARAMETER["longitude_of_center",95],PARAMETER["false_easting",0],PARAMETER["false_northing",0],UNIT["metre",1,AUTHORITY["EPSG","9001"]]]
Raster GeoTransform:
(190425.8243, 5000.0, 0.0, 1500257.0112, 0.0, -5000.0)
If I try to plot this using a Robin projection using contourf
with latlon=False
than x and y are assumed to be map projection coordinates (see docs, I think that's what I have).
But if I look to the plot I notice it's placed bottom left very small:
Using this code:
In [3]:
xy = raster.GetGeoTransform()
x = raster.RasterXSize
y = raster.RasterYSize
lon_start = xy[0]
lon_stop = x*xy[1]+xy[0]
lon_step = xy[1]
lat_start = xy[3]
lat_stop = y*xy[5]+xy[3]
lat_step = xy[5]
fig = plt.figure(figsize=(16,10))
map = Basemap(projection='robin',resolution='c',lat_0=0,lon_0=0)
lons = np.arange(lon_start, lon_stop, lon_step)
lats = np.arange(lat_start, lat_stop, lat_step)
xx, yy = np.meshgrid(lons,lats)
levels = [array.min(),-0.128305,array.max()]
map.contourf(xx, yy,array, levels, cmap=cm.RdBu_r, latlon=False)
map.colorbar(cntr,location='right',pad='10%')
map.drawcoastlines(linewidth=.5)
map.drawcountries(color='red')
Eventually I don't want to have a world view but a detailed view. But this gives me a zoom level where the coastlines and countries are drawn, but data is again placed in bottom left corner, but not as small as previous time:
Using the following code:
In [4]:
extent = [ xy[0],xy[0]+x*xy[1], xy[3],xy[3]+y*xy[5]]
width_x = (extent[1]-extent[0])*10
height_y = (extent[2]-extent[3])*10
fig = plt.figure(figsize=(16,10))
map = Basemap(projection='stere', resolution='c', width = width_x , height = height_y, lat_0=40.2,lon_0=99.6,)
xx, yy = np.meshgrid(lons,lats)
levels = [array.min(),-0.128305,array.max()]
map.contourf(xx, yy, array, levels, cmap=cm.RdBu_r, latlon=False)
map.drawcoastlines(linewidth=.5)
map.drawcountries(color='red')
You can use the following code to convert the coordinates, it automatically takes the projection from your raster as the source and the projection from your Basemap object as the target coordinate system.
Imports
Coordinate conversion
Reading and processing the data
Plotting
If you need the pixels location to be 100% correct you might want to check the creation of the coordinate arrays really careful yourself (because i didn't at all). This example should hopefully set you on the right track.