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I am attempting to fully automate the process of georeferencing a load of .png files - i have xml file containing the co-ordinates - but how can i use them?

Does anyone have any advice?

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    use a .bat [dos batch] to rename the .xml to a .pgw - if you give an example of the structure of the .xml file it would be easy to see what other factors you require or need. Scale factor/pixel size & rotation.
    – Mapperz
    Commented Dec 15, 2010 at 14:55
  • Did you see: Work flow for georeferencing imagery using open source tools? <gis.stackexchange.com/questions/644/…>. Commented Dec 16, 2010 at 6:51
  • Well, scripting (python, model builder) requires the georeference toolbar's functions available as tool(s) in the toolbar. However, the tool we were looking for is named "Warp" (Data Managment, Raster) and can be easily automated. To make it not too easy, it's not able to accept a same-styled txt file as the georeferencing toolbar will export, but a list of source points and a list of of target points. Regards, Daniel
    – user23698
    Commented Nov 6, 2013 at 17:08

2 Answers 2

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I assume you will have to create a script in ModelBuilder.

The georeference tool has a way to load the match pairs from txt file.

The format is simple...

1359096.642582 353463.253614 1343639.244522 360489.343642

1513436.420187 348310.787594 1531938.457260 360957.749644

source xy, and map xy.

You should also specify the transformation type. That will depend on how many points you have for each image. 1st, 2nd, or 3rd order polynomial or adjust.

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  • @Alice Did you find a way to use your xml? I'm sure my answer didn't get you all the way there. Successful implementation would be helpful to others.
    – Brad Nesom
    Commented Feb 18, 2011 at 16:40
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If you are able to convert those PNG images to TIFF, using QUAD-G would be an option. Our recent project was able to georeference tens of thousands of map sheets in a supervised-automated workflow in a short period of time.

The link to the program files and documentation can be found here: https://geography.wisc.edu/quad-g-automated-georeferencing-project/

The program is free and open-sourced, and the files read quickly into ArcGIS Desktop.

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