From niantaoo at 163.com Wed Aug 7 10:22:44 2019 From: niantaoo at 163.com (knasdfl) Date: Wed, 7 Aug 2019 08:22:44 +0800 (CST) Subject: [GPlates-discuss] Version issue-Tao Nian from China Message-ID: <24a0830a.2305.16c6974e4fa.Coremail.niantaoo@163.com> Dear workers, It?s nice to send you this message. I see the GPlates 2.1 seems only has win32-bit version, my PC system is win64-bit, so is it ok using GPlates 2.1-win32 for my PC. Looking forward to your reply! Best regards! | Tao Nian niantaoo at 163.com Institution?China University of Geosciences (Beijing) Address?Xueyuan Road 29#, Haidian, Beijing ??? Mobile phone?18810956713 | ????????????????????? ???? | -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From john.cannon at sydney.edu.au Wed Aug 7 12:48:33 2019 From: john.cannon at sydney.edu.au (John Cannon) Date: Wed, 7 Aug 2019 02:48:33 +0000 Subject: [GPlates-discuss] Version issue-Tao Nian from China In-Reply-To: <24a0830a.2305.16c6974e4fa.Coremail.niantaoo@163.com> References: <24a0830a.2305.16c6974e4fa.Coremail.niantaoo@163.com> Message-ID: Hi Tao, You can use a 32-bit GPlates build on 64-bit Windows. In either the next public release or the release after that, we will have a 64-bit Windows GPlates build. Regards, John From: GPlates-discuss On Behalf Of knasdfl Sent: Wednesday, 7 August 2019 10:23 AM To: gplates-discuss at mailman.sydney.edu.au Subject: [GPlates-discuss] Version issue-Tao Nian from China Dear workers, It?s nice to send you this message. I see the GPlates 2.1 seems only has win32-bit version, my PC system is win64-bit, so is it ok using GPlates 2.1-win32 for my PC. Looking forward to your reply! Best regards! [https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/HA6SCGvmB5iPMR33IKUceG?domain=img5.mimg.126.net] Tao Nian niantaoo at 163.com Institution?China University of Geosciences (Beijing) Address?Xueyuan Road 29#, Haidian, Beijing ??? Mobile phone?18810956713 [???] ????????????????????? ???? -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From calf6244 at uni.sydney.edu.au Wed Aug 21 10:41:50 2019 From: calf6244 at uni.sydney.edu.au (Christopher Peter Alfonso) Date: Wed, 21 Aug 2019 00:41:50 +0000 Subject: [GPlates-discuss] GPlates Tutorial 6.3: Creating an animation from GPlates output using FFmpeg Message-ID: Hi all, A new GPlates tutorial detailing how to convert GPlates output image files into a video animation has been added to the tutorial page, located at https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/UaCkCWLJY7iKLPrqs61MEV?domain=sites.google.com. If you have problems accessing Google servers, PDF versions of the tutorials can also be found in this archive: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/097SCYWL1viqWNVlI9nwUi?domain=earthbyte.org. Kind regards, Christopher Alfonso Christopher Alfonso | Research Assistant The University of Sydney Faculty of Science, School of Geosciences, EarthByte Group calf6244 at uni.sydney.edu.au | sydney.edu.au -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From lutz.brandon1 at gmail.com Sat Aug 24 05:12:04 2019 From: lutz.brandon1 at gmail.com (Brandon Lutz) Date: Fri, 23 Aug 2019 13:12:04 -0600 Subject: [GPlates-discuss] Issues with visualization Message-ID: Greetings, I have two main visualization issues with which I need assistance if possible: 1) I have a topological network defined and crustal thickness points added to visualize thinning factors during intra-plate extension. The crustal thickness points are colored appropriately, but the reconstructed scalar coverage is not filling with interpolated crustal thinning factor. Is there some trick to make the area defined by the scalar coverage be filled with the colors that indicate crustal thinning factor (e.g.)? 2) I have polygons within reconstructed plates that I would like to color by property, but I can't seem to make this function work. I would like to make my own colors for the polygon features as well. Is there a way to do this in the GPLATES user interface or by creating a .cpt file? Is there documentation on how to do this? Thanks so much for your assistance. GPLATES is such a powerful tool, but I am in need of some assistance to put the finishing touches on my model and make animations for presentations. Best regards, Brandon -- *Brandon Lutz* PhD candidate, Geology *New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology* Lutz.brandon1 at gmail.com 513.473.6794 <(513)%20473-6794> -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From john.cannon at sydney.edu.au Sat Aug 24 15:06:22 2019 From: john.cannon at sydney.edu.au (John Cannon) Date: Sat, 24 Aug 2019 05:06:22 +0000 Subject: [GPlates-discuss] Issues with visualization In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hi Brandon, The colouring is only at the crustal thickness points, so between the points there is no filling-in or interpolating. You?re probably finding that the points start to spread apart due to crustal extension, and hence become less densely spaced. One option is to specify a higher density when generating the initial crustal thickness points. This tutorial by Christian Heine talks about colouring by property. His specific case involves colouring by absolute age, but you can substitute any Shapefile attribute. https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/heXMCL7rK8trgYn9hBghxj?domain=wiki.paleoearthlabs.org https://mailman.sydney.edu.au/pipermail/gplates-discuss/2017-January/000584.html Regards, John PS: Regarding the filling-in of crustal thickness points? Some much more advanced options could revolve around using pyGPlates to generate the initial points (the same points generated by the ?Feature > Generate Crustal Thickness Points? dialog, but have those points spaced ?non?-uniformly such that they become more uniform ?after? extension ? then you could load the resultant GPML into GPlates to do the actual thinning. But it would be tricky to know where to place those initial points (because it depends on how the crust extends in your particular region). I suppose one could digitize some rough polygons in the extensional regions (and give them a name, or some other property, according to how much they thin, roughly), then use those polygons to generate sample points more densely in the more highly stretching polygons ? perhaps have some very high initial density of uniform points but don?t add all those points (just add more of them in more highly stretching regions). Alternatively, use GPlates to export the final thinned points back out to GPML or XY, and somehow use the final thinning factors as stretching feedback to generate a new set of points (and run those back through GPlates again to get the better filled-in results). It?s all pretty advanced though. Just some thoughts. From: GPlates-discuss On Behalf Of Brandon Lutz Sent: Saturday, 24 August 2019 5:12 AM To: gplates-discuss at mailman.sydney.edu.au Subject: [GPlates-discuss] Issues with visualization Greetings, I have two main visualization issues with which I need assistance if possible: 1) I have a topological network defined and crustal thickness points added to visualize thinning factors during intra-plate extension. The crustal thickness points are colored appropriately, but the reconstructed scalar coverage is not filling with interpolated crustal thinning factor. Is there some trick to make the area defined by the scalar coverage be filled with the colors that indicate crustal thinning factor (e.g.)? 2) I have polygons within reconstructed plates that I would like to color by property, but I can't seem to make this function work. I would like to make my own colors for the polygon features as well. Is there a way to do this in the GPLATES user interface or by creating a .cpt file? Is there documentation on how to do this? Thanks so much for your assistance. GPLATES is such a powerful tool, but I am in need of some assistance to put the finishing touches on my model and make animations for presentations. Best regards, Brandon -- Brandon Lutz PhD candidate, Geology New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology Lutz.brandon1 at gmail.com 513.473.6794 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: