Rubber sheeting may improve the value of such sources and make them easier to compare to modern maps.
Gis rubber sheeting.
Rubber sheeting is a technique for edge matching and is another name for warping.
See about spatial adjustment rubbersheeting for more details.
Linear this method creates a quick tin surface but does not really take into account the neighborhood.
Spatial adjustment rubbersheeting makes small geometric adjustments in your data usually to align features with more accurate information.
On the edit tab in the snapping group.
Rubber sheeting is commonly used after a transformation to further refine the alignment accuracy of the transformed features.
Rubber sheeting is a useful technique in historical gis where it is used to digitize and add old maps as feature layers in a modern gis.
It is slightly faster and produces good results when you have many rubbersheet links spread uniformly over the data.
Rubber sheeting a procedure for adjusting the coordinates of all the data points in a dataset to allow a more accurate match between.
For steps to transform features using affine or similarity transformation methods see transform features.
Links representing from and to locations are used to define the adjustment see also link.
The method parameter determines the interpolation method used to create the temporary tins in rubbersheeting.