Geology plotting science stereographic-projection stereonet structural-geology. Stereonet 9 was added by tobias47n9e in May 2015 and the latest update was made in Mar 2019. The list of alternatives was updated Jun 2015. It's possible to update the information on Stereonet 9 or report it as discontinued, duplicated or spam. Wulff Net: Stereonet Workbook: Lower Hemisphere Graph For Plotting Geological Data For Geologist And Geology Students, Cute Safari Wild Animals Cover (Wulff Net: Stereonet Workbooks) (Volume 1) by Moito Publishing Dec 8, 2017. Paperback $5.99 $ 5. Get it as soon as Mon, Jul 29.
Stereonet 8 will plot whatever options are checked in the Plot menu. Select a plot type once to turn it on and a second time to turn it off; the plot will automatically change to reflect your selections. If a plot option is checked at the time of data entry, the points (or great or small circles) will appear interactively as you enter each datum. The same plotting options are applied to all checked date sets in the Data Set pane. For example, turning on scatter will make a scatter plot for all lines data sets. If you do not want a data set to appear in a plot, then turn it off by unchecking it in the Data Set pane. As described above, only data that are checked in the Data List Pane will be plotted.
Plotting is specific to data set type. For example, you cannot contour a Planes data set. To produce a contour diagram of poles to planes, you must first make a Lines data set containing the poles, which you do by choosing “Poles” from the Calculation Menu.
Some of the options in the Plot menu write the results of the underlying analysis to the Analysis Pane. For example, if you choose Mean Vector from the Plot menu, the mean vector statistics will also be written to the Analysis pane. At any time, you can erase extraneous information that you don’t need from the Analysis pane by selecting it and pressing the delete key on the keyboard.
Stereonet Mobile is designed to help you collect, visualize, and analyze geological orientation data on the go. It is a companion to my Stereonet program for desktop computers, but it can also be used to measure orientations on the outcrop. The app has the following features:
Home Screen
Sighting View
Plot Configuration
Provide automatic data entry as a geologist's compass by reading the iOS device orientation and converting it to strike and dip of planes and/or trend and plunge of lines. It is the only geology compass app that can record the strike and dip of planes using the sighting method and the device camera.
Provide manual data entry via either tapping and dragging on the stereonet or by typing values into text fields
Plot one group of lines and one group of planes, though individual observations can be tagged and filtered as the user wishes.
Carry out basic calculations such as: rotations about any axis, planes from poles or poles from planes, measure angles between lines and between planes, and basic slope stability calculations
Plot mean vectors, cylindrical best fits, rose diagrams, and contour lines.
View the plots from any orientation, not just looking straight down into the lower hemisphere
Stamp each entry with time date and, if enabled by the user, location. See the location of a datum in the iOS Maps program
Show realtime changes to the stereonet projection to help students understand the geometry of the device better
Provide basic input and output of data using standard iOS conventions
Work on both iPhones or iPads, both in portrait mode only. The program will work on iPods or iPads lacking a cellular data connection but those devices have fewer sensors and thus cannot be used in automatic data collection mode.
Integrated with the StraboSpot online structure and tectonics database. Make your measurements in Stereonet Mobile and upload them directly to your StraboSpot account.
The desktop version of Stereonet has been updated so that it can read and write Stereonet Mobile files, which are simple tab separated text files.
Use it at your own risk. In particular, recall that your iOS device is very sensitive to magnetic fields and the compass bearings can easily be off by 10-20°! This program should not be used as a sole source of navigation data. The author assumes no responsibility for incorrect results, unanticipated behaviors, loss resulting from results provided by the program, or any other anticipated or unanticipated event related to the program.