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New Hi-Res Bathymetry Model of English Channel

By [email protected] - 4th January 2010 - 20:14

The UK\'s SeaZone Solutions took a major step forward in December 2009 towards its aim to create a high resolution and accurate bathymetry model of the UK Continental Shelf by completing the first phase of its Bathymetry Improvement Programme for the northern English Channel between South Foreland and Landâs End.
Image caption: Deconflicted survey extents overlaid on the bathymetric model of the Solent and waters surrounding the Isle of Wight, (30m grid resolution).The new bathymetry model will become a core reference dataset in SeaZoneâs digital marine mapping product, HydroSpatial. With increasing pressure on the marine environment and the requirement to maximise value from existing public sector information holdings, the new model in particular and HydroSpatial generally are already proving to be important tools to support offshore renewable energy development, marine planning and policy making. The bathymetry model, believed to be the first of its kind, is created from âbest availableâ digital survey bathymetry data from a variety of different sources. It is being used by British Geology Survey to improve our understanding of sea bed geology and by Cefas (and others) as input to habitat mapping.SeaZone has spent the past three years gathering and digitising data, going as far as identifying and gaining permission to use and capture survey sheets (also known as fair sheets) stored in archive at the UK Hydrographic Office. In total, SeaZone has invested in the capture of over 400 surveys to create this unique database of the UKâs underwater terrain. The data represents the most detailed water depth data available, either from modern multibeam surveys or single beam surveys dating back to 1970. All of the data used in the work has been collected to the IHOâs International Survey Standard, S-44, and quality controlled at the UK Hydrographic Office or another competent authority. By using survey data as input, the new model is more accurate than depth data displayed on traditional navigational charts, which is widely known to be coarser in resolution and conservative in depth.To date, SeaZone has collated over 2.2 billion soundings from 5,000 surveys. Accurate area extents and metadata are created for each survey and the metadata published to the MEDIN portal, as well as being used internally by SeaZone and its customers. The data and metadata is used as input to SeaZoneâs Digital Survey Bathymetry (DSB) data product and as input to the bathymetry model. From this unique Oracle database, significant resource is invested to create a single seamless surface of sea bed elevation representing the most up to date and dense data available. The work, typically known as âsurvey de-conflictionâ, is undertaken using specially designed GIS software developed at SeaZone to read survey points directly from Oracle.The de-confliction work separates the many overlapping surveys against each other based on a number of rules or attributes, most importantly survey age, survey type and sounding density. The result is a set of modified survey extents which are clipped against one another to keep the best available data in full, creating a seamless surface of depth soundings. The clipped survey extents are used to label each sounding in the Oracle database, with an active or inactive identifier, so that only the active soundings from each survey are used as input into the bathymetric model. The survey extents also form a meta layer, similar to the âsource data diagramâ on an Admiralty Chart, which is used to identify the age and provenance of the data used in the model. An example of these clipped survey extents in the Isle of Wight area is shown in the image above.Using SeaZoneâs French partner, Geomod, BathySIS software, the de-conflicted sounding data are used to create a triangulated irregular network (TIN) model (using Delaunay triangulation methods), which in turn is used to create a gridded model of varying resolutions. At a resolution of 1 arc second (or approximately 30m), physical features such as trenches, ridges, sand banks and sand waves are more easily distinguishable, even in areas where only single beam echo sounder data is used as input. By maximising the value of existing data in this way, investment in new surveys, such as those of the MCAâs Civil Hydrography Programme, can be better targeted on priority or unsurveyed areas. As new data becomes available, this can be easily ingested into SeaZoneâs database to update the model.AcknowledgementsSeaZone is pleased to acknowledge the Civil Hydrography Programme of the Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA), the Channel Coastal Observatory, the Port of London Authority and various other ports, harbours and third parties in contributing survey data to this programme. The modelling work is supported by a contract from CEFAS (Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science) where the results are being used to undertake habitat mapping work in the English Channel on behalf of Defra. Further InformationFor further information, including how your organisation can prioritise an area of particular interest or otherwise contribute to SeaZoneâs Bathymetry Improvement Programme (BIP), please contact SeaZone directly.

Author: Alison Smith, Marketing Manager, SeaZone

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