Multi-year Effort to Update Charts Arctic Regions21/07/2010 |
| NOAA (USA) sent one of its premier surveying vessels, NOAA Ship Fairweather, to detect navigational dangers in critical Arctic waters that have not been charted for more than 50 years as a response to a request from the US Navy, US Coast Guard, Alaska Maritime Pilots and the commercial shipping industry. As Arctic ice recedes, countries are looking forward to faster, safer and more efficient sea routes across the top of the world. |
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Read more about: Charting vessel mapping Safety Ice Surveying Website: http://www.nauticalcharts.noaa.gov Supplier: NOAA More news from this supplier: NOAA Sets Focus for 2012 Hydrographic Survey US-Canada Arctic Ocean Partnership Leads to Better Data New Edition of US Chart No. 1 Available New Director for NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research US and Canada Harmonise ENCs for Shared Borders Boost for NOAA Nautical Chart Production Alaska to be Resurveyed NOAA GIS Tool for Safe Navigational Products Multibeam Sonar to Detect and Map Deep-sea Gaseous Seeps Surveys to Update Long Island Coastal Charts Offshore Survey Frame Agreement ROV Survey of the Costa Concordia Grounding Site (video) 44 PMGS Transponders for Earthquake and Tsunami Research Underwater Vision to Fugro Subsea Services Award for Brazilian Hydrographic Paper Demonstrating a 'Deeper Understanding' First Real-Time Seafloor Earthquake Observatory Theme of Hydrography Day 2012: International Cooperation Finistère and Mediterranean Bathymetric Lidar Surveys Precise Positioning For BP Vessels Comments (0): |
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Hydrographic Survey of Riverbed Erosion |
Members of the US Geological Survey were filmed while out on the Missouri River at Williston, North Dakota, USA, performing a hydrographic survey to monitor the state of riverbed erosion. They were using a multibeam echo sounder which transmits sound energy and analyses the return signal (echo) that has bounced off the riverbed or other objects. Multibeam sonars emit sound waves from directly beneath a ship's hull to produce fan-shaped coverage of the riverbed.
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Fairweather, whose homeport is Ketchikan, Alaska, will spend July and August examining seafloor features, measuring ocean depths and supplying data for updating NOAA's nautical charts spanning 350 square nautical miles in the Bering Straits around Cape Prince of Wales. The data will also support scientific research on essential fish habitat and will establish new tidal datums in the region.