Data

IMSA - Very High Resolution Seafloor Classification and Satellite Derived Bathymetry of Lancelin, Australia

Australian Ocean Data Network
EOMAP (Associated with)
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]] Cited: [[ro.stat.cited]] Accessed: [[ro.stat.accessed]]
ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=https://catalogue.aodn.org.au:443/geonetwork/srv/api/records/f0df1c23-455f-4520-bd4f-fd06d8ef60a1&rft.title=IMSA - Very High Resolution Seafloor Classification and Satellite Derived Bathymetry of Lancelin, Australia&rft.identifier=f0df1c23-455f-4520-bd4f-fd06d8ef60a1&rft.publisher=Australian Ocean Data Network&rft.description=Mapping of benthic habitat and bathymetry, derived from satellite imagery captured on 17 July 2017 at a spatial resolution of 2 m. Mapping extent covered as much of the Defence gazetted waters as possible, to a depth of approximately 18 m based on water clarity. Recently dead or senesced (e.g. winter dieback of leaves) and mobile seagrass have the same satellite signature as live seagrass at spectral resolutions of the sensor (WorldView-2). This ensured areas of winter dieback and/or senescence were captured as areas of seagrass for the purposes of impact assessment.Statement: Data provides bathymetric information based on optical satellite image data. Data were processed by the Modular and Inversion System (MIP) by EOMAP GmbH & Co.KG. MIP is designed for the physically based assessment of hydro-biological parametersfrom multi- and hyperspectral remote sensing data.Supplemental_Information:EOMAPs Satellite Derived Bathymetry (SDB) method relies on the reflected light energy which is measured at the satellite sensor in space. In order to measure the water column thickness, the sea bottom reflection must be separated from all other simultaneously measured portions of light. Other contributors of light scattered to the sensor are atmospheric molecules and aerosols, adjacent scattering from land, the water surface reflection, and light scattered and absorbed due to particular properties of water constituents and the pure water itself. The pure water itself also absorbs light in a spectrally specific manner and therefore leaves unique signatures in the signal while the light passes through the water column and returns after reflection at the sea bottom. This property is relevant to estimate water depth from optical satellite imagery. As many properties can vary over space and time, effective correction, regularization and retrieval algorithms must be applied to avoid unstable results. EOMAP developed and maintains these unique algorithm and its workflows for almost 2 decades. The maximum depth the system is able to sense is related to the complex interaction of radiance of bottom material, incident sun angle and intensity, and the type and quantity of organics or sediments in the water column. As a rule-of-thumb, satellite derived bathymetry should be capable of sensing bottom to depths equal to one to one point five times the Secchi depth. Correction modules applied: Corrected for Satellite sensor noise: Yes Corrected for atmospheric effects: Yes Corrected for the effect of adjacent land reflectance: Yes Corrected for effects of turbidity: Yes Corrected for water refraction effect: No Ground-control points accessed to improve horizontal accuracy: No Local in-situ data accessed for calibration and validation purposes: Yes Datum: Mean Sea Level based on Admirality Total Tide Station Lancelin, 6225 (HAT: +1.1m above LAT, MSL: +0.48m above LAT, LAT: 0m) Data type: 32bit Geotiff and ASCII xyz text file&rft.creator=Anonymous&rft.date=2020&rft.coverage=westlimit=115.16906000000002; southlimit=-30.961; eastlimit=115.28713; northlimit=-30.8313; projection=4326&rft.coverage=westlimit=115.16906000000002; southlimit=-30.961; eastlimit=115.28713; northlimit=-30.8313; projection=4326&rft_subject=oceans&rft_subject=biota&rft_subject=environment&rft_subject=elevation&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

Brief description

Mapping of benthic habitat and bathymetry, derived from satellite imagery captured on 17 July 2017 at a spatial resolution of 2 m. Mapping extent covered as much of the Defence gazetted waters as possible, to a depth of approximately 18 m based on water clarity. Recently dead or senesced (e.g. winter dieback of leaves) and mobile seagrass have the same satellite signature as live seagrass at spectral resolutions of the sensor (WorldView-2). This ensured areas of winter dieback and/or senescence were captured as areas of seagrass for the purposes of impact assessment.

Lineage

Statement: Data provides bathymetric information based on optical satellite image data. Data were processed by the Modular and Inversion System (MIP) by EOMAP GmbH & Co.KG. MIP is designed for the physically based assessment of hydro-biological parametersfrom multi- and hyperspectral remote sensing data.Supplemental_Information:EOMAPs Satellite Derived Bathymetry (SDB) method relies on the reflected light energy which is measured at the satellite sensor in space. In order to measure the water column thickness, the sea bottom reflection must be separated from all other simultaneously measured portions of light. Other contributors of light scattered to the sensor are atmospheric molecules and aerosols, adjacent scattering from land, the water surface reflection, and light scattered and absorbed due to particular properties of water constituents and the pure water itself. The pure water itself also absorbs light in a spectrally specific manner and therefore leaves unique signatures in the signal while the light passes through the water column and returns after reflection at the sea bottom. This property is relevant to estimate water depth from optical satellite imagery. As many properties can vary over space and time, effective correction, regularization and retrieval algorithms must be applied to avoid unstable results. EOMAP developed and maintains these unique algorithm and its workflows for almost 2 decades. The maximum depth the system is able to sense is related to the complex interaction of radiance of bottom material, incident sun angle and intensity, and the type and quantity of organics or sediments in the water column. As a rule-of-thumb, satellite derived bathymetry should be capable of sensing bottom to depths equal to one to one point five times the Secchi depth. Correction modules applied: Corrected for Satellite sensor noise: Yes Corrected for atmospheric effects: Yes Corrected for the effect of adjacent land reflectance: Yes Corrected for effects of turbidity: Yes Corrected for water refraction effect: No Ground-control points accessed to improve horizontal accuracy: No Local in-situ data accessed for calibration and validation purposes: Yes Datum: Mean Sea Level based on Admirality Total Tide Station Lancelin, 6225 (HAT: +1.1m above LAT, MSL: +0.48m above LAT, LAT: 0m) Data type: 32bit Geotiff and ASCII xyz text file

Notes

Credit
EOMAP, 2019. Very High Resolution Seafloor Classification and Satellite Derived Bathymetry of Lancelin, Australia. Seefeld, Germany: EOMAP GmbH & Co. KG

Created: 05 01 2020

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115.28713,-30.8313 115.28713,-30.961 115.16906,-30.961 115.16906,-30.8313 115.28713,-30.8313

115.228095,-30.89615

text: westlimit=115.16906000000002; southlimit=-30.961; eastlimit=115.28713; northlimit=-30.8313; projection=4326

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Identifiers
  • global : f0df1c23-455f-4520-bd4f-fd06d8ef60a1