Attribute_Accuracy_Report:
The accuracy of the data is determined during data collection. This dataset is derived from a single field survey using identical equipment, set-ups, and staff; therefore, the dataset is internally consistent. Methods are employed to maintain data collection consistency aboard the platform. During mobilization, each piece of equipment was isolated to obtain internal- and external-offset measurements with respect to the survey platform. All the critical measurements were recorded manually and then digitally entered into their respective programs. For personal watercraft soundings, the distance between the transducer and GPS antenna was measured for each personal watercraft and accounted for during postprocessing. For the GPS base stations, the Ashtech ProFlex 500 system has a long static horizontal accuracy of 0.3 centimeters (cm) and 0.6-cm vertical accuracy. For the rovers, the postprocessed kinematic horizontal instrument accuracy is 1 cm and vertical accuracy is 2 cm. The Echotrac CV100 Digital Hydrographic Echo Sounder has a vertical accuracy of 0.01 m +/- 0.1 percent depth.
The U.S. Geological Survey St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center collected shallow water bathymetric data of the shoreface and the wilderness breach on Fire Island, New York, in May 2015.
This zip archive contains horizontal position and vertical elevation x,y,z single-beam data from May 2015 collected along the Fire Island shoreface. Users are advised to read the online Data Series and the rest of the metadata record carefully for additional details.
Horizontal_Positional_Accuracy:
Horizontal_Positional_Accuracy_Report:
The GPS antenna and receiver acquisition configuration used at the GPS base stations was duplicated on the survey vessel (rover). The base receiver and the rover receiver recorded their positions concurrently at 10 Hz recording intervals throughout the survey. All processed measurements are referenced to the base-station coordinates. All static base station GPS sessions were submitted for processing to the NOAA/NGS OPUS software. OPUS results provided an error measurement for each daily solution with a horizontal accuracy estimated as 0.5-cm root mean squared (RMS) for U374, 0.4 cm for REST, and 0.3 cm for VC. The combined horizontal uncertainty was assumed to be, at most, half of the vertical offset.
Quantitative_Horizontal_Positional_Accuracy_Assessment:
Horizontal_Positional_Accuracy_Value: 8.9 cm
Horizontal_Positional_Accuracy_Explanation:
Static GPS data were processed using NOAA/NGS OPUS software and kinematic GPS data were processed with GrafNav v8.50 software by Novatel and Matlab (2015b).
Vertical_Positional_Accuracy:
Vertical_Positional_Accuracy_Report:
The GPS antenna and receiver acquisition configuration used at the reference station was duplicated on the survey vessel (rover). The base receiver and the rover receiver recorded their positions concurrently at 10 Hz recording intervals throughout the survey. All processed measurements are referenced to the base-station coordinates. OPUS results provided an error measurement for each daily solution. Applying these error measurements, the vertical accuracy of the base station was estimated to be 0.3 cm root mean squared (RMS) for U374, 0.2 cm for REST, and 1.5 cm for VC base station. The kinematic (rover) trajectories were processed using GrafNav v8.50 software by Novatel, Inc. and Matlab. Occurrences where a personal watercraft trackline crosses itself were evaluated to determine vertical uncertainty. The calculated RMS uncertainty is 17.7 cm.
Quantitative_Vertical_Positional_Accuracy_Assessment:
Vertical_Positional_Accuracy_Value: 17.7 cm
Vertical_Positional_Accuracy_Explanation:
Static GPS data were processed using NOAA/NGS OPUS software and kinematic GPS data were processed with GrafNav v8.50 software by Novatel and Matlab (2015b).
Process_Step:
Process_Description:
Process Description: GPS Acquisition: GPS base stations were erected at benchmarks REST (near the town of Robins Rest) and U374 (NGS benchmark Permanent Identification number (PID#) KU0206) located on Fire Island. The base stations were equipped with Ashtech ProFlex 500 Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) receivers. The survey personal watercraft (PWC) (rovers) were equipped with ProFlex 500 GNSS receivers. The base and rover receivers recorded their positions concurrently at 10 Hertz (Hz) throughout the survey. Reference station coordinates were verified with Continuously Operating Reference Station (CORS) sites using the Online Positioning User Service (OPUS), available at
http://www.ngs.noaa.gov/OPUS/. U374 used reference stations ZNY1, NYRH, CTDA;, REST used stations NYCI, NYRH, and MOR6, and VC base used MOR6, CTGU, AND NYRH. OPUS-computed reference stations had horizontal errors of 0.4 cm for REST, 0.5 cm for U374, and 0.3 cm for VC. Vertical errors were 0.2 cm for REST, 0.3 cm for U374, and 1.5 cm for VC.
Process_Date: 2015
Process_Contact:
Contact_Information:
Contact_Organization_Primary:
Contact_Organization:
U.S. Geological Survey St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center
Contact_Person: Billy J. Reynolds
Contact_Position: Engineering Technician
Contact_Address:
Address_Type: mailing and physical address
Address: 600 4th St. S
City: St. Petersburg
State_or_Province: FL
Postal_Code: 33701
Country: USA
Contact_Voice_Telephone: 727-502-8067
Contact_Facsimile_Telephone: 727-502-8181
Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: breynolds@usgs.gov
Process_Step:
Process_Description:
Single-Beam Sounding Acquisition: Nearshore bathymetry was measured using single-beam sonar systems and GPS receivers mounted on two Yamaha (2010 and 2013) VX Deluxe personal watercraft (PWC). Each PWC was fitted with a single-beam transducer mounted off the starboard stern below the waterline off the starboard stern and placed 1.23 m and 1.30 m beneath the GPS antenna, for PWC1 and PWC2, respectively. HYPACK version 2013 was used for positioning and navigation during the survey. Depth soundings were recorded at 10 Hertz (Hz) using an Odom Ecotrac CV100 Digital Hydrographic Echo Sounder system with 200 kHz transducers with 4-degree transducers. Soundings were merged into a raw data file (.raw) and a sounding file (.bin) in Hypack. Each file was named according to transect number and coordinated universal time (UTC). Water column sound-velocity measurements were collected periodically throughout the survey using a SonTek CastAway conductivity, temperature, and depth (CTD) meter. Data were processed using SonTek CastAway CTD software version 1.5.
Process_Date: 2015
Process_Contact:
Contact_Information:
Contact_Organization_Primary:
Contact_Organization:
U.S. Geological Survey St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center
Contact_Person: Billy J. Reynolds
Contact_Position: Engineering Technician
Contact_Address:
Address_Type: mailing and physical address
Address: 600 4th St. S
City: St. Petersburg
State_or_Province: FL
Postal_Code: 33701
Country: USA
Contact_Voice_Telephone: 727-502-8067
Contact_Facsimile_Telephone: 727-502-8181
Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: breynolds@usgs.gov
Process_Step:
Process_Description:
Single-Beam Differentially Corrected Navigation Processing: Horizontal positions and vertical elevations associated with each single-beam sounding were postprocessed using differential corrections derived from the base/rover setup. Two GPS reference stations were used for the survey and were located at benchmarks U374 and REST. Applying the reference-station coordinates, GPS data acquired from the rover were processed to the concurrent GPS session data at the base station using GrafNav version 8.5 software (Waypoint Product Group). The horizontal and vertical coordinates were recorded in the World Geodetic System of 1984 (WGS84) reference frame and exported as an ASCII file for each personal watercraft and each survey day.
Process_Date: 2015
Process_Contact:
Contact_Information:
Contact_Organization_Primary:
Contact_Organization:
U.S. Geological Survey St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center
Contact_Person: Billy J. Reynolds
Contact_Position: Engineering Technician
Contact_Address:
Address_Type: mailing and physical address
Address: 600 4th St. S
City: St. Petersburg
State_or_Province: FL
Postal_Code: 33701
Country: USA
Contact_Voice_Telephone: 727-502-8067
Contact_Facsimile_Telephone: 727-502-8181
Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: breynolds@usgs.gov
Process_Step:
Process_Description:
Single-Beam Data Processing: Single-beam soundings were merged with differentially processed GPS data and sound velocity profiles using Matlab (2015b). Each transect was visually inspected for elevation outliers and dropouts associated with wave-breaking in the surf zone and were corrected manually. Usually, the highest intensity return is generated by the surface of the seafloor. Breaking waves in the surf zone can create air bubbles in the water column and cause an erroneous peak in waveform intensity. Errors are then produced in the interpreted seafloor reflection. When this circumstance was suspected, a corrected seafloor elevation was manually digitized by analyzing the .bin data file, which contains the complete waveform trace recorded by the Odom. The soundings were then corrected for the speed of sound (table 1) associated with the mean water temperature and salinity. A moving-average filter was then applied to the soundings to reduce instrument noise and the depth variations associated with the pitch and roll of the PWC. The depth soundings (from the transducer to the seafloor) were then adjusted to the depth reading from the GPS antenna and subsequently to the WGS84 ellipsoid.
Process_Date: 2016
Process_Contact:
Contact_Information:
Contact_Organization_Primary:
Contact_Organization:
U.S. Geological Survey St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center
Contact_Person: Timothy R. Nelson
Contact_Position: Geologist
Contact_Address:
Address_Type: mailing and physical address
Address: 600 4th St. S
City: St. Petersburg
State_or_Province: FL
Postal_Code: 33701
Country: USA
Contact_Voice_Telephone: 727-502-8098
Contact_Facsimile_Telephone: 727-502-8182
Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: trnelson@usgs.gov
Process_Step:
Process_Description:
Single-Beam Datum Transformation: NOAA's VDatum v3.3 was used to transform single-beam data points (x,y,z data) from their data acquisition datum (WGS84) to the North American Datum of 1983 (NAD83) reference frame and the North American Vertical Datum of 1988 (NAVD88) elevation using the National Geodetic Survey (NGS) geoid model of 2012A (GEOID12A). For conversion from the WGS84 ellipsoid to NAVD88, there is a total of 5.4 cm of uncertainty in the transformation (
http://vdatum.noaa.gov/docs/est uncertainties.html).
Process_Date: 2016
Process_Contact:
Contact_Information:
Contact_Organization_Primary:
Contact_Organization:
U.S. Geological Survey St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center
Contact_Person: Timothy R. Nelson
Contact_Position: Geologist
Contact_Address:
Address_Type: mailing and physical address
Address: 600 4th St. S
City: St. Petersburg
State_or_Province: FL
Postal_Code: 33701
Country: USA
Contact_Voice_Telephone: 727-502-8098
Contact_Facsimile_Telephone: 727-502-8182
Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: trnelson@usgs.gov
Process_Step:
Process_Description:
Single-Beam Error Analysis: The accuracy of the single-beam soundings was evaluated by identifying locations where survey tracklines crossed and soundings from each line were within a horizontal distance of 0.25 m of each other. Evaluation of the trackline crossings indicated there was a root mean square (RMS) vertical uncertainty of 18.3 cm with a 1-cm bias between the two PWCs. Large elevation differences often appear near channels where elevations vary rapidly over short distances. The RMS error for PWC2, when crossing a trackline it previously surveyed, was 13.0 cm. When PWC1 crossed a trackline it previously surveyed, the RMS error was 16.8 cm. Since the bias between the PWC elevations was on the order of the Odom instrument accuracy (1cm +/- 0.7 percent depth), no adjustments were made. Applying the square root of the sum of the datum conversion uncertainty and the sounding uncertainty resulted in a combined vertical error of 17.7 cm. Horizontal uncertainty was assumed to be half of the vertical uncertainty (8.9 cm), at most.
Process_Date: 2016
Process_Contact:
Contact_Information:
Contact_Organization_Primary:
Contact_Organization:
U.S. Geological Survey St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center
Contact_Person: Timothy R. Nelson
Contact_Position: Geologist
Contact_Address:
Address_Type: mailing and physical address
Address: 600 4th St. S
City: St. Petersburg
State_or_Province: FL
Postal_Code: 33701
Country: USA
Contact_Voice_Telephone: 727-502-8098
Contact_Facsimile_Telephone: 727-502-8182
Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: trnelson@usgs.gov
Process_Step:
Process_Description:
Merging Transects: Using Matlab (2015b), partial lines (the result of restarting the line in the middle of a transect) were subsequently merged with similar segments to create single, seamless lines. When repetitions were present, only a single line was retained. The data were then combined into a single ASCII file consisting of position, elevation, line number, vessel number, and time of sampling.
Process_Date: 2016
Process_Contact:
Contact_Information:
Contact_Organization_Primary:
Contact_Organization:
U.S. Geological Survey St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center
Contact_Person: Timothy R. Nelson
Contact_Position: Geologist
Contact_Address:
Address_Type: mailing and physical address
Address: 600 4th St. S
City: St. Petersburg
State_or_Province: FL
Postal_Code: 33701
Country: USA
Contact_Voice_Telephone: 727-502-8098
Contact_Facsimile_Telephone: 727-502-8182
Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: trnelson@usgs.gov
Process_Step:
Process_Description:
Extract Shoreface XYZ: Single-beam x,y,z data were imported into Esri’s ArcGIS using the “create feature class from xy table” tool, in ArcCatalog. Using ArcMap, a polygon was then created surrounding the data points within the shoreface of Fire Island. The polygon vertices were converted to points using the “feature vertices to points” tool, “add xy coordinates” tool, and exported as an ASCII file using the “export feature attribute to ASCII” tool. This ASCII file was subsequently imported into Matlab (2015b). Any single-beam data within or on this polygon were then extracted and saved as an ASCII file.
Source_Used_Citation_Abbreviation: 201505_Single_Beam_XYZ_Shoreface.txt
Process_Date: 2016
Process_Contact:
Contact_Information:
Contact_Organization_Primary:
Contact_Organization:
U.S. Geological Survey St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center
Contact_Person: Timothy R. Nelson
Contact_Position: Geologist
Contact_Address:
Address_Type: mailing and physical address
Address: 600 4th St. S
City: St. Petersburg
State_or_Province: FL
Postal_Code: 33701
Country: USA
Contact_Voice_Telephone: 727-502-8098
Contact_Facsimile_Telephone: 727-502-8182
Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: trnelson@usgs.gov
Process_Step:
Process_Description:
Added keywords section with USGS persistent identifier as theme keyword.
Process_Date: 20201013
Process_Contact:
Contact_Information:
Contact_Organization_Primary:
Contact_Organization: U.S. Geological Survey
Contact_Person: VeeAnn A. Cross
Contact_Position: Marine Geologist
Contact_Address:
Address_Type: Mailing and Physical
Address: 384 Woods Hole Road
City: Woods Hole
State_or_Province: MA
Postal_Code: 02543-1598
Contact_Voice_Telephone: 508-548-8700 x2251
Contact_Facsimile_Telephone: 508-457-2310
Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: vatnipp@usgs.gov