Global Shallow-Water Bathymetry from Satellite Ocean Color Data
Abstract
Knowledge of ocean bathymetry is important not only for navigation but also for scientific studies of the ocean's volume, ecology, and circulation. All of which are related to Earth's climate. In coastal regions, moreover, detailed bathymetric maps are critical for storm surge modeling, marine power plant planning, understanding of ecosystem connectivity, coastal management, and change analyses. Because ocean areas are enormously large and ship surveys have limited coverage adequate bathymetric data are still lacking throughout the global ocean. Satellite altimetry can produce reasonable estimates of bathymetry for the deep ocean but the spatial resolution is very course (6-9 kilometers) and can be highly inaccurate in shallow waters, where gravitational effects are small for example, depths retrieved from the widely used ETOPO2 bathymetry database (the National Geophysical Data Center's 2-minute global relief data for the Great Bahama Bank are seriously in error when compared with ship surveys. No statistical correlation was found between the two bathymetry measurements, and the root-mean-square error of ETOPO2 bathymetry was as high as 208 meters. Yet determining a higher-spatial-resolution bathymetry of this region with ship surveys would require about 4 years of nonstop effort.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Nov 16, 2010
- Accession Number
- ADA546943
Entities
People
- Brandon Casey
- Chuanmin Hu
- Heidi Dierssen
- Robert A. Arnone
- Shaoling Shang
- Zhongping Lee
Organizations
- United States Naval Research Laboratory