Seabed remote sensing
The data compiles seabed remote sensing situation since the 1960s. The data includes spatial data and metadata related to each survey line, mainly based on the data produced by the Geological Survey of Finland
Simple
- Date (Creation)
- 2022-09-01
- Unique resource identifier
- http://paikkatiedot.fi/so/
- Purpose
-
Methods based on acoustic-seismic soundings provide an illustrative picture of seabed topography, the thickness and internal structures of sediment units, and bottom conditions. A significant advantage of sonar methods is that they have much higher coverage than more traditional sampling. Sediment sampling provides information from a single point, whereas sonar methods provide uninterrupted regional knowledge, profile of the seabed conditions. There is a particular need for sounding information when planning marine utilization, such as marine sand retrieval, dredge-spoil dumping, or building structures on the seafloor.
- Credit
-
MarineFinland.fi -portal
- Credit
-
EMODnet Geology -portal
- Status
- On going
- Discipline
-
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Marine Geology
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- Place
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Finland
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Baltic Sea
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- Theme
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marine geology
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seabed,
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seafloor mapping
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sediments
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substrates
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remote sensing
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Maritime Spatial Planning
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Paikkatietohakemiston asiasanasto
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Not-Inspire
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GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0
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Geology
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- Use constraints
- Other restrictions
- Other constraints
- Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
- Access constraints
- Other restrictions
- Other constraints
- no limitations to public access
- Spatial representation type
- Vector
- Metadata language
- English
- Topic category
-
- Planning cadastre
- Distribution format
-
-
ESRI Shapefile
(
)
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ESRI Shapefile
(
)
- OnLine resource
- https://hakku.gtk.fi/en/locations/search?location_id=218 ( WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link )
- OnLine resource
- https://gtkdata.gtk.fi/Maankamara/index.html ( WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link )
- OnLine resource
- https://gtkdata.gtk.fi/arcgis/services/Rajapinnat/GTK_Maapera_WMS/MapServer/WMSServer?&service=WMS&VERSION=1.3.0&REQUEST=GetMap&FORMAT=image/png&TRANSPARENT=true&LAYERS=Merenpohjan_luotauslinjat6011165047&CRS=EPSG:3067&STYLES=&WIDTH=400&HEIGHT=600&BBOX=61600,6541100,543000,7350300 ( OGC:WMS-1.3.0-http-get-capabilities )
- OnLine resource
- https://gtkdata.gtk.fi/arcgis/services/Rajapinnat/GTK_Maapera_WFS/MapServer/WFSServer? ( OGC:WFS )
- Hierarchy level
- Dataset
Conformance result
- Date (Publication)
- 2010-11-23
- Explanation
-
Aineisto ei ole INSPIRE-tietotuotemäärittelyn mukainen.
- Pass
- No
- Statement
-
The most common marine geological survey methods are sediment echo sounding, multibeam sonar, side-scan sonar and seismic reflection profiling, each with their specific purpose.
The sounding data were initially interpreted from plotter prints of sounding equipment, from which the geological interfaces were interpreted and digitized into files. The digital data collection system was introduced in 1995. The post-processing and interpretation of the sounding data has been implemented since the 21st century using Meridata's MDPS post-processing software. MDPS is data processing and interpretation software that can interpret data from many different devices and view values measured at different frequencies simultaneously. The data from sounding devices are combined with spatial data and stored simultaneously using Meridata's MDCS data collection software, which integrates a coherent ensemble of the measurement devices. This facilitates the comparison and interpretation of the datasets. Data on seabed substrates verified by sampling have been used as to assist in interpretation.
- Description
-
The most common marine geological survey methods are sediment echo sounding, multibeam sonar, side-scan sonar and seismic reflection profiling, each with their specific purpose.
The sounding data were initially interpreted from plotter prints of sounding equipment, from which the geological interfaces were interpreted and digitized into files. The digital data collection system was introduced in 1995. The post-processing and interpretation of the sounding data has been implemented since the 21st century using Meridata's MDPS post-processing software. MDPS is data processing and interpretation software that can interpret data from many different devices and view values measured at different frequencies simultaneously. The data from sounding devices are combined with spatial data and stored simultaneously using Meridata's MDCS data collection software, which integrates a coherent ensemble of the measurement devices. This facilitates the comparison and interpretation of the datasets. Data on seabed substrates verified by sampling have been used as to assist in interpretation.
- Rationale
-
Methods based on acoustic-seismic soundings provide an illustrative picture of seabed topography, the thickness and internal structures of sediment units, and bottom conditions. A significant advantage of sonar methods is that they have much higher coverage than more traditional sampling. Sediment sampling provides information from a single point, whereas sonar methods provide uninterrupted regional knowledge, profile of the seabed conditions. There is a particular need for sounding information when planning marine utilization, such as marine sand retrieval, dredge-spoil dumping, or building structures on the seafloor.
- Date / Time
- 2024-02-01T00:00:00
- File identifier
- d9f9a559-d752-48b1-8eed-561ee1ce2a19 XML
- Metadata language
- English
- Hierarchy level
- Dataset
- Date stamp
- 2024-02-19T13:54:50