CCB_BOTTOMPHOTOS: Locations of bottom photographs collected by the U.S. Geological Survey offshore of Massachusetts within northern Cape Cod Bay (ESRI Shapefile, Geographic, WGS84).

Metadata also available as - [Outline] - [Parseable text]

Frequently-anticipated questions:


What does this data set describe?

Title:
CCB_BOTTOMPHOTOS: Locations of bottom photographs collected by the U.S. Geological Survey offshore of Massachusetts within northern Cape Cod Bay (ESRI Shapefile, Geographic, WGS84).
Abstract:
These data were collected under a cooperative agreement with the Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management (CZM) and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), Coastal and Marine Geology Program, Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center (WHCMSC). Initiated in 2003, the primary objective of this program is to develop regional geologic framework information for the management of coastal and marine resources. Accurate data and maps of sea-floor geology are important first steps toward protecting fish habitat, delineating marine resources, and assessing environmental changes due to natural or human impacts. The project is focused on the inshore waters of coastal Massachusetts, primarily in water depths of 3-30 meters deep. Data collected for the mapping cooperative have been released in a series of USGS Open-File Reports (<http://woodshole.er.usgs.gov/project-pages/coastal_mass/html/current_map.html>). The data collected in the study area located in Northern Cape Cod Bay Massachusetts includes high-resolution geophysics (bathymetry, backscatter intensity, and seismic reflection), and ground validation (sediment samples, video tracklines, and bottom photographs). The data were collected during five separate surveys conducted between 2006 and 2008 and cover 480 square kilometers of the inner continental shelf.

More information about the individual USGS surveys conducted as part of the northern Cape Cod Bay project can be found on the Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center Field Activity webpage:

06012: <http://quashnet.er.usgs.gov/data/2006/06012/> 07001: <http://quashnet.er.usgs.gov/data/2007/07001/> 07002: <http://quashnet.er.usgs.gov/data/2007/07002/> 07003: <http://quashnet.er.usgs.gov/data/2007/07003/> 08002: <http://quashnet.er.usgs.gov/data/2008/08002/>

  1. How should this data set be cited?

    U.S. Geological Survey, 2010, CCB_BOTTOMPHOTOS: Locations of bottom photographs collected by the U.S. Geological Survey offshore of Massachusetts within northern Cape Cod Bay (ESRI Shapefile, Geographic, WGS84).: Open-File Report 2010-1006, U.S. Geological Survey, Coastal and Marine Geology Program, Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center, Woods Hole, Massachusetts.

    Online Links:

    This is part of the following larger work.

    Andrews, Brian D. , Ackerman, Seth D. , Baldwin, Wayne E. , and Barnhardt, Walter A. , 2010, Geophysical and Sampling Data from the Inner Continental Shelf: Northern Cape Cod Bay, Massachusetts.: Open-File Report 2010-1006, U.S. Geological Survey, Coastal and Marine Geology Program, Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center, Woods Hole, Massachusetts.

    Online Links:

  2. What geographic area does the data set cover?

    West_Bounding_Coordinate: -70.632913
    East_Bounding_Coordinate: -70.189849
    North_Bounding_Coordinate: 42.086761
    South_Bounding_Coordinate: 41.936515

  3. What does it look like?

    <https://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2010/1006/GIS/browse_jpg/CCB_BottomPhotos.jpg> (JPEG)
    Thumbnail image of bottom photo locations

  4. Does the data set describe conditions during a particular time period?

    Beginning_Date: 07-Sep-2007
    Ending_Date: 11-Sep-2007
    Currentness_Reference: ground condition

  5. What is the general form of this data set?

    Geospatial_Data_Presentation_Form: vector digital data

  6. How does the data set represent geographic features?

    1. How are geographic features stored in the data set?

      This is a Vector data set. It contains the following vector data types (SDTS terminology):

      • Entity point (673)

    2. What coordinate system is used to represent geographic features?

      Horizontal positions are specified in geographic coordinates, that is, latitude and longitude. Latitudes are given to the nearest 0.000001. Longitudes are given to the nearest 0.000001. Latitude and longitude values are specified in Decimal degrees.

      The horizontal datum used is D_WGS_1984.
      The ellipsoid used is WGS_1984.
      The semi-major axis of the ellipsoid used is 6378137.000000.
      The flattening of the ellipsoid used is 1/298.257224.

  7. How does the data set describe geographic features?

    CCB_BottomPhotos
    Cape Cod Bay Bottom Photographs (Source: USGS)

    FID
    Internal feature number. (Source: ESRI)

    Sequential unique whole numbers that are automatically generated.

    Shape
    Feature geometry. (Source: ESRI)

    Coordinates defining the features.

    PICNAME
    Name of the JPEG photograph (format is downloadnumber_seqphotonumber.jpg) where the download number portion of the name reflects during which download session (DL1-DL4) the images were copied from the camera's CompactFlash card. (Source: U.S. Geological Survey)

    Character string of width 30

    TIME
    Time (corrected) of photograph in UTC (hh:mm:ss) (Source: U.S. Geological Survey)

    Character string of width 8

    LAT
    Latitude coordinate of photograph (in decimal degrees, WGS84) (Source: U.S. Geological Survey)

    LONG
    Longitude coordinate of photograph (in decimal degrees, WGS84) (Source: U.S. Geological Survey)

    JULDAY
    Julian day photograph was acquired based on UTC time. (Source: U.S. Geological Survey)

    YEAR
    Calendar year data were collected (Source: U.S. Geological Survey)

    Character string of width 4

    hotlink
    This indicates the location of the actual JPEG photograph relative to this shapefile (CCB_BottomPhotos.shp) so that the "hotlink" feature can be easily used within an ESRI ArcMap project (see Appendex 1 of this report USGS OFR 2010-1006 for information about setting the "hotlink" feature to work in ArcMap 9.3). (Source: U.S. Geological Survey)

    Character string of width 254

    LINENAME
    This indicates the SEABOSS station number or SEABOSS trackline along which digital still photos and continuous bottom video were acquired. (Source: U.S. Geological Survey)

    Character string of width 10

    SURVEYID
    WHCMSC field activity number (Source: U.S. Geological Survey)

    Character string of width 10

    DEVICEID
    Device used to collect photographs data (e.g. SEABOSS, mini-SEABOSS, drop camera) (Source: U.S. Geological Survey)

    Character string of width 15

    VEHICLEID
    Survey vessel name (Source: U.S. Geological Survey)

    Character string of width 25


Who produced the data set?

  1. Who are the originators of the data set? (may include formal authors, digital compilers, and editors)

  2. Who also contributed to the data set?

  3. To whom should users address questions about the data?

    Brian Andrews
    U.S. Geological Survey
    Geographer
    384 Woods Hole Rd.
    Woods Hole, MA 02543-1598
    USA

    508-548-8700 x2348 (voice)
    508-457-2310 (FAX)
    bandrews@usgs.gov


Why was the data set created?

The purpose of this data set is to record the locations of 673 bottom photographs that were collected with the large SEABed Observation and Sampling System (SEABOSS) to ground-truth (verify) the acoustic data sets acquired during USGS geophysical surveys 06012 (2006), 07001 (2007), 07002 (2007), and 08002 (2008). Bottom video were also taken at each station occupied by the SEABOSS (see shapefile CCB_SeabossTracklines.shp).


How was the data set created?

  1. From what previous works were the data drawn?

  2. How were the data generated, processed, and modified?

    Date: Sep-2007 (process 1 of 7)
    Target stations were occupied with the large SEABOSS (Blackwood and Parolski, 2001) that is equipped with a Van Veen grab sampler, a digital still camera, and a video camera. One-hundred nine stations are within the northern Cape Cod Bay survey area. The digital photographs were downloaded from the camera and backed-up to a laptop and hard-drive four times during the sampling survey.

    Person who carried out this activity:

    Seth Ackerman
    U.S. Geological Survey
    Geologists
    384 Woods Hole Road
    Woods Hole, MA 02543-1598
    USA

    (508) 548-8700 x2315 (voice)
    (508) 457-2310 (FAX)
    sackerman@usgs.gov

    Data sources produced in this process:
    • JPEG photographs

    Date: Jan-2009 (process 2 of 7)
    DGPS navigation was logged through a Microsoft HyperTerminal (version 5.1) session on a Dell Latitude D820 laptop computer running Windows XP, SP2. Log files were saved for each sampling watch then reformatted into log files by Julian Day (e.g. nav_sda.251) during post-processing. The AWK script HT_doGPGGA.awk was modified accordingly for each Julian Day and run (using GNU AWK version 3.1.6) on each Julian Day file creating a comma separated value (CSV) ASCII text file. This file was parsed for the GPGGA navigation string and reformatted for input to the Python ground-truth toolset. The individual Julian Day navigation files were concatenated into a single navigation file for the entire sampling survey (07003_allnav_gpgga_formatted.csv). > cat gpgga_out* > 07003_allnav_gpgga_formatted.csv

    Person who carried out this activity:

    Seth Ackerman
    U.S. Geological Survey
    Geologist
    384 Woods Hole Rd.
    Woods Hole, MA 02543-1598
    USA

    508-548-8700 x2315 (voice)
    508-457-2310 (FAX)
    sackerman@usgs.gov

    Data sources used in this process:
    • HyperTerminal generated navigation files (090807_day_watch.txt, 090907_night_watch.txt, etc.)

    Data sources produced in this process:

    • GPGGA parsed navigation files (gpgga_out.25[0-4])
    • GPGGA parsed navigation file (07003_allnav_gpgga_formatted.csv)

    Date: 04-Feb-2009 (process 3 of 7)
    Extracted time from the "Date Picture Taken" in the Exchangeable Image File (EXIF) format header of the quality JPEG bottom photographs using ArcGIS 9.3 ArcToolbox tool "GeoTools JPG Header Tool - SDA Feb05" (which uses the Python (v2.5) script "sda_vexiftool_mod12.py (v.Jan18.2007)).

    Person who carried out this activity:

    Seth Ackerman
    U.S. Geological Survey
    Geologist
    384 Woods Hole Rd.
    Woods Hole, MA 02543-1598
    USA

    508-548-8700 x2315 (voice)
    508-457-2310 (FAX)
    sackerman@usgs.gov

    Data sources used in this process:
    • JPEG photographs

    Data sources produced in this process:

    • Photo_headers_Feb4.csv

    Date: 04-Feb-2009 (process 4 of 7)
    Manual adjustments were done to account for a number of time offsets between the time recorded in the JPEG EXIF time "Date Picture Taken" and the GPS time as verified by the SEABOSS video. The date and timestamp on the video is acquired directly from the GPS. The camera time generally varied from 5 to twenty-seven seconds from the GPS during parts of the survey. However, on the first day of the survey, the camera time was almost 1 hour off and on the last day of the survey the month and year were incorrectly set on the camera. Microsoft Excel 2003 was used to manually make these time adjustments in the table that will be used in the next step to create the shapefile. The following is a list of offsets (not including the 1 month and 1 year shift for photos taken in "Download 4"): > Download 1, 306 photos @ 4:00 UTC JD251 after sta33 (end of Gregorian Day 9/7), average offset = photos ahead by 59 min 10 sec (adjust -3550 seconds), original photo directory 090707 > Download 2, 316 photos @ 23:50 UTC JD251 after sta91 (end of Julian Day 251), average offset = photo ahead by 11 sec, original photo directory 090807 > Download 3, 372 photos @ 4:00 UTC JD253 after sta131 (end of Gregorian Day 9/9), average offset = 8 sec for JD252 and 5sec for JD253, original photo directories 090907 and 091007a > Download 4, 344 photos @ 8:30 UTC JD254 after sta175 (end of SEABOSS ops), average offset = photos ahead by 24 sec, original photo directories 091007b and 091107

    Person who carried out this activity:

    Seth Ackerman
    U.S. Geological Survey
    Geologist
    384 Woods Hole Rd.
    Woods Hole, MA 02543-1598
    USA

    508-548-8700 x2315 (voice)
    508-457-2310 (FAX)
    sackerman@usgs.gov

    Data sources used in this process:
    • Photo_headers_Feb4.csv

    Data sources produced in this process:

    • jpg_headers_all_do_timeshift.csv

    Date: 04-Feb-2009 (process 5 of 7)
    Create ESRI shapefile joining the bottom photo name with the navigation based on matching date and time fields using ArcGIS 9.3 ArcToolbox tool "GeoTools Hotlink Tool - SDA Feb05" (which uses the Python (v2.5) script "sda_hotlink_5.py (v.Oct10.2007)).

    Person who carried out this activity:

    Seth Ackerman
    U.S. Geological Survey
    Geologist
    384 Woods Hole Rd.
    Woods Hole, MA 02543-1598
    USA

    508-548-8700 x2315 (voice)
    508-457-2310 (FAX)
    sackerman@usgs.gov

    Data sources used in this process:
    • 07003_allnav_gpgga_formatted.csv
    • Photo_headers_Feb4_fix_timediff.csv

    Data sources produced in this process:

    • 07003_BP_Feb4.shp

    Date: 04-Feb-2009 (process 6 of 7)
    ArcCatalog 9.3 was used to define the projection of the ESRI shapefile as Geographic (Decimal_Degrees_WGS84.prj) and to create the .prj file.

    Person who carried out this activity:

    Seth Ackerman
    U.S. Geological Survey
    Geologist
    384 Woods Hole Rd.
    Woods Hole, MA 02543-1598
    USA

    508-548-8700 x2315 (voice)
    508-457-2310 (FAX)
    sackerman@usgs.gov

    Data sources used in this process:
    • 07003_BP_Feb4.shp

    Data sources produced in this process:

    • 07003_BP_Feb4.prj

    Date: 14-Dec-2009 (process 7 of 7)
    In ESRI ArcMap (version 9.3), a spatial join was done to merge the attributes of the bottom photograph locations shapefile (07003_BP_Feb4.shp) with the SEABOSS tracklines shapefile (CCB_SeabossTrackline.shp). The 673 photos from within the northern Cape Cod Bay survey area were selected and XTools Pro (version 5.3.0) for ArcGIS desktop was used to reorganize, delete unnecessary fields and add new fields to the point shapefile's attribute table (Table Operations - Table Restructure). This created a new shapefile of the bottom photograph locations within the Cape Cod Bay survey area. Table attributes for the survey ID ("SURVEYID'), device used to collect the data ('DEVICEID'), survey vessel name ('VEHICLEID'), and year ('YEAR') were added and/or populated using the table editor in ArcMap (version 9.3). The attributes for time ('TIME'), photo name ('PICNAME'), latitude ('LAT'), longitude ('LON'), Julian day ('JULDAY'), hotlink location ('HOTLINK') and SEABOSS station number ('LINENAME') were already populated.

    Person who carried out this activity:

    Seth Ackerman
    U.S. Geological Survey
    Geologist
    384 Woods Hole Rd.
    Woods Hole, MA 02543-1598
    USA

    508-548-8700 x2315 (voice)
    508-457-2310 (FAX)
    sackerman@usgs.gov

    Data sources used in this process:
    • 07003_BP_Feb4.shp
    • CCB_SeabossTrackline.shp

    Data sources produced in this process:

    • CCB_BottomPhotos.shp

  3. What similar or related data should the user be aware of?

    Blackwood, D., and Parolski, K., 2001, Seabed observation and sampling system: Sea Technology v. 42, no. 2, p. 39-43.

    Barnhardt, Walter A. , Andrews, Brian D. , and Butman, Bradford, 2006, High-Resolution Mapping of the Inner Continental Shelf: Nahant to Gloucester, Massachusetts: Open-File Report 2005-1293, U.S. Geological Survey, Coastal and Marine Geology Program, Woods Hole Science Center, Woods Hole, MA.

    Online Links:

    Ackerman, Seth D. , Butman, Bradford, Barnhardt, Walter A. , Danforth, William W. , and Crocker, James M. , 2006, High-Resolution Geologic Mapping of the Inner Continental Shelf: Boston Harbor and Approaches, Massachusetts: Open-File Report 2006-1008, U.S. Geological Survey, Coastal and Marine Geology Program, Woods Hole Science Center, Woods Hole, MA.

    Online Links:

    Barnhardt, Walter A. , Andrews, Brian D. , Ackerman, Seth D. , Baldwin, Wayne E. , and Hein, Christopher J. , 2009, High-Resolution Geological Mapping of the Inner Continental Shelf: Cape Ann to Salisbury Beach, Massachusetts: Open-File Report 2007-1373, U.S. Geological Survey, Coastal and Marine Geology Program, Woods Hole Science Center, Woods Hole, MA.

    Online Links:

    Barnhardt, Walter A. , Ackerman, Seth D. , Andrews, Brian D. , and Baldwin, Wayne E. , 2010, Geophysical and Sampling Data from the Inner Continental Shelf: Duxbury to Hull, Massachusetts: Open-File Report 2009-1072, U.S. Geological Survey, Coastal and Marine Geology Program, Woods Hole Science Center, Woods Hole, Massachusetts.

    Online Links:


How reliable are the data; what problems remain in the data set?

  1. How well have the observations been checked?

  2. How accurate are the geographic locations?

    Navigation for survey 07003 used Differential Global Positioning System (GPS). The recorded position of each bottom photograph is actually the position of the GPS antenna on the survey vessel, not the SEABOSS sampler. The SEABOSS was deployed approximately 5 meters astern of the GPS antenna off the ship's J-frame on the starboard side. No layback or offset was applied to the recorded position. In addition to the 5 meter offset the SEABOSS may drift away from the survey vessel when deployed on the seafloor. Based on the various sources for horizontal offsets, a conservative estimate the horizontal accuracy of the bottom photograph locations is 20-30 meters.

  3. How accurate are the heights or depths?

  4. Where are the gaps in the data? What is missing?

    A total of 1,329 bottom photographs were taken during survey 07003 covering both the Duxbury to Hull and northern Cape Cod Bay survey areas. Only the 673 bottom photograph locations collected within the northern Cape Cod Bay survey area are included in this spatial dataset. The bottom photographs collected north of Brant Rock, Massachusetts are published in a previous data release (2009-1072) focused on the Duxbury to Hull survey area (Barnhardt and others 2010). Any bottom photographs taken in water column or were otherwise not usable were deleted.

  5. How consistent are the relationships among the observations, including topology?

    Gaps in sequential photo numbers exist. If camera was triggered accidentally on deck or picture did not come out, it was deleted.


How can someone get a copy of the data set?

Are there legal restrictions on access or use of the data?

Access_Constraints: None
Use_Constraints:
Public domain data from the U.S. Government are freely redistributable with proper metadata and source attribution. Please recognize the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) as the source of this information.

  1. Who distributes the data set? (Distributor 1 of 1)

    Brian Andrews
    U.S. Geological Survey
    Geographer
    384 Woods Hole Rd.
    Woods Hole, MA 02543-1598
    USA

    508-548-8700 x2315 (voice)
    508-457-2310 (FAX)
    bandrews@usgs.gov

  2. What's the catalog number I need to order this data set?

    Downloadable Data

  3. What legal disclaimers am I supposed to read?

    Neither the U.S. Government, the Department of the Interior, nor the USGS, nor any of their employees, contractors, or subcontractors, make any warranty, express or implied, nor assume any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed, nor represent that its use would not infringe on privately owned rights. The act of distribution shall not constitute any such warranty, and no responsibility is assumed by the USGS in the use of these data or related materials. Any use of trade, product, or firm names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.

  4. How can I download or order the data?

  5. What hardware or software do I need in order to use the data set?

    This zip file contains data available in Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI) shapefile format. The user must have software capable of uncompressing the WinZip file and displaying the shapefile. In lieu of ArcView or ArcGIS, the user may utilize another GIS application package capable of importing the data. A free data viewer, ArcExplorer, capable of displaying the data is available from ESRI at www.esri.com.


Who wrote the metadata?

Dates:
Last modified: 23-Aug-2010
Metadata author:
Seth Ackerman
U.S. Geological Survey
Geologist
384 Woods Hole Rd.
Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543-1598
USA

508-548-8700 x2315 (voice)
508-457-2310 (FAX)
sackerman@usgs.gov

Metadata standard:
FGDC Content Standards for Digital Geospatial Metadata (FGDC-STD-001-1998)
Metadata extensions used:


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