By Erin R. Twomey and Richard P. Signell
Abstract
A system-wide description of the seafloor topography is a basic requirement for most coastal
oceanographic studies. The necessary detail of the topography obviously varies with application, but for
many uses, a nominal resolution of roughly 100 m is sufficient. Creating a digital bathymetric grid with
this level of resolution can be a complex procedure due to a multiplicity of data sources, data coverages,
datums and interpolation procedures. This report documents the procedures used to construct a 3-arcsecond
(approximately 90-meter grid cell size) digital elevation model for the
Gulf of Maine (71°30' to 63° W, 39°30' to 46° N). We obtained elevation and bathymetric data from a variety of American and Canadian sources, converted all
data to the North American Datum of 1983 for horizontal coordinates and the North American Vertical Datum of 1988 for vertical coordinates,
used a combination of automatic and manual techniques for quality control, and interpolated gaps using a surface-fitting routine. |