R E F E R E N C E S




U.S. HYDRO CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS

U.S. Hydro '2009 Conference, May 11-14, 2009.

U.S. Hydro '2007 Conference, May 14-17, 2007.

U.S. Hydro '2005 Conference, March 29-31, 2005.

U.S. Hydro '2003 Conference, March 24-27, 2003.

U.S. Hydro '2001 Conference, May 22-24, 2001.

U.S. Hydro '1999 Conference, April 27-29, 1999.




HYDROGRAPHIC MANUALS

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Engineering and Design - Hydrographic Surveying Manual



The IHO Hydrographic Manual, Publication C-13, can be downloaded from the IHO Publications Section.



NOAA Hydrographic Manual (Edition 4). Originally published in 1976, this manual underwent three revisions through 1981. See Note **, below.

We suggest you examine the Table of Contents and the Index to see what portions may be of interest. For downloaing convenience the manual has been broken down into six files:

Table of Contents and Index (PDF 229k)
Part 1, Chapters 1,2,and 3 (PDF 1,610k)
Part 1, Chapters 4 and 5 (PDF 7,895k)
Part 2 (PDF 1,724k)
Part 3 (PDF 3,548k)
Entire Manual (PDF 14,890k)




BOOKS ON HYDROGRAPHY

Hydrography E-Book. Second Edition 2003, Updated 2010, and based on IHO S-44 (Edition 4), this e-book was made available by Houston Chapter member Stewart Cannon who facilitated an arrangement with the authors for distribution to THSOA members. Download (PDF 6,085 k)





STANDARDS AND SPECIFICATIONS

IHO S-44

S-44 (Edition 5), International Hydrographic Survey Standards (PDF 700k).

S-44 (Edition 4), International Hydrographic Survey Standards (PDF 2009k).

S-44 (Edition 2), International Hydrographic Survey Standards
(PDF 170k).




IHO S-57

IHO S-57, IHO Transfer Standard for Digital Hydrographic Data, can be downloaded from the IHO Downloads section.

Information on the contents of S-57 and a wealth of information on the Electronic Navigational Chart (ENC) may be obtained from the Caris web site.



NOAA, National Ocean Service Specifications and Deliverables




DICTIONARIES/GLOSSARIES

The IHO Dictionary is available here interactively.



G P S

The Global Position System (GPS) is a subject near and dear to every hydrographic surveyor. Here are our favorite links !

Trimble GPS Tutorial:
http://www.trimble.com/gps/

GPS Notes:
http://www.colorado.edu/geography/gcraft/notes/gps/gps_f.html

Sam Wormley's GPS Site:
http://www.edu-observatory.org/gps/gps.html




HISTORICAL REFERENCES

The Coast and Geodetic Survey Annual Reports 1844-1910 are a valuable historic reference.



General Instructions, Inshore Hydrographic Work of the Coast Survey (1878).
This is the second set of "Instructions" (vice "Manual") published by the Coast Survey and the oldest that we have been able to locate. Despite the title it did include offshore work. The first set of instructions consisted of 28 pages and a probable date of 1860. Download (PDF 790k) See Note **



U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, Association of Field Engineers BULLETINS . For some time this agency produced informal "bulletins". Beginning in June 1930 and continuing though December 1939, 13 were published. These bulletins demonstrate humor and professionalism and also serve as a valuable source of metada for those interested in historical data.

June 1930    December 1930   June 1931   December 1931




Hydrographic Manual (Edition 1) - J.H. Hawley
. Published in 1931, 170 pages. Download (PDF 2,030k) See Note **



Hydrographic Manual (Edition 2) (Special Publication 143) - K.T. Adams. Published in 1942, 940 pages, a classic reference includes information on European instruments. For your convenience we have extracted and saved the Table of Contents and the Index as a separate document so you can see how the manual is organized and what topics are discussed:
Table of Contents and Index (PDF 622k)
Entire Manual including above (PDF 8,253k) See Note **




Hydrographic Manual (Edition 3) - Jeffers. Published in 1960, 238 pages. Download (PDF 3,844k) See Note **



NOTE **: THSOA in cooperation with NOAA's Office of Coast Survey, Hydrographic MetaData Project, has made these manuals available, in PDF (Normal) format. PDF Normal means that all text has been cleaned up and suspects corrected during the OCR phase. The Acrobat Reader FIND command can be used. Disclaimer: Although every attempt has been made to proof read these documents it is possible that typographic errors do exist. If you come across any, please e-mail us and we will promptly correct them.



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Updated Jul-4-2010
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