The two aims of the project involved:
1. Devising a system for prediction o f areas of bathymetric change within the Fal
estuary
2. Formulating and evaluating a method for interpolating single beam acoustic
bathymetry to avoid artefacts o f interpolation.
In order to address these aims, sources of bathymetric data for the Fal estuary were
identified as Truro Harbour Office, Cornwall County Council and the Environment
Agency. The data collected from these sources included red wavelength Lidar, aerial
photography and single beam acoustic bathymetry from a number of different years.
These data were input into a Geographic Information System (GIS) and assessed for
suitability for the purposes o f data comparison and hence assessment of temporal
trends in bathymetry within the estuary
Problems encountered during mterpolation of the acoustic bathymetry resulted in the
later aim of the project, to formulate an interpolation system suitable for interpolation
of the single beam, bathymetric data in a realistic way, avoiding serious artefacts of
interpolation. This aim was met, successfully, through the following processes:
1. An interpolation system was developed, using polygonal zones, bounded by
channels and coastlines, to prevent interpolation across these boundaries. This
system, based on Inverse Distance Weighting (IDW) interpolation, was referred to
as Zoned Inverse Distance Weighting (ZIDW).
2. ZIDW was found, by visual inspection, to eliminate the interpolation artefacts
described above.
3. The processes of identification of sounding lines and charmels, and the allocation
of soundings and output grid cells to polygons, were successfully automated to
allow ZIDW to be applied to large and multiple data sets. Manual intervention
was maintained for processes performed most successfully by the human brain to
optimise the results o f ZIDW.
4. To formalise the theory of ZIDW it was applied to a range of idealised,
mathematically defined chaimels. For simple straight and regular curved,
mathematical channels interpolation by the standard TIN method was found to
perform as well as ZIDW.
5. Investigation of sinusoidal channels within a rectangular estuary, however,
revealed that the TIN method begins to produce serious interpolation artefacts
where sounding lines are not parallel to the centre lines o f channels and ridges.
Hence, overall ZIDW was determined mathematically to represent the optimum
method o f interpolation for single beam, bathymelric data.
6. Finally, ZIDW was refined, using data from the Humber and Gironde estuaries, to
achieve universal applicability for interpolation of single beam, echo soimding
data from any estuary.
7. The refinements involved allowance for non-continuous, flood and ebb type
charmels; consideration of the effects of the scale of the estuary; smoothing of the
channels using cubic splines; interpolation using a 'smart' ellipse and the option to
reconstruct sounding lines from data that had previously been re-ordered.
Date of Award | 2001 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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The synthesis of estuarine bathymetry from sparse sounding data
Burroughes, J. E. (Author). 2001
Student thesis: PhD