Saturday, January 19, 2013

Digital map error may have led to minesweeper grounding

NGA chart 92020 Suhu Sea (1:500,000) soundings in meters

NGA chart 92033 Palawan (1:402,000) soundings in fathoms

From Intercepts / NavyTimes

A digital chart used by the minesweeper USS Guardian to navigate Philippine waters misplaced the location of a reef by about eight nautical miles (approximatively the length of the North Islet), and may have been a significant factor when the ship drove hard aground on the reef on Jan. 17.

Aerial photographs provided by the Philippine military showed the ship’s bow sitting atop corals in shallow turquoise waters, with the stern floating in the deep blue waters in the South Atoll.
Crewmembers are visible on the Guardian's upper superstructure in this image taken Jan. 17.
They were subsequently taken off the ship for safety reasons, the Navy said.
It was unclear how much of the reef was damaged.
The government imposes a fine of about $300 per square meter (yard) of damaged coral.
In 2005, the environmental group Greenpeace was fined almost $7,000 after its 'Rainbow Warrior II' flagship struck a reef in the same area.
The World Wide Fund for Nature Philippines said in a statement that according to an initial ocular inspection, the 68-meter (74-yard) long, 1,300-ton Guardian damaged at least 10 meters (yards) of the reef.
 
As of Jan. 18, U.S. Navy ships have been directed to “operate with caution” when using similar electronic charts and compare the map data with paper charts, which are considered accurate.


 >>> geolocalization with the Marine GeoGarage <<<
zoom

extract of BA 967 Palawan (1985)
1 : 725,000 / depths in fathoms

 undetermined datum 

Note from NP33 Philippines Islands Pilot 2ed 2004 (2.20)
"Tubbatha Reefs are two extensive dangerous reefs separated by a channel 4 miles wide.
In 2005 the reefs were reported to extend 1.5 miles seaward of their charted positions."

2537 NAMRIA topographic map (1:250,000) for Tubbataha reefs

 Tubbataha Reef dive map (picture)
Tubbataha means « long reef exposed at low tide»

 Tubbataha lighthouse coordinates (WGS84) : (ENC zoom view)
on the official ENC vector chart : 8°44.91' N / 119°49.19' E
-note : 08° 44.389' N / 119° 48.684' E / Elev: 3m on waypoint.ph source, so 0.72 Nm (1.3 km) SSW (224°) from ENC position-
(photo Gregg Yan) 

Crewmembers are visible on the Guardian's upper superstructure in this image taken Jan. 17.
They were subsequently taken off the ship for safety reasons, the Navy said.

The Guardian drove onto Tubbataha Reef in the Sulu Sea around 2:25 a.m. on Jan. 17 (some sources cite a date of Jan. 16, since that was the date in Washington, D.C. when the incident occurred).
The reef is about 80 miles east-southeast of Palawan Island.

The ship had been at Olongapo City in Subic Bay, and was en route to Indonesia when she struck the reef, according to the Navy.
The Guardian is homeported at Sasebo, Japan.
The mine countermeasures vessel, with a wooden hull sheathed in fiberglass, has been taking on water and moving on the reef, and 79 crew members were taken off the ship on Jan. 18, transferring to the Navy survey ship Bowditch and the C-Champion, a commercial vessel chartered by the Navy’s Military Sealift Command.

 Tubbataha reefs on Google Earth :
no detailed image 

Remote Sensing of Coral Reefs : SeaWiFS Bathymetry


 with Landsat satellite picture (USGS)
Note : Tubbataha lighthouse coordinates (WGS84)  : approximatively 8°45 N / 119°49.2' E
so comparable to the ENC coordinates

The Guardian has not been abandoned, the Navy said, and the service said removal of the crew was a temporary safety measure.
“Seventh Fleet ships remain on scene and essential Guardian sailors will continue conducting survey operations onboard the ship as needed until she is recovered,” said Vice Adm. Scott Swift, commander of the U.S. 7th Fleet, of which the Guardian is a member.
“Several support vessels have arrived and all steps are being taken to minimize environmental effects while ensuring the crew’s continued safety,” Swift said in a statement issued Jan. 18.

(see discussion / OpenSeaMap view with Bing Maps)

 Bing Maps (with Earthstar Geographics TerraColor 15m satellite imagery from Landsat data)
showing a shift in the position of the map vs satellite imagery
Note : this doesn't seem to be a problem of datum :
the shift between official PRS92 (or even old Luzon 1911) local Philippines datum
and WGS84 geodesy is about 450 meters (0.24 Nm) in the area
(see MapBox OSM editor for better view)
Note : Tubbataha lighthouse Bing Maps coordinates (WGS84): approximatively 8°42.13' N / 119°56.57' E
so shifted 7.8 Nm (14,5 km) in the SW (111°) from the ENC position 

ELS2000v2 Landsat view (courtesy GeoSage)

ELS2000v2 detailed view on Tubbataha Reefs (courtesy GeoSage)

 Planet Observer 15m satellite imagery (Landsat data)

 Note : Tubbataha lighthouse (WGS84)  : approximatively 8°42' N / 119°56.60' E
equivalent to the coordinates got with Bing Maps,
so also shifted 8 Nm from ENC position

The ship remains threatened by the weather, according to the Navy official, and the crew has been dealing with rough, unpredictable seas coming from different directions, adding to the ship’s movement on the reef.
A Philippine salvage tug, the Trabajador, also is on the scene and assisting, as is the Philippine Coast Guard.
Other Navy ships are headed to assist the Guardian.
The Mustin, a destroyer based in Yokosuka, Japan, is expected to arrive shortly, and the Pearl Harbor-based salvage ship Salvor is en route, although she is not expected on the scene until later next week.

Digital Error


The Digital Nautical Charts (DNC) used by the Guardian and most Navy ships are produced by the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA), a largely secret organization headquartered in Springfield,Va.

The DNC charts come in “general” and “coastal” versions, and, according to an NGA memo sent to the Navy on Jan. 18, the error was in the coastal DNC.
The general DNC and hardcopy charts show the reef’s location correctly, NGA said.

extract from UKHO NtM December 22, 2005
indicating undetermined datum for BA943, BA967, BA3483, BA3809 and BA3811 charts 
and the extension of the reefs 1-5 miles seaward

 extract from NtM August 13rd, 2011
signalling a missing reef data for DNC CD11

Letitia Long, the agency’s director, told the Navy that the coastal DNC charts would be corrected by Jan. 30, and advised ships not to use the Sulu Sea charts until then.

The Navy’s head navigator took things a step further, advising in a message sent to the fleet Jan. 18 “to operate with caution when using NGA-supplied Coastal Digital Nautical Charts due to an identified error in the accuracy of charting in the Sulu Sea.” (Commander, Pacific Fleet)
Rear Adm. Jonathan White, Oceanographer and Navigator of the Navy, said in the message that preliminary analysis of the error indicates it “resulted from incorrect geographic rectification of satellite imagery used to build” the coastal DNC charts.
“NGA has found no other anomalies, but is currently conducting a comprehensive review of its source data,” White said in the message.
He cautioned Navy ships “to compare coastal DNC charts with general DNC library charts, and not rely on [a] single source for navigation data.
“Commanding officers,” White added, “are directed to report any anomalies immediately to NGA.”
"While the erroneous navigation chart data is important information, no one should jump to conclusions," said Pacific Fleet spokesman Capt. Darryn James.
"It is critical that the U.S. Navy conduct a comprehensive investigation that assesses all the facts surrounding the Guardian grounding."

 DNC11 coastal charts in Philippines
COA11D : South China Sea; Palawan Island, Philippines
Charts: US 91320, 91330, 92033, 92480, 92490, 92500, 92520, 93044, 93045, 93046, 93047,
    93049,

CH 10019, 18050, 18100, 18200, 18300, 18400, 18500, 18600, 18700, 18800;
    UK 967, 287, 3819, 3820, 3821, 4483
 

The agency expects to complete its review of all coastal DNC charts by Jan. 22, White noted.
A Navy official cautioned that while the digital chart error may have contributed to the incident, an accident investigation is continuing.
“This guidance to the fleet does not presuppose the cause of the USS Guardian grounding,” the official said Jan. 18.
“The investigation will look at a number of potential contributing factors.”

PH4TBTH0 ENC Tubbatha Reef
scale : Approach (1:22.000 - 1 : 100.000)
soundings in meters
official ENC from NAMRIA Philippines Hydrographic Office
-vector ECDIS chart equivalent to military DNC-
has been last updated 2010-05-12 
Note : equivalent to paper local nautical map 4357 (1:50,000 Jan 2009) 

 C-Map CM93 commercial vector chart (overzoom view)
note : Tubbataha lighthouse coordinates (WGS84) : 8°43.49' N / 119°48.90' E
so shifted 1.4 Nm (2,7 km) in the SSW (191°) from the ENC position

 Navionics commercial vector chart

 Transas TX97 commercial vector chart

The Guardian is commanded by Lt. Cmdr. Mark Rice, who first reported to the ship in October 2011.
The 14-ship minesweeper fleet, which generally toils in obscurity, has become the focus of major refurbishment and modernization efforts with the delay of planned replacements, renewed concerns about anti-mine capabilities, and a surge deployment to the Persian Gulf.
Guardian is one of four ships forward-deployed to Japan.
Four others are homeported at Bahrain, where four San Diego-based ships also are operating.
Two others remain at San Diego, home base for the mine force.
The ships entered service between 1987 and 1994.

Located within the Northern apex of the Coral Triangle, Tubbataha reef is often considered to be the best dive spot in the Philippines and this marine protected area is home to a staggering wealth of biodiversity.
The Tubbataha Reefs has two coral atolls that harbor a wide range of marine species including 600 species of fish, 360 species of corals, 11 species of sharks, 13 species of dolphins and whales, 100 species of birds and sea turtles.
Ships are not allowed to go near the area since it is a protected site,
according to Republic Act 10067 or the Tubbataha Reefs National Park Act of 2009.
The Tubbataha management office said the 68-meter ship entered these areas without permission and failed to coordinate with environmental officials.

The incident has triggered worries in the Philippines about potential damage to the coral reef, which is in a Unesco World Heritage zone where entry is restricted. (see WWF)
So far, no fuel leaks have been reported from the ship.

Links :

People of the Coral Triangle


from James Morgan Photography


Links :

Friday, January 18, 2013

Canada CHS update in the Marine GeoGarage


16 charts have been updated (December 28, 2012) :
    • 1202 CAP ETERNITE TO SAINT-FULGENCE
    • 1203 TADOUSSAC TO CAP ETERNITE
    • 1429 CANAL DE LA RIVE SUD
    • 1430 LAC SAINT-LOUIS
    • 3000 JUAN DE FUCA STRAIT TO DIXON ENTRANCE
    • 3461 JUAN DE FUCA STRAIT EASTERN PORTION
    • 3462 JUAN DE FUCA STRAIT TO STRAIT OF GEORGIA
    • 3891 SKIDEGATE CHANNEL
    • 3955 PLANS PRINCE RUPERT HARBOUR
    • 4023 NORTHUMBERLAND STRAIT
    • 4049 GRAND BANK NORTHERN PORTION TO FLEMISH PASS
    • 4406 TRYON SHOALS TO CAPE EGMONT
    • 4498 PUGWASH HARBOUR AND APPROACHES
    • 4921 PLANS CHALEUR BAY -NORTH SHORE
    • 4955 HAVRE-AUX-MAISONS
    • 6248 OBSERVATION POINT TO GRINDSTONE POINT
    So 688 charts (1658 including sub-charts) are available in the Canada CHS layer. (see coverage)

    Note : don't forget to visit 'Notices to Mariners' published monthly and available from the Canadian Coast Guard both online or through a free hardcopy subscription service.
    This essential publication provides the latest information on changes to the aids to navigation system, as well as updates from CHS regarding CHS charts and publications.
    See also written Notices to Shipping and Navarea warnings : NOTSHIP

    How the vampire squid eats its prey


     For years marine biologists have puzzled over what the mysterious vampire squid eats.
    Recent research by Henk-Jan Hoving and Bruce Robison at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute finally reveals the answer.
    These deep-sea creatures use long, retractile filaments to passively harvest particles and aggregates of detritus, or marine snow, sinking from the waters above.
    This feeding strategy, unknown in any other cephalopod (this group of animals includes squid and octopods), allows vampire squid to thrive in the oxygen minimum zone where there are few predators but marine detritus is abundant.

    From Wired

    Marine biologists have finally solved the mystery of how the “vampire squid” feeds, and what on — namely a delightful recipe of corpses and faeces washed down with its own mucus.

     photos on MBARI or National Geographic

    With a name like Vampyroteuthis infernalis (meaning, quite literally, the squid from hell), this lonely cephalopod was never going to be chowing down on any ordinary fare.
    Residing around 3,000 feet deep in warm waters, where there is little oxygen, and reaching a size of just 5 inches in adulthood, the vampire squid’s life is a solitary one — it even has its very own taxononomic order, Vampyromorphida, of which it is the sole member, being an unusual breed that has characteristics of both octopi and squid.
    Its name, however, is misleading, according to research carried out by Hendrik Hoving and Bruce Robison of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute.
    Their findings, published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, reveal that the unusual cephalopod quite cleverly takes advantage of its environment, where there is little competition for food or threat of predators.

    “Vampyroteuthis’ feeding behaviour is unlike any other cephalopod,” explains the study.
    “(It) reveals a unique adaptation that allows these animals to spend most of their life at depths where oxygen concentrations are very low, but where predators are few and typical cephalopod food is scarce.”

    The vampire squid therefore feeds solely on “marine snow” — the debris that falls to the ocean floor, not live creatures.
    Marine biologists have never before been able to prove this, finding stomach contents of the dissected cephalopods to be inconclusive.
    Hoving and Robison proved the theory by not only examining the stomach contents of live cephalopods from Southern California and Mexico, but by filming the specimens in their natural habitat using remotely operated vehicles and studying them in tanks back at the lab.


    The vampire squid can turn itself "inside out" to avoid predators.

    When debris made of animal particles were sunk in the tanks, the pair witnessed the cephalopod extend a fine, long filament from its umbrella-like mouth, which contains a web of eight arms covered in suckers and spines called cirri.
    This filament (which extends to eight times its body length) would stick to the debris, and then be drawn back through the web of arms, where the edible particles are “cleaned” off the filament and covered in mucus secreted from suckers.
    This glued together combination of mucus and debris is then placed in the mouth using the cirri, and consumed.

    “The food items that we found in digestive tracts, in droppings and regurgitations and that we saw being consumed during in situ observations were not representative of captured live prey,” states the study.
    “Instead, Vampyroteuthis’ food consisted of agglomerated copepod parts, faecal pellets, diatoms, radiolarians and fish scales; often embedded in a mucus matrix. The most likely source of this eclectic mix is marine snow aggregates, including the feeding structures of larvaceans.”

    Speaking to Discovery News, Richard Young, a biological oceanographer not involved in the study, called the findings “spectacular”.

    “Vampire squid have always had these really funny long things that stick out of their body, and scientists like me had no idea what they were used for. Now we know. [This] is one peculiar critter. I would be shocked if any other marine organism ate in such a way.”

    So it turns out the stealthy cephalopod — which uses its massive 2.5cm eye to look out for food, cloaks itself in bioluminescence to hide its silhouette from predators and uses its filaments to safely extract marine snow from a distance — has been getting a bad rap all these years, despite being possibly the only cephalopod to not eat live prey.
    It can now have its reputation adjusted — the cephalopod should no longer be referred to as a vampire, but instead a detritivore: a creature that thrives on decomposing bodies and faecal matter.
    It might not be much of an improvement.

    Thursday, January 17, 2013

    James Whistler, painter and former cartographer

    Sketch of Anacapa Island, 1854
    Records of the Coast And Geodetic Survey / National Archives and Records Administration 


    James Abbott McNeill Whistler, one of the most influential figures in the 19th-century art world, (Whistlers' mother famous painting) learned etching while employed in the cartographic section of the U.S. Coast Survey.

     The Sea 1865, oil on canvas, Montclair Art Museum

    According to that agency's volume of Personnel Records, 1816-1881, Whistler was hired by the federal government as a draftsman on November 7, 1854, for $1.50 a day.

    However, his unconventional work habits and his inability to conform to government routine led to his dismissal on January 9, 1855.

    One of the known works completed by Whistler during his brief federal service, "Sketch of Anacapa Island," 1854, exemplifies Whistler's need to add his personal touch to official charts.
    After he completed this etching in the approved style, he thought it looked dull.
    Therefore, he added two flocks of gulls sailing gracefully over the rocky headland.

    The National Archives holds three impressions of this work, and the originals can be seen by contacting the Cartographic and Architectural Branch of the National Archives, located in College Park, MD.