Sydney Harbour floor mapped in 3D

By on 10 June, 2014
The hydrographic survey clearly shows the Sydney Harbour Tunnel, as well as a 45m deep hole to the west of the bridge.

The hydrographic survey clearly shows the Sydney Harbour Tunnel, as well as a 45m deep hole to the west of the bridge.

 

Sydney Ports has revealed some of its 3D imagery of the floor of Sydney Harbour, which it uses to maintain the shipping lanes and berths.

There are four hydrographic surveyors at Sydney Ports who monitor the bottom of the Harbour to make sure that obstacles do not disrupt water traffic on Port Jackson.

Venessa O’Connell, Andrew Tsaccounis told the Daily Telegraph that they and their colleagues use a $750,000 multi-beam echo sounder system to make detailed 3-D maps of the Harbour floor.

Installed on-board the tri-hulled motor boat ‘Port Explorer’, the system fires 512 separate sonar rays to the bottom to build up a digital map of the Harbour’s hidden depths.

“We are looking for anything that can impact on shipping and shipping schedules,” Ms O’Connell told the Daily Telegraph. “While Sydney Harbour doesn’t really have any problems with filling up with silt, we do find a wide variety of objects that have been dumped or fallen off the back of ships and barges.”

These objects have previously included: concrete blocks and steel poles for construction work; various items of furniture; shopping trolleys; small boats that have broken from their moorings and later sunk; and even cars and motorbikes.

The survey also shows the location of many historic items, including the Harbour’s biggest and most intact wreck, the TSS Currajong, a collier that was sunk just off Bradleys Head, near Mosman, in 1910 after being hit by the SS Wyreema, a 6000-tonne passenger liner.

You can read more, including more images and a video, over at the Daily Telegraph.

You may also like to read:


, , , , ,


Newsletter

Sign up now to stay up to date about all the news from Spatial Source. You will get a newsletter every week with the latest news.

Geospatial in the age of the metaverse
The geospatial sector is set to both underpin the metaverse ...
$140 million allocated for WA Spatial Digital Twin
The 10-year project aims to improve infrastructure delivery,...
March 21: Celebrating Global Surveyors’ Day
March 21 is the day on which we celebrate the essential work...
Government releases new Local Drone Rules map
UAV users can now easily see whether they need to obtain aut...
Photogrammetry with enhanced cloud capabilities
SimActive has announced improved cloud environment enhanceme...