2007 - Second Annual GEBCO Bathymetric Science Day

Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, Palisades, New York, USA

Presentations

Title Author(s)
Two Hundred Years of the US Survey of the Coast Skip Theberge, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), USA
Lamont in the History of Global Ocean Mapping John Diebold, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO), USA
A hovercraft for geophysical investigations in the inaccessible high Arctic John K Hall, Geological Survey of Israel (Retired)
An overview on the MGDS, automatic data exchange with NGDC and our experiences with web services Suzanne Carbotte, LDEO, USA
An introduction to the Global Multi-Resolution Topography synthesis - approach and lessons learned Bill Ryan, LDEO, USA
A sea bottom landslide identified at a foot of a volcano Shin Tani, Japan Secretariat for Ocean Policy, Japan
Indonesian Tsunameter Djoko Hartoyo, Indonesia Technology Center for Marine Survey, Indonesia
The IBCSO data compilation Southern Ocean GIS (SOGIS): data management and processing perspectives Norbert Ott, Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research (AWI), Germany
GeoMapApp - a web service enabled tool for visualization and analysis of multi-disciplinary marine geoscience data Andrew Goodwillie, LDEO, USA
Experiences using Google Earth to serve marine geoscience data Vicki Ferrini, LDEO, USA

Poster displays

Title Author(s) Link
Sensitivity of global tide models to large-scale bathymetry and smallscale roughness Brian Arbic, Institute for Geophysics, Jackson School for Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin, USA  
Towards an error budget for single-and multi-beam data Karen Marks and Walter H.F. Smith, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Lab. for Satellite Altimetry, Silver Spring, USA (1709 KB)
How much of the seafloor has ever been ensonified? David Monahan, Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping/Joint Hydrographic Center (CCOM/JHC), University of New Hampshire, USA  
Sea bottom landslide maps Shin Tani, Japan Secretariat for Ocean Policy, Japan  
Historic charts of the US Coast Survey Skip Theberge, NOAA, USA