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Sonar surveys of water depth from the Colorado River at Lees Ferry Arizona, September 23, 2019

Dates

Acquisition
2019-09-23
Publication Date

Citation

Kinzel, P.J., Legleiter, C.J. and Grams, P.E., 2021, Remotely sensed bathymetry and field measurements from the Colorado River near Lees Ferry, Arizona, September 23, 2019: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9O9ONXF.

Summary

Field-based multibeam sonar surveys were collected along the Colorado River, near Lees Ferry, Arizona from a motorized cataraft. These data were used to assess the accuracy of river bathymetry inferred from the ASTRALiTe bathymetric lidar, acquired contemporaneously from the same survey vessel. These data sets were collected to support research focused on developing innovative methods for non-contact measurement of river discharge based on various forms of remotely sensed data. The sonar survey data were exported to a comma-separated text file and the resulting *.csv file contain for each point the spatial coordinates, and depth (expressed as a negative number), all in meters

Contacts

Originator :
Paul J Kinzel
Publisher :
U.S. Geological Survey
Metadata Contact :
Paul J Kinzel
USGS Mission Area :
Water Resources
SDC Data Owner :
Water - Integrated Modeling and Prediction Division
Distributor :
U.S. Geological Survey - ScienceBase

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

ASTRALiTe_GC3.jpg
“Photograph of ASTRALiTe instrument and vertical pole holding the sonar.”
thumbnail 1.66 MB image/jpeg
LF-20190923_utm.csv
“SONAR survey”
100.36 MB text/csv

Material Request Instructions

For any questions regarding these data, please contact:

Paul Kinzel - pjkinzel@usgs.gov, 303-278-7941
United States Geological Survey
4620 Technology Drive, Suite 400
Golden, CO 80403

Purpose

The U.S. Geological Survey has an ongoing research interest in developing and testing innovative technologies for remote sensing of river bed topography as one component of an integrated approach to non-contact measurement of river discharge. High-resolution measurements of bed topography are increasingly used to support scientific investigations and resource monitoring because such data afford numerous advantages for geomorphic change detection, physical habitat characterization, and numerical modeling of flow and sediment transport.

Rights

Any use of trade, firm, or product names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.

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