49773
2010 Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Topographic Lidar: Concord River Watershed, Massachusetts
ma2010_fema_concordriver_m2549_metadata
Data Set
Published / External
49401
Lidar - partner (no harvest)
Project
Completed
2013-09
The Concord AOI consists of one area. Ground Control is collected throughout the AOI for use in the processing of LiDAR data to ensure data accurately represents the ground surface. QA/QC checkpoints,
(FVA and CVA - see Ground Control process step for further information) also collected throughout the AOI, are used for independent quality checks of the processed LiDAR data.
LiDAR acquisition products include Pre- and Post- flight reports which contain information on the flightlines, equipment parameters, and other pertinant acquisition details. The LiDAR product
is considered to be point cloud data and consists of 1500mx1500m tiles of LAS points which are partially classified such that the bare earth points can be calibrated to the ground surface and
tested via the independent QC to ensure the ground surface is accurately represented. The Bare Earth deliverables consists of tiles of fully classified LAS points. A suite of products derived
from the LiDAR data including DEMs and contour data has been created to support H&H analysis within the Concord watershed. A full narrative accompanies this deliverable, as well as the independent QC report.
Provide high resolution terrain elevation and land cover elevation data. Terrain data is used to represent the topography of a watershed and/or floodplain environment and to extract useful information
for hydraulic and hydrologic models.
10417
A footprint of this data set may be viewed in Google Earth at:
https://noaa-nos-coastal-lidar-pds.s3.amazonaws.com/laz/geoid18/2549/supplemental/ma2010_fema_concordriver_footprint.KMZ
A vertical accuracy report from the vendor may be viewed here:
https://noaa-nos-coastal-lidar-pds.s3.amazonaws.com/laz/geoid18/2549/supplemental/ma2010_fema_concordriver_accuracyreport.pdf
Theme
ISO 19115 Topic Category
elevation
Theme
Land Surface
Office for Coastal Management
Charleston
SC
Data Set
As Needed
las
LiDAR points in LAS 1.2 format (ASPRS Classes 1,2,7,8,12)
Appendix M of FEMA Guidelines and Specifications for FEMA Flood Hazard Mapping Partners contains a detailed description of the data themes and references
to other relevant information.
Any conclusions drawn from the analysis of this information are not the responsibility
of Photo Science, Greenhorne & O'Mara, CompassData, STARR, FEMA, NOAA, the Office for Coastal Management or its partners.
Ground control and quality control checkpoints were collected by CompassData, Inc. LiDAR was acquired and processed by Photo Science, Inc. Quality Control testing was performed by CompassData, Inc.
Quality Assurance testing was conducted by Greenhorne & O'Mara, Inc. All firms were under contract to STARR, A Joint Venture which held the FEMA contract and task order for this work.
Data Steward
2013-09
Organization
NOAA Office for Coastal Management
NOAA/OCM
coastal.info@noaa.gov
2234 South Hobson Ave
Charleston
SC
29405-2413
(843) 740-1202
https://coast.noaa.gov
NOAA Office for Coastal Management Home Page
Online Resource
Distributor
2013-09
Organization
NOAA Office for Coastal Management
NOAA/OCM
coastal.info@noaa.gov
2234 South Hobson Ave
Charleston
SC
29405-2413
(843) 740-1202
https://coast.noaa.gov
NOAA Office for Coastal Management Home Page
Online Resource
Metadata Contact
2013-09
Organization
NOAA Office for Coastal Management
NOAA/OCM
coastal.info@noaa.gov
2234 South Hobson Ave
Charleston
SC
29405-2413
(843) 740-1202
https://coast.noaa.gov
NOAA Office for Coastal Management Home Page
Online Resource
Point of Contact
2013-09
Organization
NOAA Office for Coastal Management
NOAA/OCM
coastal.info@noaa.gov
2234 South Hobson Ave
Charleston
SC
29405-2413
(843) 740-1202
https://coast.noaa.gov
NOAA Office for Coastal Management Home Page
Online Resource
Ground Condition
-71.71944
-71.246749
42.641574
42.203354
Range
2010-12-02
2010-12-12
Yes
Unclassified
This data can be obtained on-line at the following URL:
https://coast.noaa.gov/dataviewer/#/lidar/search/where:ID=2549
;
None
Acknowledgement of FEMA would be appreciated in products derived from these data. This digital data is produced for the purposes of updating/creating a DFIRM database.
https://coast.noaa.gov/dataviewer/#/lidar/search/where:ID=2549
Customized Download
Create custom data files by choosing data area, product type, map projection, file format, datum, etc.
https://noaa-nos-coastal-lidar-pds.s3.amazonaws.com/laz/geoid18/2549/index.html
Bulk Download
Simple download of data files.
https://coast.noaa.gov
Online Resource
https://coast.noaa.gov/dataviewer
Online Resource
2017-03-20
Date that the source FGDC record was last modified.
2017-11-14
Converted from FGDC Content Standards for Digital Geospatial Metadata (version FGDC-STD-001-1998) using 'fgdc_to_inport_xml.pl' script. Contact Tyler Christensen (NOS) for details.
2018-02-08
Partial upload of Positional Accuracy fields only.
2018-03-13
Partial upload to move data access links to Distribution Info.
Deliverables were tested by for both vertical and horizontal accuracy. The vertical unit of the data file is in meters with 2-decimal point precision.; Quantitative Value: 0.189 meters, Test that produced the value:
Consolidated Vertical Accuracy (CVA) equal to the 95th percentile confidence level (RMSE[z] x 1.9600) calculated against the bare earth
surface in all ground cover classes. Reported in meters.
Survey data have been checked for completeness, points have been collected in correct vegetation units, and distributed throughout the AOI. The terrain data have been checked for completeness
against AOI polygons. No gaps as defined by FEMA Procedural Memo No. 61 are known to exist within the dataset.
Survey data have been confirmed to be in proper units, coordinate systems and format. The terrain data have been confirmed as complete LAS format data files. Header files are in proper
LAS format with content as specified by FEMA Procedural Memo No. 61.
1
GPS based surveys were utilized to support both processing and testing of LiDAR data within FEMA designated Areas of Interest (AOIs). Geographically distinct ground points were surveyed using
GPS technology throughout the AOIs to provide support for three distinct tasks. Task 1 was to provide Vertical Ground Control to support the aerial acquisition and subsequent bare earth model processing.
To accomplish this, survey-grade Trimble R-8 GPS receivers were used to collect a series of control points located on open areas, free of excessive or significant slope, and at least 5 meters away from
any significant terrain break. Most if not all control points were collected at street/road intersections on bare level pavement. Task 2 was to collect Fundamental Vertical Accuracy (FVA) checkpoints
to evaluate the initial quality of the collected point cloud and to ensure that the collected data was satisfactory for further processing to meet FEMA specifications. The FVA points were collected in
identical fashion to the Vertical Ground Control Points, but segregated from the point pool to ensure independent quality testing without prior knowledge of FVA locations by the aerial vendor.
Task 3 was to collect Consolidated Vertical Accuracy CVA) checkpoints to allow vertical testing of the bare-earth processed LiDAR data in different classes of land cover, including: Open (pavement,
open dirt, short grass), High Grass and Crops, Brush and Low Trees, Forest, Urban. CVA points were collected in similar fashion as Control and FVA points with emphasis on establishing point locations
within the predominant land cover classes within each AOI or Functional AOI Group. In order to successfully collect the Forest land cover class, it was necessary to establish a Backsight and Initial Point
with the R8 receiver, and then employ a Nikon Total Station to observe a retroreflective prism stationed under tree canopy. This was necessary due to the reduced GPS performance and degradation of signal
under tree canopy. The R-8 receivers were equipped with cellular modems to receive real-time correction signals from the Keystone Precision Virtual Reference Station (VRS) network encompassing the Region 1 AOIs.
Use of the VRS network allowed rapid collection times (~3 minutes/point) at 2.54 cm (1 inch) initial accuracy. All points collected were below the 8cm specification for testing 24cm, Highest category LiDAR data.
2010-01-01T00:00:00
10
Created 5ft floating point raster DEM from ESRI Terrain by converting Terrain to Raster using ArcGIS 3D Analyst. Save results as a ESRI GRID dataset.
2011-01-01T00:00:00
11
Created 10ft floating point raster DEM from ESRI Terrain by converting Terrain to Raster using ArcGIS 3D Analyst. Save results as a ESRI GRID dataset.
2011-01-01T00:00:00
12
Create contours by Extracting by mask from the 5ft DEM using a HUC12 area. Save this raster as HUC12 Name 5ft.
Focal Statistics using Extracted 5ft DEM as input, Intermediate Focal Raster as Output, Neighborhood should be set to weighted kernel, and the statistic should be sum.
Create contours using focal stats raster as input, output polyline should be based on HUC12 name, Contour Interval of 2ft, Set base contour to 0.001.
Check results and store in file geodatabase under the HUC12 name feature dataset.
2011-01-01T00:00:00
13
Create HDEM from the Floating Point 10ft DEM derived from the Concord LiDAR data was constructed to include all drainage areas for the Concord watershed. Used a U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National
Hydrography Dataset (NHD) polyline featureclass containing the stream channel locations was reviewed and compared with orthophotos to confirm the stream channels were in the correct location.
Using ArcHydro, the DEM and the polyline shapefile were used as inputs to the DEM Reconditioning (AGREE) tool of Arc Hydro. Arc Hydro burned the polylines into the DEM, and thus produced a hydrologically-correct
DEM (HDEM). Sinks are filled, a flow direction and flow accumulation analyses performed, and a final stream GRID developed. The final output of the model is a stream network shapefile. The stream network shapefile
is reviewed and compared to orthophotos and USGS NHD flow lines to confirm the stream channels are in the correct location.
2011-01-01T00:00:00
14
The NOAA Office for Coastal Management (OCM) received the topographic files in LAS V1.2 format. The files contained lidar elevation measurements, classifications,
intensity data, return information, GPS time and scan angle. The data were received in NAD83 UTM Zone 19N (meters) and were vertically referenced to NAVD88
using the Geoid09 model. The vertical units of the data were meters. OCM performed the following processing for data storage and Digital Coast provisioning purposes:
1. All points in Class 11 were changed to Class 12 (Overlap)
2. The topographic las files' global encoding bit was set to '1' to reflect use of the Adjusted Standard GPS Time format.
3. The topographic las files were converted from a Projected Coordinate System (NAD83, UTM Zone 19N) to Geographic coordinates (NAD83).
4. The topographic las files' horizontal units were converted from meters to decimal degrees.
5. The topographic las files were converted from orthometric (NAVD88) heights to ellipsoidal heights using Geoid09.
2013-09-01T00:00:00
2
To ensure valid in-field collections, an NGS monument with suitable vertical reporting was measured using the same equipment and procedures used for Control, FVA and CVA points on a daily basis. The measurement
was compared to the NGS published values to ensure that the GPS collection schema was producing valid data and as a physical proof point of quality of collection. Those monument measurements are summarized in the
Accuracy report included in the data delivered to FEMA. In order to meet FEMA budgetary requirements, 20 FVA points are necessary to allow testing to CE95 ? 1 point out of 20 may fail vertical testing and still
allow the entire dataset to meet 95% accuracy requirements. In similar fashion, 20 CVA points are necessary to test to CE95 as discussed above. 15 CVA points were collected with the intention at the outset that 5
of the collected FVAs would perform double ?duty as Open-class CVA points, to total 20 CVAs. The following software packages and utilities were used to control the GPS receiver in the field during data collection,
and then ingest and export the collected GPS data for all points: Trimble Survey Controller, Trimble Pathfinder Office. The following software utilities were used to translate the collected Latitude/Longitude Decimal
Degree HAE GPS data for all points into Latitude/Longitude Degrees/Minutes/Seconds for checking the collected monument data against the published NGS Datasheet Lat/Long DMS values and into UTM NAD83 Northings/Eastings:
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers CorpsCon, National Geodetic Survey Geoid09NAVD88. MSL values were determined using the most recent NGS-approved geoid model to generate geoid separation values for each Lat/Long coordinate pair.
In this fashion, Orthometric heights were determined for each Control, FVA and CVA point by subtracting the generated Geoid Separation value from the Ellipsoidal Height (HAE) for publication and use as MSL NAVD88(09).
2010-01-01T00:00:00
3
Using an Optech Gemini LiDAR system, a total 111 flightlines of highest density (Nominal pulse Spacing of 1.0m) were collected over the Concord area. A total of 405 square miles was collected. A total
of 12 missions were flown between December 2 and December 12, 2010. Two airborne global positioning system (GPS) base stations were used to support the LiDAR data acquisition: BED A-AI5558,and ORH A-AI5600. Coordinates are
available in the Post-Flight Aerial Acquisition Report.
2010-01-01T00:00:00
4
Applanix software was used in the post processing of the airborne GPS and inertial data that is critical to the positioning and orientation of the sensor during all flights. POSPac MMS provides the smoothed best estimate
of trajectory (SBET) that is necessary for Optech's post processor to develop the point cloud from the LiDAR missions. The point cloud is the mathematical three dimensional collection of all returns from all laser pulses
as determined from the aerial mission. Optech?s DASHMap software and Leica?s ALS Post Processor software were used to create the Raw LIDAR Flight Line strips. At this point this data is ready for analysis, classification,
and filtering to generate a bare earth surface model in which the above ground features are removed from the data set. The GeoCue and TerraScan software packages are then used for the automated data classification. Project
specific macros are created to classify the ground and to remove the side overlap between parallel flight lines. LAS Class 2 (Ground) is used to check the surveyed control points against the Triangulated LIDAR surface. Any
bias is then removed using macro functionality within TerraScan. Unclassified Point Cloud tiles are then created using TerraScan macro functionality. These tiles are populated within GeoCue to ensure correct LAS versioning
and LAS Header information. LAS Class 2 is used to check the independent QC points against the Triangulated LiDAR surface. If RMSE is not within guidelines TerraScan software is utilitzed to remove any bias, and the check
is performed again.
2011-01-01T00:00:00
5
Point Cloud data is manually reviewed and any remaining artifacts are removed using functionality provided within the TerraScan and TerraModeler software packages.
Additional project specific macros are created and run within GeoCue/TerraScan to ensure correct LAS classification prior to project delivery.
Final Classified LAS tiles are created within GeoCue to confirm correct LAS versioning and header information.
In-house software is then used to check LAS header information and final LAS classification prior to delivery.
LAS Class 2 is used to check the independent QC points against the Triangulated LiDAR surface.
2011-01-01T00:00:00
6
Created Multipoint feature class from Class 2 LAS files using ArcGIS 3D Analyst converion tool LAS to Multipoint and stored results in APRS_Class_2_Bare_Earth feature dataset
within the Concord_HUC8_Bare_Earth_Data.gdb file geodatabase.
2011-01-01T00:00:00
7
Convert points to raster using the count option...assign one value to all data cells with a conditional statement...fill small nodata areas with expand...reduce the extent with shrink...
vectorize with raster to polygon...clean up and create polygon for LiDAR collection area.
2011-01-01T00:00:00
8
Run point file information tool on classified LAS files...measure tiles and create polyline vector grid that covers collection area...feature to points for the label points of the LAS Information polygon shapefile...
feature to polygon using vector grid as polyline input and LAS Info points as label points...clean up file.
2011-01-01T00:00:00
9
Created ESRI Terrain using class 2 multipoint feature class as mass point input and Concord Collection Area as soft clip.
This data is stored in the APRS_Class_2_Bare_Earth feature dataset within the Concord_HUC8_Bare_Earth_Data.gdb file geodatabase.
2011-01-01T00:00:00
gov.noaa.nmfs.inport:49773
Anne Ball
2017-11-15T15:22:12
SysAdmin InPortAdmin
2022-08-09T17:11:36
2022-03-16
OCM Partners
OCMP
1002
Public
No
2022-03-16
1 Year
2023-03-16