99 datasets found
  1. d

    Shuttle Radar Topography Mission 1-arc second Global

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.nasa.gov
    • +3more
    Updated Dec 7, 2023
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    DOI/USGS/EROS (2023). Shuttle Radar Topography Mission 1-arc second Global [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/shuttle-radar-topography-mission-1-arc-second-global
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 7, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    United States Geological Surveyhttp://www.usgs.gov/
    Description

    The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) was flown aboard the space shuttle Endeavour February 11-22, 2000. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) participated in an international project to acquire radar data which were used to create the first near-global set of land elevations. The radars used during the SRTM mission were actually developed and flown on two Endeavour missions in 1994. The C-band Spaceborne Imaging Radar and the X-Band Synthetic Aperture Radar (X-SAR) hardware were used on board the space shuttle in April and October 1994 to gather data about Earth's environment. The technology was modified for the SRTM mission to collect interferometric radar, which compared two radar images or signals taken at slightly different angles. This mission used single-pass interferometry, which acquired two signals at the same time by using two different radar antennas. An antenna located on board the space shuttle collected one data set and the other data set was collected by an antenna located at the end of a 60-meter mast that extended from the shuttle. Differences between the two signals allowed for the calculation of surface elevation. Endeavour orbited Earth 16 times each day during the 11-day mission, completing 176 orbits. SRTM successfully collected radar data over 80% of the Earth's land surface between 60° north and 56° south latitude with data points posted every 1 arc-second (approximately 30 meters). Two resolutions of finished grade SRTM data are available through EarthExplorer from the collection held in the USGS EROS archive: 1 arc-second (approximately 30-meter) high resolution elevation data offer worldwide coverage of void filled data at a resolution of 1 arc-second (30 meters) and provide open distribution of this high-resolution global data set. Some tiles may still contain voids. The SRTM 1 Arc-Second Global (30 meters) data set will be released in phases starting September 24, 2014. Users should check the coverage map in EarthExplorer to verify if their area of interest is available. 3 arc-second (approximately 90-meter) medium resolution elevation data are available for global coverage. The 3 arc-second data were resampled using cubic convolution interpolation for regions between 60° north and 56° south latitude. [Summary provided by the USGS.]

  2. NASA SRTM Digital Elevation 30m

    • developers.google.com
    Updated Feb 23, 2000
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    NASA / USGS / JPL-Caltech (2000). NASA SRTM Digital Elevation 30m [Dataset]. https://developers.google.com/earth-engine/datasets/catalog/USGS_SRTMGL1_003
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 23, 2000
    Dataset provided by
    NASAhttp://nasa.gov/
    United States Geological Surveyhttp://www.usgs.gov/
    Time period covered
    Feb 11, 2000 - Feb 22, 2000
    Area covered
    Description

    The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM, see Farr et al. 2007) digital elevation data is an international research effort that obtained digital elevation models on a near-global scale. This SRTM V3 product (SRTM Plus) is provided by NASA JPL at a resolution of 1 arc-second (approximately 30m). This dataset has undergone a void-filling process using open-source data (ASTER GDEM2, GMTED2010, and NED), as opposed to other versions that contain voids or have been void-filled with commercial sources. For more information on the different versions see the SRTM Quick Guide. Documentation: User's Guide General Documentation Algorithm Theoretical Basis Document (ATBD)

  3. Plan Curvature derived from 1" SRTM DEM-S

    • data.csiro.au
    • researchdata.edu.au
    Updated Mar 8, 2016
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    John Gallant; Jenet Austin (2016). Plan Curvature derived from 1" SRTM DEM-S [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4225/08/56DE806D91E44
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 8, 2016
    Dataset provided by
    CSIROhttp://www.csiro.au/
    Authors
    John Gallant; Jenet Austin
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Feb 11, 2000 - Feb 22, 2000
    Area covered
    Dataset funded by
    CSIROhttp://www.csiro.au/
    Description

    Plan (or contour) curvature is the rate of change of aspect (orthogonal to the slope) and represents topographic convergence or divergence. It is significant for water movement across the landscape, i.e., the accumulation or dispersion of water.

    The plan curvature products were derived from the Smoothed Digital Elevation Model (DEM-S; ANZCW0703014016), which was derived from the 1 second resolution SRTM data acquired by NASA in February 2000. The calculation of plan curvature from DEM-S accounted for the varying spacing between grid points in the geographic projection.

    The plan curvature data are available at 1 arc-second (approx. 30 m) and 3 arc-second (approx. 90 m) resolutions.

    The 3 arc-second resolution product was generated from the 1 arc-second plan curvature product and masked by the 3” water and ocean mask datasets. Lineage: Source data 1. 1 arc-second SRTM-derived Smoothed Digital Elevation Model (DEM-S; ANZCW0703014016). 2. 1 arc-second plan curvature product 3. 3 arc-second resolution SRTM water body and ocean mask datasets

    Plan Curvature calculation Plan curvature was calculated from DEM-S using the finite difference method (Gallant and Wilson, 2000). The different spacing in the E-W and N-S directions due to the geographic projection of the data was accounted for by using the actual spacing in metres of the grid points calculated from the latitude.

    The plan curvature calculation was performed on 1° x 1° tiles, with overlaps to ensure correct values at tile edges.

    The 3 arc-second resolution version was generated from the 1 arc-second plan curvature product. This was done by aggregating the 1” data over a 3 x 3 grid cell window and taking the mean of the nine values that contributed to each 3” output grid cell. The 3” plan curvature data were then masked using the SRTM 3” ocean and water body datasets.

    References Gallant, J.C. and Wilson, J.P. (2000) Primary topographic attributes, chapter 3 in Wilson, J.P. and Gallant, J.C. Terrain Analysis: Principles and Applications, John Wiley and Sons, New York.

  4. r

    SRTM v3 (NASA)

    • opendata.rcmrd.org
    • data.amerigeoss.org
    • +3more
    Updated Sep 19, 2017
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    International Digital Elevation Model Service (2017). SRTM v3 (NASA) [Dataset]. https://opendata.rcmrd.org/documents/cadb028a356046479fcda5207a235560
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 19, 2017
    Dataset authored and provided by
    International Digital Elevation Model Service
    Description

    The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) is a collaborative effort from NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) and NGA (National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency) as well as DLR (Deutsches Zentrum für Luft-und Raumfahrt) and ASI (Agenzia Spaziale Italiana). SRTM was flown aboard the Endeavour space shuttle in February 2000 to provide a high-resolution Digital Elevation Model (DEM). The SRTM instrumentation consisted of the Spaceborne Imaging Radar-C (SIR-C) with an additional antenna to form a 60 meters long baseline. As a result of the SRTM mission, several DEM versions have been released since 2003, which differ in terms of data processing and procedures applied for the filling of voids (areas not or poorly observed by the SRTM radar observations).

    SRTM v3.0 (SRTM Plus) is the newest version, published in 2015 by NASA as a part of NASA Making Earth System Data Records for Use in Research Environments (MEaSUREs) project, which incorporates topographic data to fill the gaps or voids in earlier versions of SRTM data. For the void filling with the Delta Surface Fill algorithm, ASTER DEMs have been used as auxiliary data source, or interpolations have been applied. Many variants of DEM are available in SRTM v3.0, with SRTMGL1 being one of the key products from SRTM v3.0. ‘GL1’ on its name stands for “Global 1-arc second”. It provides regularly spaced DEM grids of 1 arc-second (approximately 30 meters) and covering 80% of Earth’s landmass, between 60° North and 56° South. This product is divided into 1° x 1° latitude and longitude tiles in “geographic” projection, as shown here.

    A typical file of the SRTMGL1 dataset requires 25 MB memory (without compression) and stores exactly one 1°x1° tile; it contains 3,601 lines and 3,601 columns, which sum up to around 100 GB (compressed) and 350 GB (uncompressed) for the global data set of 14297 tiles. Individual tile names refer to the latitude and longitude of southwest (lower left) corner of the tile, e.g., tile N20W030 has lower left corner at 20°N and 30°W, covering area of 20-21°N and 30-29°W. The absolute vertical accuracy for SRTM heights has been found to be ~9 m (90 % confidence) or better (Rodriguez et al. 2005).

    Geodetic information: The SRTM GL1 DEMs are vertically referenced to the EGM96 geoid and horizontally referenced to the WGS84 (World Geodetic System 1984).

    Further notes: The SRTM DEM represents bare ground elevations only where vegetation cover and buildings are absent. Over most areas, the DEM elevations reside between the bare ground (terrain) and top of canopies (surface), so are technically a mixture of terrain and surface models. Few artefacts, e.g., pits or spikes may still be present in the data set.

    Data access: The homepage of SRTM mission is http://www2.jpl.nasa.gov/srtm/. SRTM v3.0 datasets can be searched in MEASURES webpage and acquired freely from USGS website (http://earthexplorer.usgs.gov/) and USGS data pool (http://e4ftl01.cr.usgs.gov/SRTM/).References:Farr, T.G., E. Caro, R. Crippen, R. Duren, S. Hensley, M. Kobrick, M. Paller, E. Rodriguez, P. Rosen, L. Roth, D. Seal, S. Shaffer, J. Shimada, J. Umland, M. Werner, 2007, The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission. Reviews of Geophysics, volume 45, RG2004, doi:10.1029/2005RG000183.NASA, The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) Collection User Guide. Available on https://lpdaac.usgs.gov/sites/default/files/public/measures/docs/NASA_SRTM_V3.pdfRodriguez, E., C.S. Morris, J.E. Belz, E.C. Chapin, J.M. Martin, W. Daffer, S.Hensley, 2005, An assessment of the SRTM topographic products, Technical Report JPL D-31639, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, 143 pp. available on http://www2.jpl.nasa.gov/srtm/SRTM_D31639.pdf

  5. E

    SRTM30+ Global 1-km Digital Elevation Model (DEM): Version 11: Land Surface

    • pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu
    • data.ioos.us
    • +1more
    Updated May 20, 2015
    + more versions
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    David T. Sandwell (2015). SRTM30+ Global 1-km Digital Elevation Model (DEM): Version 11: Land Surface [Dataset]. https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/srtm30plus_v11_land/index.html
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    Dataset updated
    May 20, 2015
    Dataset provided by
    Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS)
    Authors
    David T. Sandwell
    Area covered
    South Pacific Ocean, Pacific Ocean
    Variables measured
    elev, latitude, longitude
    Description

    A global 1-km resolution land surface digital elevation model (DEM) derived from U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) 30 arc-second SRTM30 gridded DEM data created from the NASA Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM). GTOPO30 data are used for high latitudes where SRTM data are not available. For a grayscale hillshade image layer of this dataset, see "world_srtm30plus_dem1km_hillshade" in the distribution links listed in the metadata. acknowledgement=The Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) is funded through the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) as a Regional Association within the U.S. Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS). PacIOOS is coordinated by the University of Hawaii School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST). cdm_data_type=Grid comment=These data are provided by David Sandwell of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and subsequently distributed via THREDDS Data Server (TDS) and ERDDAP by PacIOOS. contributor2_institution=Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) contributor2_name=Joseph J. Becker contributor2_role=originator contributor2_type=person contributor_email=Walter.HF.Smith@noaa.gov contributor_institution=NOAA Laboratory for Satellite Altimetry contributor_name=Walter H.F. Smith contributor_role=originator contributor_type=person contributor_url=https://www.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/star/Smith_WHF.php Conventions=CF-1.6, ACDD-1.3 date_metadata_modified=2023-01-20 drawLandMask=under Easternmost_Easting=179.99583333333334 geospatial_bounds=POLYGON ((-90 -180, 90 -180, 90 180, -90 180, -90 -180)) geospatial_bounds_crs=EPSG:4326 geospatial_lat_max=89.99583333333334 geospatial_lat_min=-89.99583333333334 geospatial_lat_resolution=0.008333333333333333 geospatial_lat_units=degrees_north geospatial_lon_max=179.99583333333334 geospatial_lon_min=-179.99583333333334 geospatial_lon_resolution=0.008333333333333333 geospatial_lon_units=degrees_east history=2015-05-20T00:00:00Z PacIOOS obtained data files from Scripps ftp then masked out the ocean data and converted to NetCDF format. id=srtm30plus_v11_land infoUrl=https://topex.ucsd.edu/WWW_html/srtm30_plus.html institution=Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) instrument=Earth Remote Sensing Instruments > Active Remote Sensing > Imaging Radars > > SRTM > Shuttle Radar Topography Mission instrument_vocabulary=GCMD Instrument Keywords ISO_Topic_Categories=elevation keywords_vocabulary=GCMD Science Keywords locations=Geographic Region > Global Land locations_vocabulary=GCMD Location Keywords metadata_link=https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/metadata/srtm30plus_v11_land.html naming_authority=org.pacioos Northernmost_Northing=89.99583333333334 platform=Models/Analyses > > DEM > Digital Elevation Model, Space Stations/Manned Spacecraft > Space Shuttle platform_vocabulary=GCMD Platform Keywords program=Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) project=Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) references=https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/metadata/world_srtm30plus_dem1km_hillshade.html; Related publication: Becker, J.J., D.T. Sandwell, W.H.F. Smith, J. Braud, B. Binder, J. Depner, D. Fabre, J. Factor, S. Ingalls, S.-H. Kim, R. Ladner, K. Marks, S. Nelson, A. Pharaoh, R. Trimmer, J. Von Rosenberg, G. Wallace, and P. Weatherall (2009) Global Bathymetry and Elevation Data at 30 Arc Seconds Resolution: SRTM30_PLUS, Marine Geodesy, 32:4, 355-371, https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01490410903297766. source=USGS SRTM30 DEM, USGS GTOPO30 DEM sourceUrl=https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/thredds/dodsC/srtm30plus_v11_land Southernmost_Northing=-89.99583333333334 standard_name_vocabulary=CF Standard Name Table v39 time_coverage_duration=P0D time_coverage_resolution=P0D Westernmost_Easting=-179.99583333333334

  6. d

    Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM GL1) Global 30m

    • search.dataone.org
    • portal.opentopography.org
    • +3more
    Updated Oct 19, 2023
    + more versions
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    OpenTopography (2023). Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM GL1) Global 30m [Dataset]. https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256%3A7c939d51e73462dac055ccff6335213563440c7c9654af337ef8fbbe3ed3d786
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 19, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    OpenTopography
    Time period covered
    Feb 11, 2000 - Feb 22, 2000
    Area covered
    Description

    The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) obtained elevation data on a near-global scale to generate the most complete high-resolution digital topographic database of Earth. SRTM consisted of a specially modified radar system that flew onboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour during an 11-day mission in February of 2000. SRTM is an international project spearheaded by the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

    Version 3: Elimination of the voids in the NASA SRTM DEM was the primary goal of a project under the NASA MEaSUREs (Making Earth System Data Records for Use in Research Environments) Program. Ultimately this was achieved by filling the voids with elevation data primarily from the ASTER GDEM2 (Global Digital Elevation Model Version 2) and secondarily from the USGS GMTED2010 elevation model or the USGS National Elevation Dataset (NED). NASA SRTM V3.0 three-arc-second data are provided in two forms: (1) by three-by-three averaging of the one arc-second samples, and (2) by extracting the middle sample of those same three-by-three samples. For more information on this dataset visit the LP DAAC NASA Shuttle Radar Topography Mission Global 1 arc second page.

  7. d

    Geoscience Australia, 1 second SRTM Digital Elevation Model (DEM)

    • data.gov.au
    • researchdata.edu.au
    • +2more
    zip
    Updated Nov 20, 2019
    + more versions
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    Bioregional Assessment Program (2019). Geoscience Australia, 1 second SRTM Digital Elevation Model (DEM) [Dataset]. https://data.gov.au/data/dataset/groups/9a9284b6-eb45-4a13-97d0-91bf25f1187b
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    zip(31709399957)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 20, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    Bioregional Assessment Program
    License

    Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Australia
    Description

    Abstract

    This dataset and its metadata statement were supplied to the Bioregional Assessment Programme by a third party and are presented here as originally supplied.

    This dataset provides a userguide and setup information relating to accessing the Gescience Australia, 1 second SRTM Digital Elevation Model (DEM), for visualisation and analysis using ESRI ArcMap and ArcCatalog.

    The 1 second DSM, DEM, DEM-S and DEM-H are national elevation data products derived from the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) data. The SRTM data is not suitable for routine application due to various artefacts and noise.

    The data has been treated with several processes to produce more usable products:

    * A cleaned digital surface model (DSM)

    * regular grid representing ground surface topography as well as other features including vegetation and man-made structures

    * A bare-earth digital elevation model (DEM)

    * regular grid representing ground surface topography, and where possible, excluding other features such as vegetation and man-made structures.

    * A smoothed digital elevation model (DEM-S)

    * A smoothed DEM based on the bare-earth DEM that has been adaptively smoothed to reduce random noise typically associated with the SRTM data in low relief areas.

    * A hydrologically enforced digital elevation model (DEM-H)

    * A hydrologically enforced DEM is based on DEM-S that has had drainage lines imposed and been further smoothed using the ANUDEM interpolation software.

    The last product, a hydrologically enforced DEM, is most similar to the DEMs commonly in use around Australia, such as the GEODATA 9 Second DEM and the 25 m resolution DEMs produced by State and Territory agencies from digitised topographic maps.

    For any analysis where surface shape is important, one of the smoothed DEMs (DEM-S or DEM-H) should be used. DEM-S is preferred for shape and vertical accuracy and DEM-H for hydrological connectivity. The DSM is suitable if you want to see the vegetation as well as the land surface height. There are few cases where DEM is the best data source, unless access to a less processed product is necessary.

    The 1 second DEM (in its various incarnations) has quite different characteristics to DEMs derived by interpolation from topographic data. Those DEMs are typically quite smooth and are based on fairly accurate but sparse source data, usually contours and spot heights supplemented by drainage lines. The SRTM data is derived from radar measurements that are dense (there is essentially a measurement at almost every grid cell) but noisy.

    Version 1.0 of the DSM was released in early 2009 and version 1.0 of the DEM was released in late 2009. Version 1.0 of the DEM-S was released in July 2010 and version 1.0 of the hydrologically enforced DEM-H was released in October 2011. These products provide substantial improvements in the quality and consistency of the data relative to the original SRTM data, but are not free from artefacts. Improved products will be released over time.

    The 3 second products were derived from the 1 second data and version 1.0 was released in August 2010. Future releases of these products will occur when the 1 second products have been improved. At this stage there is no 3 second DEM-H product, which requires re-interpolation with drainage enforcement at that resolution.

    Dataset History

    The following datasets were used to derive this version of the 1 second DEM products:

    Source data

    1. SRTM 1 second Version 2 data (Slater et al., 2006), supplied by Defence Imagery and Geospatial Organisation (DIGO) as 813 1 x 1 degree tiles. Data were produced by NASA from radar data collected by the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission in February 2000.

    2. GEODATA 9 second DEM Version 3 (Geoscience Australia, 2008) used to fill voids.

    3. SRTM Water Body Data (SWBD) shapefile accompanying the SRTM data (Slater et al., 2006). This defines the coastline and larger inland waterbodies for the DEM and DSM.

    4. Vegetation masks and water masks applied to the DEM to remove vegetation.

    Full metadata, methodologies and lineage descriptions can be found in the PDF userguide within this dataset.

    Further information can be found at http://www.ga.gov.au/metadata-gateway/metadata/record/gcat_72759

    Dataset Citation

    Geoscience Australia (2011) Geoscience Australia, 1 second SRTM Digital Elevation Model (DEM). Bioregional Assessment Source Dataset. Viewed 10 December 2018, http://data.bioregionalassessments.gov.au/dataset/9a9284b6-eb45-4a13-97d0-91bf25f1187b.

  8. Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) Images

    • datasets.ai
    • s.cnmilf.com
    • +5more
    21
    Updated Aug 7, 2024
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    National Aeronautics and Space Administration (2024). Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) Images [Dataset]. https://datasets.ai/datasets/shuttle-radar-topography-mission-srtm-images
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    21Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 7, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    NASAhttp://nasa.gov/
    Authors
    National Aeronautics and Space Administration
    Description

    Culminating more than four years of processing data, NASA and the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) have completed Earth's most extensive global topographic map. The mission is a collaboration among NASA, NGA, and the German and Italian space agencies. For 11 days in February 2000, the space shuttle Endeavour conducted the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) using C-Band and X-Band interferometric synthetic aperture radars to acquire topographic data over 80% of the Earth's land mass, creating the first-ever near-global data set of land elevations. This data was used to produce topographic maps (digital elevation maps) 30 times as precise as the best global maps used today. The SRTM system gathered data at the rate of 40,000 per minute over land. They reveal for the first time large, detailed swaths of Earth's topography previously obscured by persistent cloudiness. The data will benefit scientists, engineers, government agencies and the public with an ever-growing array of uses. The SRTM radar system mapped Earth from 56 degrees south to 60 degrees north of the equator. The resolution of the publicly available data is three arc-seconds (1/1,200th of a degree of latitude and longitude, about 295 feet, at Earth's equator). The final data release covers Australia and New Zealand in unprecedented uniform detail. It also covers more than 1,000 islands comprising much of Polynesia and Melanesia in the South Pacific, as well as islands in the South Indian and Atlantic oceans. SRTM data are being used for applications ranging from land use planning to "virtual" Earth exploration. Currently, the mission's homepage "http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/srtm" provides direct access to recently obtained earth images. The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission C-band data for North America and South America are available to the public. A list of complete public data set is available at "http://www2.jpl.nasa.gov/srtm/dataprod.htm" The data specifications are within the following parameters: 30-meter X 30-meter spatial sampling with 16 meter absolute vertical height accuracy, 10-meter relative vertical height accuracy, and 20-meter absolute horizontal circular accuracy. From the JPL Mission Products Summary, "http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/srtm/dataprelimdescriptions.html". The primary products of the SRTM mission are the digital elevation maps of most of the Earth's surface. Visualized images of these maps are available for viewing online. Below you will find descriptions of the types of images that are being generated:

    • Radar Image
    • Radar Image with Color as Height
    • Radar Image with Color Wrapped Fringes
      -Shaded Relief
    • Perspective View with B/W Radar Image Overlaid
    • Perspective View with Radar Image Overlaid, Color as Height
    • Perspective View of Shaded Relief
    • Perspective View with Landsat or other Image Overlaid
    • Contour Map - B/W with Contour Lines
    • Stereo Pair
    • Anaglypgh

    The SRTM radar contained two types of antenna panels, C-band and X-band. The near-global topographic maps of Earth called Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) are made from the C-band radar data. These data were processed at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and are being distributed through the United States Geological Survey's EROS Data Center. Data from the X-band radar are used to create slightly higher resolution DEMs but without the global coverage of the C-band radar. The SRTM X-band radar data are being processed and distributed by the German Aerospace Center, DLR.

  9. T

    SRTM DEM dataset in China (2000)

    • tpdc.ac.cn
    • data.tpdc.ac.cn
    zip
    Updated Mar 2, 2022
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    CGIAR-CSI (2022). SRTM DEM dataset in China (2000) [Dataset]. https://www.tpdc.ac.cn/zh-hans/data/acb49ce8-2bfe-4ab4-97ff-e6e727110703
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    zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 2, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    TPDC
    Authors
    CGIAR-CSI
    Area covered
    Description

    The SRTM sensor has two bands, namely C-band and X-band. The SRTM we are using now comes from the C-band. The publicly released SRTM digital elevation products include DEM data at three different resolutions: * SRTM1 covers only the continental United States, with a spatial resolution of 1s; * SRTM3 data covers the world with a spatial resolution of 3s. This is the most widely used dataset. The elevation reference of SRTM3 is the geoid of EGM96 and the horizontal reference is WGS84. The nominal absolute elevation accuracy is ± 16m, and the absolute plane accuracy is ± 20m. * SRTM30 data also covers the world, with a resolution of 30s. There are multiple versions of SRTM data. The early SRTM data was completed by NASA's "JPL" (Jet Propulsion Laboratory) ground data processing system (GDPS). The data is called SRTM3- 1. The National Geospatial Intelligence Agency has further processed the data, and the lack of data has been significantly improved. The data is called SRTM3-2. This dataset is mainly the fourth version of SRTM terrain data obtained by CIAT (International Center for Tropical Agriculture) using a new interpolation algorithm. This method better fills the SRTM 90 data hole. The interpolation algorithm comes from Reuter et al. (2007). The data of SRTM is organized as follows: every 5 latitude and longitude grids is divided into a file, which are divided into 24 rows (-60 to 60 degrees) and 72 columns (-180 to 180 degrees). The file naming rule is srtm_XX_YY.zip, where XX indicates the number of columns (01-72), and YY indicates the number of rows (01-24). The resolution of the data is 90 m. Data use: SRTM data uses a 16-bit value to represent the elevation value (-/ + / 32767 meters), the maximum positive elevation is 9000 meters, and the negative elevation (12,000 meters below sea level). -32767 standard for empty data.

  10. n

    SRTM DEM derived 18 degree or greater - SRTM18

    • datasets.seed.nsw.gov.au
    • data.nsw.gov.au
    Updated Jun 26, 2019
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    (2019). SRTM DEM derived 18 degree or greater - SRTM18 [Dataset]. https://datasets.seed.nsw.gov.au/dataset/srtm18
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 26, 2019
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Slopes greater than or equal to 18 degrees derived from the 1 second Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) Digital Elevation Model (DEM). The SRTM >18 layer is a component used in the Native Vegetation Regulatory Map vulnerable lands layer. The Shuttle Radar Topographic Mission DEM derived 18 degree or higher layer is a raster (30 metre pixel) image. The Shuttle Radar Topographic Mission was flown in February 2000 and captured global elevation information between latitudes of 60 degrees North to 56 degrees south at 1 arcsecond resolution. This data has been processed to calculate slope based on a 3 by 3 pixel moving window and resampled to 30m. All values greater than or equal to 18 degrees have been extracted and flattened to produce the SRTM>18 layer described here. More information regarding the Vulnerable Lands Layer may be found at: https://datasets.seed.nsw.gov.au/dataset/nvr-map-vulnerable-regulated-land-2022

  11. Aspect derived from 1" SRTM DEM-S

    • data.csiro.au
    • researchdata.edu.au
    Updated Mar 3, 2016
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    John Gallant; Jenet Austin (2016). Aspect derived from 1" SRTM DEM-S [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4225/08/56D778315A62B
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 3, 2016
    Dataset provided by
    CSIROhttp://www.csiro.au/
    Authors
    John Gallant; Jenet Austin
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Feb 11, 2000 - Feb 22, 2000
    Area covered
    Dataset funded by
    CSIROhttp://www.csiro.au/
    Description

    Aspect measures the direction in which a land surface slope faces. The direction is expressed in degrees from north.

    The aspect products were derived from the Smoothed Digital Elevation Model (DEM-S; ANZCW0703014016), which was derived from the 1 arc-second resolution SRTM data acquired by NASA in February 2000. The calculation of aspect from DEM-S accounted for the varying spacing between grid points in the geographic projection.

    The aspect data are available at 1 arc-second and 3 arc-second resolution

    The 3” resolution version of the aspect product has been masked by the 3” water and ocean mask datasets. Lineage: Source data 1. 1 arc-second SRTM-derived Smoothed Digital Elevation Model (DEM-S; ANZCW0703014016).
    2. 1 arc-second aspect product 3. 3 arc-second resolution SRTM water body and ocean mask datasets

    Aspect calculation Aspect was calculated at 1 arc-0second resolution from DEM-S using the finite difference method (Gallant and Wilson, 2000). The different spacing in the E-W and N-S directions due to the geographic projection of the data was accounted for by using the actual spacing in metres of the grid points calculated from the latitude.

    The 3 arc-second resolution version of the aspect product was derived from the 1 arc-second slope and aspect products by reconstructing the x and y components of the surface normal vector, averaging those components, then calculating aspect from the aggregated components.

    The aspect calculation was performed on 1° x 1° tiles, with overlaps to ensure correct values at tile edges. The data were masked using the 1" or 3” resolution water and ocean mask datasets.

    References Gallant, J.C. and Wilson, J.P. (2000) Primary topographic attributes, chapter 3 in Wilson, J.P. and Gallant, J.C. Terrain Analysis: Principles and Applications, John Wiley and Sons, New York.

  12. a

    MERIT DEM (SRTM-based Bare-Earth model), 2017

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • data.amerigeoss.org
    • +3more
    Updated Oct 26, 2017
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    International Digital Elevation Model Service (2017). MERIT DEM (SRTM-based Bare-Earth model), 2017 [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/documents/8305e783c44a4104b8eba5badded3e02
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 26, 2017
    Dataset authored and provided by
    International Digital Elevation Model Service
    Area covered
    Earth
    Description

    MERIT (Multi-Error-Removed Improved Terrain DEM) is a substantially improved near-global terrain description with 90 m (3 arc-seconds) spatial resolution (Yamazaki et al. 2017). MERIT covers almost all of Earth’s land areas within 90N-60S, except of Antarctica. Different to most other global DEM data sets, MERIT provides – in good approximation – elevations of the bare ground. This has been achieved by reducing vegetation heights (known as tree height bias) using tree density and tree height maps as auxiliary information in the production of the MERIT DEM. However, over built areas, MERIT elevations may contain a bias due to urban canopy.MERIT relies on SRTM v2.1 South of 60° latitude, ALOS AW3D North of 60° latitude, and uses elevations from Viewfinder Panoramas (VFP-DEM) to fill voids (unobserved areas) where present. For the void-filling with VFP-DEM, an average matching method has been applied by Yamazaki et al. (2017) to ensure smooth transitions. Within the SRTM data area, about 0.5 % of MERIT land cells rely on VFP-DEM. North of 60°, the contribution of VFP-DEM is about ~30 %. As a result, elevation errors previously present in the SRTM model have been reduced such that actual terrain features stand out more clearly.

    Geodetic information: The MERIT DEMs are vertically referenced to the EGM96 geoid and horizontally referenced to the WGS84 (World Geodetic System 1984).

    Further notes: The MERIT DEM mostly represents bare ground elevations, so is technically close to a digital terrain model (DTM). This makes the data set suitable for applications requiring heights of the bare ground. Example areas are hydrology, hydrodynamics, physical geodesy and geophysics.

    Data access: The authors freely share their model for non-commercial applications (e.g. science and education) via URL: hydro.iis.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~yamadai/MERIT_DEM/

    References:

    Yamazaki, D., D. Ikeshima, R. Tawatari, T. Yamaguchi, F. O’Loughlin, J.C. Neal, C.C. Sampson, S. Kanae, P.D. Bates (2017), A high accuracy map of global terrain elevations, Geophysical Research Letters, Doi: 10.1002/2017GL072874

  13. c

    Shuttle Radar Topography Mission DTED Level 1 (3-arc second) Data (DTED-1)

    • s.cnmilf.com
    • data.nasa.gov
    • +4more
    Updated Dec 6, 2023
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    DOI/USGS/EROS (2023). Shuttle Radar Topography Mission DTED Level 1 (3-arc second) Data (DTED-1) [Dataset]. https://s.cnmilf.com/user74170196/https/catalog.data.gov/dataset/shuttle-radar-topography-mission-dted-level-1-3-arc-second-data-dted-1
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 6, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    United States Geological Surveyhttp://www.usgs.gov/
    Description

    The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) successfully collected Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (IFSAR) data over 80 percent of the landmass of the Earth between 60 degrees North and 56 degrees South latitudes in February 2000. The mission was co-sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA). NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) performed preliminary processing of SRTM data and forwarded partially finished data directly to NGA for finishing by NGA's contractors and subsequent monthly deliveries to the NGA Digital Products Data Wharehouse (DPDW). All the data products delivered by the contractors conform to the NGA SRTM products and the NGA Digital Terrain Elevation Data (DTED) to the Earth Resources Observation & Science (EROS) Center. The DPDW ingests the SRTM data products, checks them for formatting errors, loads the SRTM DTED into the NGA data distribution system, and ships the public _domain SRTM DTED to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Earth Resources Observation & Science (EROS) Center. Two resolutions of finished grade SRTM data are available through EarthExplorer from the collection held in the USGS EROS archive: 1 arc-second (approximately 30-meter) high resolution elevation data are only available for the United States. 3 arc-second (approximately 90-meter) medium resolution elevation data are available for global coverage. The 3 arc-second data were resampled using cubic convolution interpolation for regions between 60° north and 56° south latitude. [Summary provided by the USGS.]

  14. G

    High Resolution Digital Elevation Model (HRDEM) - CanElevation Series

    • open.canada.ca
    • catalogue.arctic-sdi.org
    esri rest, geotif +5
    Updated Oct 25, 2024
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    Natural Resources Canada (2024). High Resolution Digital Elevation Model (HRDEM) - CanElevation Series [Dataset]. https://open.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/957782bf-847c-4644-a757-e383c0057995
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    shp, geotif, html, pdf, esri rest, json, kmzAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 25, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Natural Resources Canada
    License

    Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The High Resolution Digital Elevation Model (HRDEM) product is derived from airborne LiDAR data (mainly in the south) and satellite images in the north. The complete coverage of the Canadian territory is gradually being established. It includes a Digital Terrain Model (DTM), a Digital Surface Model (DSM) and other derived data. For DTM datasets, derived data available are slope, aspect, shaded relief, color relief and color shaded relief maps and for DSM datasets, derived data available are shaded relief, color relief and color shaded relief maps. The productive forest line is used to separate the northern and the southern parts of the country. This line is approximate and may change based on requirements. In the southern part of the country (south of the productive forest line), DTM and DSM datasets are generated from airborne LiDAR data. They are offered at a 1 m or 2 m resolution and projected to the UTM NAD83 (CSRS) coordinate system and the corresponding zones. The datasets at a 1 m resolution cover an area of 10 km x 10 km while datasets at a 2 m resolution cover an area of 20 km by 20 km. In the northern part of the country (north of the productive forest line), due to the low density of vegetation and infrastructure, only DSM datasets are generally generated. Most of these datasets have optical digital images as their source data. They are generated at a 2 m resolution using the Polar Stereographic North coordinate system referenced to WGS84 horizontal datum or UTM NAD83 (CSRS) coordinate system. Each dataset covers an area of 50 km by 50 km. For some locations in the north, DSM and DTM datasets can also be generated from airborne LiDAR data. In this case, these products will be generated with the same specifications as those generated from airborne LiDAR in the southern part of the country. The HRDEM product is referenced to the Canadian Geodetic Vertical Datum of 2013 (CGVD2013), which is now the reference standard for heights across Canada. Source data for HRDEM datasets is acquired through multiple projects with different partners. Since data is being acquired by project, there is no integration or edgematching done between projects. The tiles are aligned within each project. The product High Resolution Digital Elevation Model (HRDEM) is part of the CanElevation Series created in support to the National Elevation Data Strategy implemented by NRCan. Collaboration is a key factor to the success of the National Elevation Data Strategy. Refer to the “Supporting Document” section to access the list of the different partners including links to their respective data.

  15. d

    Geoscience Australia, 3 second SRTM Digital Elevation Model (DEM) v01

    • data.gov.au
    • researchdata.edu.au
    • +2more
    zip
    Updated Apr 13, 2022
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    Bioregional Assessment Program (2022). Geoscience Australia, 3 second SRTM Digital Elevation Model (DEM) v01 [Dataset]. https://data.gov.au/data/dataset/activity/12e0731d-96dd-49cc-aa21-ebfd65a3f67a
    Explore at:
    zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 13, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Bioregional Assessment Program
    License

    Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Australia
    Description

    Abstract

    This dataset and its metadata statement were supplied to the Bioregional Assessment Programme by a third party and are presented here as originally supplied.

    The 3 second (~90m) Shuttle Radar Topographic Mission (SRTM) Digital Elevation Model (DEM) version 1.0 was derived from resampling the 1 arc second (~30m) gridded DEM (ANZCW0703013355). The DEM represents ground surface topography, and excludes vegetation features. The dataset was derived from the 1 second Digital Surface Model (DSM; ANZCW0703013336) by automatically removing vegetation offsets identified using several vegetation maps and directly from the DSM. The 1 second product provides substantial improvements in the quality and consistency of the data relative to the original SRTM data, but is not free from artefacts. Man-made structures such as urban areas and power line towers have not been treated. The removal of vegetation effects has produced satisfactory results over most of the continent and areas with defects are identified in the quality assessment layers distributed with the data and described in the User Guide (Geoscience Australia and CSIRO Land & Water, 2010). A full description of the methods is in progress (Read et al., in prep; Gallant et al., in prep). The 3 second DEM was produced for use by government and the public under Creative Commons attribution.

    The 3 second DSM and smoothed DEM are also available (DSM; ANZCW0703014216,

    DEM-S; ANZCW0703014217).

    Dataset History

    Source data

    1. SRTM 1 second Version 2 data (Slater et al., 2006), supplied by Defence Imagery and Geospatial Organisation (DIGO) as 813 1 x 1 degree tiles. Data was produced by NASA from radar data collected by the Shuttle Radar Topographic Mission in February 2000.

    2. GEODATA 9 second DEM Version 3 (Geoscience Australia, 2008) used to fill voids.

    3. SRTM Water Body Data (SWBD) shapefile accompanying the SRTM data (Slater et al., 2006). This defines the coastline and larger inland waterbodies for the DEM and DSM.

    4. Vegetation masks and water masks applied to the DEM to remove vegetation.

    5. 1 second DEM resampled to 3 second DEM.

    1 second DSM processing

    The 1 second SRTM-derived Digital Surface Model (DSM) was derived from the 1 second Shuttle Radar Topographic Mission data by removing stripes, filling voids and reflattening water bodies. Further details are provided in the DSM metadata (ANZCW0703013336).

    1 second DEM processing (vegetation offset removal)

    Vegetation offsets were identified using Landsat-based mapping of woody vegetation. The height offsets were estimated around the edges of vegetation patches then interpolated to a continuous surface of vegetation height offset that was subtracted from the DSM to produce a bare-earth DEM. Further details are provided in the 1 second DSM metadata (ANZCW0703013355).

    Void filling

    Voids (areas without data) occur in the data due to low radar reflectance (typically open water or dry sandy soils) or topographic shadowing in high relief areas. Delta Surface Fill Method (Grohman et al., 2006) was adapted for this task, using GEODATA 9 second DEM as infill data source. The 9 second data was refined to 1 second resolution using ANUDEM 5.2 without drainage enforcement. Delta Surface Fill Method calculates height differences between SRTM and infill data to create a "delta" surface with voids where the SRTM has no values, then interpolates across voids. The void is then replaced by infill DEM adjusted by the interpolated delta surface, resulting in an exact match of heights at the edges of each void. Two changes to the Delta Surface Fill Method were made: interpolation of the delta surface was achieved with natural neighbour interpolation (Sibson, 1981; implemented in ArcGIS 9.3) rather than inverse distance weighted interpolation; and a mean plane inside larger voids was not used.

    Water bodies

    Water bodies defined from the SRTM Water Body Data as part of the DSM processing were set to the same elevations as in the DSM.

    Edit rules for land surrounding water bodies

    SRTM edit rules set all land adjacent to water at least 1m above water level to ensure containment of water (Slater et al., 2006). Following vegetation removal, void filling and water flattening, the heights of all grid cells adjacent to water was set to at least 1 cm above the water surface. The smaller offset (1cm rather than 1m) could be used because the cleaned digital surface model is in floating point format rather than integer format of the original SRTM.

    Some small islands within water bodies are represented as voids within the SRTM due to edit rules. These voids are filled as part of void filling process, and their elevations set to a minimum of 1 cm above surrounding water surface across the entire void fill.

    Overview of quality assessment

    The quality of vegetation offset removal was manually assessed on a 1/8 ×1/8 degree grid. Issues with the vegetation removal were identified and recorded in ancillary data layers. The assessment was based on visible artefacts rather than comparison with reference data so relies on the detection of artefacts by edges.

    The issues identified were:

    * vegetation offsets are still visible (not fully removed)

    * vegetation offset overestimated

    * linear vegetation offset not fully removed

    * incomplete removal of built infrastructure and other minor issues

    DEM Ancillary data layers

    The vegetation removal and assessment process produced two ancillary data layers:

    * A shapefile of 1/8 × 1/8 degree tiles indicating which tiles have been affected by vegetation removal and any issue noted with the vegetation offset removal

    * A difference surface showing the vegetation offset that has been removed; this shows the effect of vegetation on heights as observed by the SRTM radar

    instrument and is related to vegetation height, density and structure.

    The water and void fill masks for the 1 second DSM were also applied to the DEM. Further information is provided in the User Guide (Geoscience Australia and CSIRO Land & Water, 2010).

    Resampling to 3 seconds

    The 1 second SRTM derived Digital Elevation Model (DEM) was resampled to 3 seconds of arc (90m) in ArcGIS software using aggregation tool. This tool determines a new cell value based on multiplying the cell resolution by a factor of the input (in this case three) and determines the mean value of input cells with the new extent of the cell (i.e. Mean value of the 3x3 input cells). The 3 second SRTM was converted to integer format for the national mosaic to make the file size more manageable. It does not affect the accuracy of the data at this resolution. Further information on the processing is provided in the User Guide (Geoscience Australia and CSIRO Land & Water, 2010).

    Further information can be found at http://www.ga.gov.au/metadata-gateway/metadata/record/gcat_aac46307-fce9-449d-e044-00144fdd4fa6/SRTM-derived+3+Second+Digital+Elevation+Models+Version+1.0

    Dataset Citation

    Geoscience Australia (2010) Geoscience Australia, 3 second SRTM Digital Elevation Model (DEM) v01. Bioregional Assessment Source Dataset. Viewed 11 December 2018, http://data.bioregionalassessments.gov.au/dataset/12e0731d-96dd-49cc-aa21-ebfd65a3f67a.

  16. GLO DEM 1sec SRTM MGA56

    • researchdata.edu.au
    • data.gov.au
    • +1more
    Updated May 31, 2018
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    Bioregional Assessment Program (2018). GLO DEM 1sec SRTM MGA56 [Dataset]. https://researchdata.edu.au/glo-dem-1sec-srtm-mga56/2992390
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    Dataset updated
    May 31, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    Data.govhttps://data.gov/
    Authors
    Bioregional Assessment Program
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Abstract

    The dataset was derived by the Bioregional Assessment Programme from the Geoscience Australia, 1 second SRTM Digital Elevation Model (DEM) dataset. The source dataset is identified in the Lineage field in this metadata statement. The processes undertaken to produce this derived dataset are described in the History field in this metadata statement.

    This dataset provides a userguide and setup information relating to accessing the Geoscience Australia, 1 second SRTM Digital Elevation Model (DEM), for visualisation and analysis using ESRI ArcMap and ArcCatalog.

    The 1 second DSM, DEM, DEM-S and DEM-H are national elevation data products derived from the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) data. The SRTM data is not suitable for routine application due to various artifacts and noise.

    The data has been treated with several processes to produce more usable products:

    \* A cleaned digital surface model (DSM)

    o regular grid representing ground surface topography as well as other features including vegetation and man-made structures

    \* A bare-earth digital elevation model (DEM)

    o regular grid representing ground surface topography, and where possible, excluding other features such as vegetation and man-made structures.

    \* A smoothed digital elevation model (DEM-S)

    o A smoothed DEM based on the bare-earth DEM that has been adaptively smoothed to reduce random noise typically associated with the SRTM data in low relief areas.

    \* A hydrologically enforced digital elevation model (DEM-H)

    o A hydrologically enforced DEM is based on DEM-S that has had drainage lines imposed and been further smoothed using the ANUDEM interpolation software.

    The last product, a hydrologically enforced DEM, is most similar to the DEMs commonly in use around Australia, such as the GEODATA 9 Second DEM and the 25 m resolution DEMs produced by State and Territory agencies from digitised topographic maps.

    For any analysis where surface shape is important, one of the smoothed DEMs (DEM-S or DEM-H) should be used. DEM-S is preferred for shape and vertical accuracy and DEM-H for hydrological connectivity. The DSM is suitable if you want to see the vegetation as well as the land surface height. There are few cases where DEM is the best data source, unless access to a less processed product is necessary.

    The 1 second DEM (in its various incarnations) has quite different characteristics to DEMs derived by interpolation from topographic data. Those DEMs are typically quite smooth and are based on fairly accurate but sparse source data, usually contours and spot heights supplemented by drainage lines. The SRTM data is derived from radar measurements that are dense (there is essentially a measurement at almost every grid cell) but noisy.

    Version 1.0 of the DSM was released in early 2009 and version 1.0 of the DEM was released in late 2009. Version 1.0 of the DEM-S was released in July 2010 and version 1.0 of the hydrologically enforced DEM-H was released in October 2011. These products provide substantial improvements in the quality and consistency of the data relative to the original SRTM data, but are not free from artefacts. Improved products will be released over time.

    The 3 second products were derived from the 1 second data and version 1.0 was released in August 2010. Future releases of these products will occur when the 1 second products have been improved. At this stage there is no 3 second DEM-H product, which requires re-interpolation with drainage enforcement at that resolution.

    Dataset History

    See readme file: readme file for gloucester basin 1sec srtm.xyz

    This is ascii file created by CSIRO 3 september 2013 using Geosoft Oasis Montaj software

    file is 1 second shuttle radar data (28.6 x 28.6 m) which has had buildings and vegetation removed

    (processing by CSIRO and GA) DEM-S product

    file format is gda94 easting, gda94 northing, height above sea level

    mga zone 56 coordinates, all data in metres

    origin (bottom left) is 379007E, 6400022N

    1260 pts in east direction

    2798 pts in north direction

    Dataset Citation

    Bioregional Assessment Programme (XXXX) GLO DEM 1sec SRTM MGA56. Bioregional Assessment Derived Dataset. Viewed 18 July 2018, http://data.bioregionalassessments.gov.au/dataset/ca38ed31-e15d-4bb5-a7ef-0aeba3dad3f4.

    Dataset Ancestors

  17. d

    SRTM15_PLUS: Data fusion of Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) land...

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.cnra.ca.gov
    • +3more
    Updated Mar 1, 2025
    + more versions
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    (Point of Contact) (2025). SRTM15_PLUS: Data fusion of Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) land topography with measured and estimated seafloor topography (NCEI Accession 0150537) [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/srtm15_plus-data-fusion-of-shuttle-radar-topography-mission-srtm-land-topography-with-measured-
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 1, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    (Point of Contact)
    Description

    To provide an improved mapping of the seafloor fabric globally, we have used available sounding data along with an improved global marine gravity model to develop at grid at 15 arcsecond resolution (~500 m). Land elevations are based on the best available data from SRTM, ASTER digital elevation models while the ice topography of Greenland and Antarctica is based on CryoSat-2 and IceSat. Ocean bathymetry is based on bathymetric predictions from the latest global gravity model from CryoSat-2 and Jason-1 along with 494 million carefully edited depth soundings at 15 arcsecond resolution. Bathymetry of the Arctic seafloor is based on the IBCAO grid with improved resolution in areas of multibeam coverage. We have used the bathymetry grid along with the improved gravity to construct a global map of abyssal hill amplitude and orientations and compare the orientations with predictions from seafloor age gradient analysis. Areas of disagreement reveal propagating rifts, microplates, and tectonic reorganizations. This SRTM15_PLUS provides the foundational bathymetry layer for Google Earth and is freely available at our ftp site (topex.ucsd.edu).

  18. A

    SRTM v4.1 (CGIAR-CSI)

    • data.amerigeoss.org
    • hub.arcgis.com
    • +2more
    esri rest, html
    Updated Dec 21, 2017
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    AmeriGEO ArcGIS (2017). SRTM v4.1 (CGIAR-CSI) [Dataset]. https://data.amerigeoss.org/dataset/srtm-v4-1-cgiar-csi
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    html, esri restAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 21, 2017
    Dataset provided by
    AmeriGEO ArcGIS
    Description

    SRTM v4.1 is based on the finished-grade 2006 SRTM v2 release by NASA that was post-processed and published in 2008 by CGIAR-CSI (Consortium for Spatial Information). The SRTM v4.1 data set offers 3 arc-second (approximately 90 meters) spatial resolution and covers about 80% of Earth’s landmass, between 60° North and 56° South. SRTM v4.1 is divided onto 5° x 5° of latitude and longitude tiles in “geographic” projection, shown here.

    The original SRTM v2 release contained voids (areas not or not well observed by the SRTM radar), mostly occurring in topographically steep terrain. The overcome this problem, CGIAR-CSI focused on filling the voids (holes) using various interpolation techniques, such as Kriging, moving window averaging, and importantly, the use of auxiliary elevation data sets (DEMs from other sources, e.g., national DEMs). CGIAR-CSI DEM v4.1 data comes at 5 deg x 5 deg tiles, and has a typical file size of 23 MB for one tile, which comprises two kinds of information; the DEM file and a mask file. The mask file is a binary file which identifies areas within the DEM that have been interpolated. The SRTM v4.1 datasets are available in ArcInfo ASCII and GeoTIFF (.tif) formats.

    Geodetic information: The SRTM V4.1 DEMs are vertically referenced to the EGM96 geoid and horizontally referenced to the WGS84 (World Geodetic System 1984).

    Further notes: This data set contains artefacts, e.g., pits or steps, over parts of the Himalayas, the Andes and other mountainous regions. Artefacts in SRTM v4.1 tend to occur over void-filled areas. The SRTM DEM represents bare ground elevations only where vegetation cover and buildings are absent. Over most areas, the DEM elevations reside between the bare ground (terrain) and top of canopies (surface), so are technically a mixture of a terrain and surface model.

    Data access to the v4.1 data set: A detailed description is found at http://www.cgiar-csi.org/data/srtm-90m-digital-elevation-database-v4-1 and access is possible via the data search page on http://srtm.csi.cgiar.org/SELECTION/inputCoord.asp.

    References:

    Reuter H.I, A. Nelson, A. Jarvis, 2007, An evaluation of void filling interpolation methods for SRTM data, International Journal of Geographic Information Science, 21:9, 983-1008. Available on http://srtm.csi.cgiar.org/download/Reuteretal2007.pdf

  19. c

    Digital Elevation Model (DEM) from the Hydrologic Derivatives for Modeling...

    • s.cnmilf.com
    • data.usgs.gov
    • +5more
    Updated Jul 6, 2024
    + more versions
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    U.S. Geological Survey (2024). Digital Elevation Model (DEM) from the Hydrologic Derivatives for Modeling and Analysis (HDMA) database -- South America [Dataset]. https://s.cnmilf.com/user74170196/https/catalog.data.gov/dataset/digital-elevation-model-dem-from-the-hydrologic-derivatives-for-modeling-and-analysis-hdma-253b2
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 6, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    United States Geological Surveyhttp://www.usgs.gov/
    Area covered
    South America
    Description

    This dataset contains the Digital Elevation Model (DEM) for South America from the Hydrologic Derivatives for Modeling and Analysis (HDMA) database. The data were developed and distributed by processing units. There are 10 processing units for South America. The distribution files have the number of the processing unit appended to the end of the zip file name (e.g. sa_dem_3.zip contains the DEM data for unit 3-2). The HDMA database provides comprehensive and consistent global coverage of raster and vector topographically derived layers, including raster layers of digital elevation model (DEM) data, flow direction, flow accumulation, slope, and compound topographic index (CTI); and vector layers of streams and catchment boundaries. The coverage of the data is global (-180º, 180º, -90º, 90º) with the underlying DEM being a hybrid of three datasets: HydroSHEDS (Hydrological data and maps based on SHuttle Elevation Derivatives at multiple Scales), Global Multi-resolution Terrain Elevation Data 2010 (GMTED2010) and the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM). For most of the globe south of 60º North, the raster resolution of the data is 3-arc-seconds, corresponding to the resolution of the SRTM. For the areas North of 60º, the resolution is 7.5-arc-seconds (the smallest resolution of the GMTED2010 dataset) except for Greenland, where the resolution is 30-arc-seconds. The streams and catchments are attributed with Pfafstetter codes, based on a hierarchical numbering system, that carry important topological information.

  20. m

    Smoothed Digital Elevation Model (DEM) - 1 arc second resolution - Clipped...

    • demo.dev.magda.io
    • researchdata.edu.au
    • +1more
    zip
    Updated Dec 4, 2022
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    Bioregional Assessment Program (2022). Smoothed Digital Elevation Model (DEM) - 1 arc second resolution - Clipped to Galilee Subregion extent [Dataset]. https://demo.dev.magda.io/dataset/ds-dga-9a6ce1e6-c4d1-4aaf-9330-22fdea4a33f4
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    zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 4, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    Bioregional Assessment Program
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Abstract The dataset was derived by the Bioregional Assessment Programme from the 1 second SRTM Digital Elevation Model (DEM) dataset. The source dataset is identified in the Lineage field in this metadata statement. The processes undertaken to produce this derived dataset are described in the History field in this metadata statement. A clipped version of the Australia wide 1 second -S DEM, version 1, which limits the size to the rectangular extent of the Galilee Basin Subregion, enhancing …Show full descriptionAbstract The dataset was derived by the Bioregional Assessment Programme from the 1 second SRTM Digital Elevation Model (DEM) dataset. The source dataset is identified in the Lineage field in this metadata statement. The processes undertaken to produce this derived dataset are described in the History field in this metadata statement. A clipped version of the Australia wide 1 second -S DEM, version 1, which limits the size to the rectangular extent of the Galilee Basin Subregion, enhancing speed and efficiency for visualisation and processing. The metadata for the Geoscience Australia 1 sec SRTM is below: The 1 second DSM, DEM, DEM-S and DEM-H are national elevation data products derived from the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) data. The SRTM data is not suitable for routine application due to various artefacts and noise. The data has been treated with several processes to produce more usable products: * A cleaned digital surface model (DSM) * regular grid representing ground surface topography as well as other features including vegetation and man-made structures * A bare-earth digital elevation model (DEM) * regular grid representing ground surface topography, and where possible, excluding other features such as vegetation and man-made structures. * A smoothed digital elevation model (DEM-S) * A smoothed DEM based on the bare-earth DEM that has been adaptively smoothed to reduce random noise typically associated with the SRTM data in low relief areas. * A hydrologically enforced digital elevation model (DEM-H) * A hydrologically enforced DEM is based on DEM-S that has had drainage lines imposed and been further smoothed using the ANUDEM interpolation software. The last product, a hydrologically enforced DEM, is most similar to the DEMs commonly in use around Australia, such as the GEODATA 9 Second DEM and the 25 m resolution DEMs produced by State and Territory agencies from digitised topographic maps. For any analysis where surface shape is important, one of the smoothed DEMs (DEM-S or DEM-H) should be used. DEM-S is preferred for shape and vertical accuracy and DEM-H for hydrological connectivity. The DSM is suitable if you want to see the vegetation as well as the land surface height. There are few cases where DEM is the best data source, unless access to a less processed product is necessary. The 1 second DEM (in its various incarnations) has quite different characteristics to DEMs derived by interpolation from topographic data. Those DEMs are typically quite smooth and are based on fairly accurate but sparse source data, usually contours and spot heights supplemented by drainage lines. The SRTM data is derived from radar measurements that are dense (there is essentially a measurement at almost every grid cell) but noisy. Version 1.0 of the DSM was released in early 2009 and version 1.0 of the DEM was released in late 2009. Version 1.0 of the DEM-S was released in July 2010 and version 1.0 of the hydrologically enforced DEM-H was released in October 2011. These products provide substantial improvements in the quality and consistency of the data relative to the original SRTM data, but are not free from artefacts. Improved products will be released over time. The 3 second products were derived from the 1 second data and version 1.0 was released in August 2010. Future releases of these products will occur when the 1 second products have been improved. At this stage there is no 3 second DEM-H product, which requires re-interpolation with drainage enforcement at that resolution. Purpose To enhance the speed and efficiency for visualisation and processing of the smoothed 1 second DEM data within the Galilee Basin Subregion Dataset History The original, Australia wide, 1 second smoothed DEM was clipped to rectangular extents of the Galilee subregion using the Spatial Analyst 'Extract By Rectangle' tool in ESRI ArcCatalog v10.0 with the following parameters: Input raster: source 1 second SRTM Extent: Galilee Basin subregion polygon Extraction Area: INSIDE 'no data' values are created outside the clip extent therefore the extent of the dataset may still reflect the national DEM extent in ArcCatalog. Check the tool details for more info. The lineage of the source 1 second SRTM is below: The following datasets were used to derive this version of the 1 second DEM products: Source data SRTM 1 second Version 2 data (Slater et al., 2006), supplied by Defence Imagery and Geospatial Organisation (DIGO) as 813 1 x 1 degree tiles. Data were produced by NASA from radar data collected by the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission in February 2000. GEODATA 9 second DEM Version 3 (Geoscience Australia, 2008) used to fill voids. SRTM Water Body Data (SWBD) shapefile accompanying the SRTM data (Slater et al., 2006). This defines the coastline and larger inland waterbodies for the DEM and DSM. Vegetation masks and water masks applied to the DEM to remove vegetation. Full metadata, methodologies and lineage descriptions can be found in the PDF userguide within this dataset. Dataset Citation Bioregional Assessment Programme (2014) Smoothed Digital Elevation Model (DEM) - 1 arc second resolution - Clipped to Galilee Subregion extent. Bioregional Assessment Derived Dataset. Viewed 10 December 2018, http://data.bioregionalassessments.gov.au/dataset/0fe257aa-8845-4183-9d05-5b48edd98f34. Dataset Ancestors Derived From Geoscience Australia, 1 second SRTM Digital Elevation Model (DEM)

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DOI/USGS/EROS (2023). Shuttle Radar Topography Mission 1-arc second Global [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/shuttle-radar-topography-mission-1-arc-second-global

Shuttle Radar Topography Mission 1-arc second Global

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2 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
Dataset updated
Dec 7, 2023
Dataset provided by
United States Geological Surveyhttp://www.usgs.gov/
Description

The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) was flown aboard the space shuttle Endeavour February 11-22, 2000. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) participated in an international project to acquire radar data which were used to create the first near-global set of land elevations. The radars used during the SRTM mission were actually developed and flown on two Endeavour missions in 1994. The C-band Spaceborne Imaging Radar and the X-Band Synthetic Aperture Radar (X-SAR) hardware were used on board the space shuttle in April and October 1994 to gather data about Earth's environment. The technology was modified for the SRTM mission to collect interferometric radar, which compared two radar images or signals taken at slightly different angles. This mission used single-pass interferometry, which acquired two signals at the same time by using two different radar antennas. An antenna located on board the space shuttle collected one data set and the other data set was collected by an antenna located at the end of a 60-meter mast that extended from the shuttle. Differences between the two signals allowed for the calculation of surface elevation. Endeavour orbited Earth 16 times each day during the 11-day mission, completing 176 orbits. SRTM successfully collected radar data over 80% of the Earth's land surface between 60° north and 56° south latitude with data points posted every 1 arc-second (approximately 30 meters). Two resolutions of finished grade SRTM data are available through EarthExplorer from the collection held in the USGS EROS archive: 1 arc-second (approximately 30-meter) high resolution elevation data offer worldwide coverage of void filled data at a resolution of 1 arc-second (30 meters) and provide open distribution of this high-resolution global data set. Some tiles may still contain voids. The SRTM 1 Arc-Second Global (30 meters) data set will be released in phases starting September 24, 2014. Users should check the coverage map in EarthExplorer to verify if their area of interest is available. 3 arc-second (approximately 90-meter) medium resolution elevation data are available for global coverage. The 3 arc-second data were resampled using cubic convolution interpolation for regions between 60° north and 56° south latitude. [Summary provided by the USGS.]

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