2 datasets found
  1. SRTM-derived 1 Second Digital Elevation Models Version 1.0

    • data.gov.au
    esri mapserver, html +1
    Updated Sep 16, 2019
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    Commonwealth of Australia (Geoscience Australia) (2019). SRTM-derived 1 Second Digital Elevation Models Version 1.0 [Dataset]. https://data.gov.au/dataset/ds-ga-aac46307-fce8-449d-e044-00144fdd4fa6
    Explore at:
    pdf, html, esri mapserverAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Sep 16, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    Geoscience Australiahttp://ga.gov.au/
    License

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

    Description

    Note: Geoscience Australia no longer supports users' external hard drives. The data can either be downloaded from the ELVIS Portal or from the Related links. The 1 second Shuttle Radar Topography …Show full descriptionNote: Geoscience Australia no longer supports users' external hard drives. The data can either be downloaded from the ELVIS Portal or from the Related links. The 1 second Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) Digital Elevation Models Version 1.0 package comprises three surface models: the Digital Elevation Model (DEM), the Smoothed Digital Elevation Model (DEM-S) and the Hydrologically Enforced Digital Elevation Model (DEM-H). The DEMs were derived from the SRTM data acquired by NASA in February 2000 and were publicly released under Creative Commons licensing from November 2011 in ESRI Grid format. DEM represents ground surface topography, with vegetation features removed using an automatic process supported by several vegetation maps. This 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 identified in supplementary layers distributed with the data, and described in the User Guide. DEM-S represents ground surface topography, excluding vegetation features, and has been smoothed to reduce noise and improve the representation of surface shape. An adaptive smoothing process applied more smoothing in flatter areas than hilly areas, and more smoothing in noisier areas than in less noisy areas. This DEM-S supports calculation of local terrain shape attributes such as slope, aspect and curvature that could not be reliably derived from the unsmoothed 1 second DEM because of noise. DEM-H is a hydrologically enforced version of the smoothed DEM-S. The DEM-H captures flow paths based on SRTM elevations and mapped stream lines, and supports delineation of catchments and related hydrological attributes. The dataset was derived from the 1 second smoothed Digital Elevation Model (DEM-S) by enforcing hydrological connectivity with the ANUDEM software, using selected AusHydro V1.6 (February 2010) 1:250,000 scale watercourse lines and lines derived from DEM-S to define the watercourses. The drainage enforcement has produced a consistent representation of hydrological connectivity with some elevation artefacts resulting from the drainage enforcement. Further information can be found in the supplementary layers supplied with the data and in the User Guide.

  2. SRTM-derived 1 Second Digital Elevation Models Version 1.0

    • ecat.ga.gov.au
    • researchdata.edu.au
    • +1more
    esri:map-service +3
    Updated Sep 16, 2019
    Share
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    Commonwealth of Australia (Geoscience Australia) (2019). SRTM-derived 1 Second Digital Elevation Models Version 1.0 [Dataset]. https://ecat.ga.gov.au/geonetwork/srv/api/records/aac46307-fce8-449d-e044-00144fdd4fa6
    Explore at:
    www:link-1.0-http--link, esri:map-service, ogc:wms, ogc:wcsAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Sep 16, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    Geoscience Australiahttp://ga.gov.au/
    Area covered
    Description

    Note: Geoscience Australia no longer supports users' external hard drives. The data can either be downloaded from the ELVIS Portal or from the Related links. The 1 second Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) Digital Elevation Models Version 1.0 package comprises three surface models: the Digital Elevation Model (DEM), the Smoothed Digital Elevation Model (DEM-S) and the Hydrologically Enforced Digital Elevation Model (DEM-H). The DEMs were derived from the SRTM data acquired by NASA in February 2000 and were publicly released under Creative Commons licensing from November 2011 in ESRI Grid format.

    DEM represents ground surface topography, with vegetation features removed using an automatic process supported by several vegetation maps. This 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 identified in supplementary layers distributed with the data, and described in the User Guide.

    DEM-S represents ground surface topography, excluding vegetation features, and has been smoothed to reduce noise and improve the representation of surface shape. An adaptive smoothing process applied more smoothing in flatter areas than hilly areas, and more smoothing in noisier areas than in less noisy areas. This DEM-S supports calculation of local terrain shape attributes such as slope, aspect and curvature that could not be reliably derived from the unsmoothed 1 second DEM because of noise.

    DEM-H is a hydrologically enforced version of the smoothed DEM-S. The DEM-H captures flow paths based on SRTM elevations and mapped stream lines, and supports delineation of catchments and related hydrological attributes. The dataset was derived from the 1 second smoothed Digital Elevation Model (DEM-S) by enforcing hydrological connectivity with the ANUDEM software, using selected AusHydro V1.6 (February 2010) 1:250,000 scale watercourse lines and lines derived from DEM-S to define the watercourses. The drainage enforcement has produced a consistent representation of hydrological connectivity with some elevation artefacts resulting from the drainage enforcement.

    Further information can be found in the supplementary layers supplied with the data and in the User Guide.

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Commonwealth of Australia (Geoscience Australia) (2019). SRTM-derived 1 Second Digital Elevation Models Version 1.0 [Dataset]. https://data.gov.au/dataset/ds-ga-aac46307-fce8-449d-e044-00144fdd4fa6
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SRTM-derived 1 Second Digital Elevation Models Version 1.0

Explore at:
3 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
pdf, html, esri mapserverAvailable download formats
Dataset updated
Sep 16, 2019
Dataset provided by
Geoscience Australiahttp://ga.gov.au/
License

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

Description

Note: Geoscience Australia no longer supports users' external hard drives. The data can either be downloaded from the ELVIS Portal or from the Related links. The 1 second Shuttle Radar Topography …Show full descriptionNote: Geoscience Australia no longer supports users' external hard drives. The data can either be downloaded from the ELVIS Portal or from the Related links. The 1 second Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) Digital Elevation Models Version 1.0 package comprises three surface models: the Digital Elevation Model (DEM), the Smoothed Digital Elevation Model (DEM-S) and the Hydrologically Enforced Digital Elevation Model (DEM-H). The DEMs were derived from the SRTM data acquired by NASA in February 2000 and were publicly released under Creative Commons licensing from November 2011 in ESRI Grid format. DEM represents ground surface topography, with vegetation features removed using an automatic process supported by several vegetation maps. This 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 identified in supplementary layers distributed with the data, and described in the User Guide. DEM-S represents ground surface topography, excluding vegetation features, and has been smoothed to reduce noise and improve the representation of surface shape. An adaptive smoothing process applied more smoothing in flatter areas than hilly areas, and more smoothing in noisier areas than in less noisy areas. This DEM-S supports calculation of local terrain shape attributes such as slope, aspect and curvature that could not be reliably derived from the unsmoothed 1 second DEM because of noise. DEM-H is a hydrologically enforced version of the smoothed DEM-S. The DEM-H captures flow paths based on SRTM elevations and mapped stream lines, and supports delineation of catchments and related hydrological attributes. The dataset was derived from the 1 second smoothed Digital Elevation Model (DEM-S) by enforcing hydrological connectivity with the ANUDEM software, using selected AusHydro V1.6 (February 2010) 1:250,000 scale watercourse lines and lines derived from DEM-S to define the watercourses. The drainage enforcement has produced a consistent representation of hydrological connectivity with some elevation artefacts resulting from the drainage enforcement. Further information can be found in the supplementary layers supplied with the data and in the User Guide.

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