Transcontinental Traverse Explained

The Transcontinental Traverse (TCT) was a geodetic survey traverse conducted in the continental United States by the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey between 1961 and 1970 and the U.S. National Geodetic Survey between 1970 and 1976. It was the most accurate large-area survey ever done prior to Global Positioning System surveys. TCT included over 2,700 survey stations, covered over 13600miles, and passed through 44 U.S. states.[1]

This nationwide survey increased the accuracy of the existing U.S. survey network. It was also fundamental to the sophisticated mathematical readjustment of the nation's survey network known as the North American Datum of 1983. It was the "end of an era" as the last conventional, purely terrestrial large scale survey.

Forerunner surveys

The first major transcontinental survey was the Transcontinental Arc of Triangulation, completed in 1896 along the 39th parallel north with coastal endpoints at Cape May Lighthouse at Cape May, New Jersey, and Point Arena Light near Point Arena, California. It established the Meades Ranch survey marker, also called the Geodetic Center of the United States.[2]

The Transcontinental Traverse, commonly known as the "TCT", grew out of smaller surveying projects that the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey (USC&GS) conducted for the United States Air Force missile-tracking program in an area near Cape Canaveral, Florida, during the 1960s. The USC&GS developed unique specifications for this work that resulted in one part in 1,000,000, exceeding Air Force requirements.[3] This led USC&GS officials to conclude that applying the same specifications to a nationwide traverse, a surveying method, would dramatically improve the scale of the entire U.S. survey network. Soon after completing its work for the Air Force in Florida in 1961, the USC&GS embarked on the TCT.

Route and history

The Geodimeter electronic distance measurement device was rapidly tested and adopted by U.S. national agencies for long-distance mapping. The last base line to be measured with tape happened near Salmon, Idaho, in 1958.

The survey began in 1961 in Florida and ended in 1976 in Michigan. It crisscrossed North America along three east-west and five north-south corridors. A portion that had been planned to traverse the U.S.-Canada border to Maine was canceled due to advances in satellite geodesy.

Equipment and methods

The traverse made use of the Geodimeter, a lightwave phase electronic distance measurement instrument that had just been invented when the traverse began.[4] The instruments were located atop Bilby towers many meters above ground level to avoid obscuring objects and to get a smoother air temperature profile for accuracy. Due to the light source then in use, the Geodimeter could only be operated at night.

Satellite triangulation

Photographic satellite triangulation stations were tied in to the traverse at Moses Lake, Washington; Chandler, Minnesota; Beltsville, Maryland; and four other locations. The Moses Lake and Beltsville sites became part of a worldwide satellite geodesy network.[5]

See also

References

Sources

in NOAA Celebrates 200 years

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. https://celebrating200years.noaa.gov/magazine/tct/welcome.html#trans The High-precision Transcontinental Traverse: Improving the Scale of the U.S. Survey Network
  2. https://www.ngs.noaa.gov/web/about_ngs/history/milestones.shtml Milestones of the Survey
  3. https://celebrating200years.noaa.gov/magazine/tct/welcome.html#capec Cape Canaveral Triangulation Survey Yields High-Precision Results
  4. https://celebrating200years.noaa.gov/magazine/tct/welcome.html#improv The High-precision Transcontinental Traverse: Improving the Scale of the U.S. Survey Network
  5. http://www.photolib.noaa.gov/htmls/geod0009.htm Worldwide BC-4 Network