<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<metadata>
  <idinfo>
    <citation>
      <citeinfo>
        <origin>
          Pacific Islands Benthic Habitat Mapping Center (PIBHMC), Coral Reef Ecosystem Division (CRED), Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center (PIFSC), National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
        </origin>
        <pubdate>
          200704
        </pubdate>
        <title>
          CRED Optical Validation Data at Howland Island in the Pacific Remote Islands Area (PRIA), 2002, to Support Benthic Habitat Mapping
        </title>
        <geoform>
          Video and photo imagery, track line navigation files, and log sheets
        </geoform>
        <onlink>
          http://www.soest.hawaii.edu/pibhmc/
        </onlink>
      </citeinfo>
    </citation>
    <descript>
      <abstract>
        Optical validation data were collected using a Tethered Optical Assessment Device (TOAD), an underwater
sled equipped with an underwater digital video camera and lights. Data were collected at Howland Island to support
Benthic Habitat Mapping efforts during NOAA Ship Townsend Cromwell cruise TC0201.
      </abstract>
      <purpose>
        These data provide optical observations that will be correlated with bathymetry and acoustic backscatter
imagery to develop a benthic habitat map of Howland. Refer to supplemental information for description of instrument
and survey.
      </purpose>
      <supplinf>
        Howland, a low-lying 1.84 sq.km. island in the Pacific Remote Island Area (PRIA), is the
northernmost of the Phoenix Islands. Centered at 00 degrees 48N, 176 degrees 38W, it is within one degree latitude
of the equator. It lies within an arid zone of the tropical Pacific, with insufficient groundwater and rainfall to
support continuous human habitation. Although Howland was unhabited at the time of its discovery by Western sailors,
Polynesians probably visited it periodically over many centuries to harvest fish and wildlife. The lack of human
habitation allowed Howland&apos;s coral reefs to remain completely pristine until the early 20th century. Even today it
lies beyond the influence of urban centers, associated pollutants and major shipping lanes. In 1857, Howland was
claimed by the U.S. under the Guano Act. A short-lived colonization attempt was made between 1935 and World War II,
but was abandoned thereafter. The famed American aviatrix Amelia EARHART disappeared while seeking out Howland
Island as a refueling stop during her 1937 round-the-world flight; Earhart Light, a day beacon near the middle of
the west coast, was named in her memory. A no-take island and marine protected area National Wildlife Refuge
administered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Howland is under the joint jurisdiction of the Departments of
Interior and Commerce. Ocean currents transport and distribute larvae among and between different atolls and islands,
and particularly in the Pacific equatorial region, define sea surface temperatures (SSTs) and available nutrient
regimes. The North Equatorial Current (NEC), Equatorial Counter Current (ECC), Equatorial Undercurrent or Cromwell
Current (EUC), and South Equatorial Current (SEC) provide the mechanism by which many species are distributed among
the PRIAs, nearby central Pacific islands, the main Hawaiian Islands (MHI), as well as other distant regions.

Optical validation data were collected using the Tethered Optical Assessment Device (TOAD), a sled equipped with
underwater video camera, still camera, and lights. These data are used to provide ground-truth validation that for
benthic habitat maps based on multibeam echosounder surveys.  Camera sled deployments were conducted at night,
usually between 1800 and midnight. The TOAD was deployed from a pot hauler mounted on the starboard side of the
fantail on NOAA Ship Townsend Cromwell. It was lowered slowly to the bottom by the deck crew with the use of a
capstan. The TOAD operator monitored a live video feed from the camera and began recording data on two video tape
recorders. When the camera reached bottom the deck crew was notified by radio to stop lowering. The TOAD was a
MiniBat 8820 unit manufactured by Guideline, and was towed by the ship at 1-2 knots while remotely guided from the
ship using adjustable wing controls to keep the unit close to the underwater substrate. The TOAD was damaged during
the cruise on 02/20/02, and subsequent tows were conducted as drift deployments. At each station the ship was
positioned with the wind on the starboard side and drifted downwind; occasional light turns were applied to the
ship&apos;s screws if necessary to reduce the ship&apos;s motion. The operator continued to monitor the vehicle and provided
commands to raise or lower it to keep the camera just above the bottom.

Equipment Description: The TOAD is a camera sled based on the Guildline MiniBat model 8820 tow body. The frame was
configured with a single Sony DCR-PC110 Digital Video Camera in a modified Gates underwater housing, a Canon Power
Shot G1 Still Camera (modified by CRED engineers) in an Ikelite housing rated to 60 m slaved to an Ikelite DS-50
strobe, and two 500 W DeepSea Power &amp; Light model 710-0400601 underwater lights. The Canon camera had a custom-built
timer that enabled the user to select a constant time interval (ranging from approximately 5 seconds to 2 minutes) between
photographs. An interval of 30 seconds was typically selected, which, assuming a mean velocity for the camera sled
of of 1.5 knots, resulted in one photograph approximately every 20 m. Photograph resolution is 2048 x 1536
pixels and file names are assigned sequentially and automatically by the camera, starting at 100-0000 after the
camera&apos;s memory is cleared. The MiniBAT pressure sensor and wing controller were also mounted on the frame but the
pressure sensor was not operational. After damage to the TOAD on 02/20/02 and the sled&apos;s wings were not installed
thereafter. The cable between the sled and the surface was an underwater load-bearing electrical cable. The TOAD
computers were located in the Electronics Lab of the Townsend Cromwell. The electronics box containing the power
switches was secured to the ship&apos;s fantail, and all other TOAD surface components were secured in the ship&apos;s wet lab.

Name and address of person collecting data:
Joyce Miller &amp; Ron Hoeke
NOAA PIFSC
1125B Ala Moana Blvd
Honolulu, HI 98614

Data Files: Video data were recorded on two video tape recorders.  Still photos were recorded on digital camera
and downloaded to the TOAD computer after the tow. The position of the camera sled was recorded using Guildline
MiniBat In-Tow data acquisition software.

File naming convention: Each tow is given a name consisting of a three-letter designator for the island area,
followed by a two-digit year and a three-digit tow number, which increments by one for each new tow around that
island.  During OES0402 (NOAA Ship Oscar Elton Sette&apos;s 2nd cruise in calendar year 2004) the consecutive tows at
Tutuila started at TUT04000.  For following cruises, the tow numbers will increment by 100, so the first tow on
the next cruise to Tutuila in 2004 will be tow number TUT04100. Video tape labels, the navigation files (*.glo) and
paper log forms are annotated with the tow name and number, e.g., TUT04012. If the navigation file is edited during
processing the file name has a suffix &apos;a&apos; added.  For example, for a navigation data file named TUT04012a.glo, the
&apos;a&apos; would indicate that metadata were extracted from the navigation data and recorded to a file with the same name
as the navigation file except that a file type of &apos;.met&apos; was appended; for example, &apos;TUT04012a.glo.met.

Time Correlation: All times are based on UTC.  Two clocks were set manually synchronized prior to starting data
collection; the clock in the video character generator that was used to annotate the video tape and the TOAD data
acquisition computer clock was used to annotate the navigation (*.glo) files.  These clocks were set to UTC at the
beginning of each evening&apos;s operations and then compared to one another prior to (and during) each tow.  There were
problems maintaining synchronization of the TOAD computer clock during this cruise.  See the problems section for a
description.

Resource Description: Digital video images that are geo-referenced to navigation files.
      </supplinf>
    </descript>
    <timeperd>
      <timeinfo>
        <rngdates>
          <begdate>
            20020129
          </begdate>
          <enddate>
            20020201
          </enddate>
        </rngdates>
      </timeinfo>
      <current>
        ground condition
      </current>
    </timeperd>
    <status>
      <progress>
        Complete
      </progress>
      <update>
        None planned
      </update>
    </status>
    <spdom>
      <bounding>
        <westbc>
          -176.64
        </westbc>
        <eastbc>
          -176.60
        </eastbc>
        <northbc>
          0.84
        </northbc>
        <southbc>
          0.78
        </southbc>
      </bounding>
    </spdom>
    <keywords>
      <theme>
        <themekt>
          CoRIS Theme Thesaurus
        </themekt>
        <themekey>
          EARTH SCIENCE &gt; Biosphere &gt; Aquatic Habitat &gt; Benthic Habitat
        </themekey>
        <themekey>
          EARTH SCIENCE &gt; Biosphere &gt; Zoology &gt; Corals &gt; Reef Monitoring and Assessment &gt; Photographic Analysis &gt; Videography
        </themekey>
        <themekey>
          EARTH SCIENCE &gt; Biosphere &gt; Zoology &gt; Corals &gt; Reef Monitoring and Assessment &gt; Mapping
        </themekey>
      </theme>
      <theme>
        <themekt>
          None
        </themekt>
        <themekey>
          Benthic habitat
        </themekey>
        <themekey>
          Tethered Optical Assessment Device (TOAD)
        </themekey>
        <themekey>
          TC0201
        </themekey>
      </theme>
      <theme>
        <themekt>
          CoRIS Discovery Thesaurus
        </themekt>
        <themekey>
          Visual Images &gt; Habitats
        </themekey>
      </theme>
      <theme>
        <themekt>
          ISO 19115 Topic Category
        </themekt>
        <themekey>
          environment
        </themekey>
        <themekey>
          biota
        </themekey>
      </theme>
      <place>
        <placekt>
          CoRIS Place Thesaurus
        </placekt>
        <placekey>
          OCEAN BASIN &gt; Pacific Ocean &gt; Central Pacific Ocean &gt; Howland Island &gt; Howland Island (00S176W0001)
        </placekey>
        <placekey>
          COUNTRY/TERRITORY &gt; United States of America &gt; USA Minor Outlying Islands &gt; Howland Island (00S176W0001)
        </placekey>
      </place>
      <place>
        <placekt>
          None
        </placekt>
        <placekey>
          Pacific Remote Island Area
        </placekey>
      </place>
      <place>
        <placekt>
          CoRIS Region
        </placekt>
        <placekey>
          PRIA
        </placekey>
      </place>
    </keywords>
    <accconst>
      None
    </accconst>
    <useconst>
      Please acknowledge the NOAA Coral Reef Ecosystem Division, Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center
as the source of this information.
    </useconst>
    <ptcontac>
      <cntinfo>
        <cntorgp>
          <cntorg>
            Pacific Islands Benthic Habitat Mapping Center (PIBHMC), Coral Reef Ecosystem Division (CRED), Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center (PIFSC), National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
          </cntorg>
          <cntper>
            John Rooney
          </cntper>
        </cntorgp>
        <cntaddr>
          <addrtype>
            mailing and physical address
          </addrtype>
          <address>
            1125B Ala Moana Blvd.
          </address>
          <city>
            Honolulu
          </city>
          <state>
            HI
          </state>
          <postal>
            96814
          </postal>
        </cntaddr>
        <cntvoice>
          (808) 983-3776
        </cntvoice>
        <cntfax>
          (808) 983-2902
        </cntfax>
        <cntemail>
          pibhmc@soest.hawaii.edu
        </cntemail>
        <cntinst>
          e-mail preferred
        </cntinst>
      </cntinfo>
    </ptcontac>
    <datacred>
      Pacific Islands Benthic Habitat Mapping Center, Coral Reef Ecosystem Division (CRED), Pacific Islands
Fisheries Science Center (PIFSC), NOAA
    </datacred>
    <secinfo>
      <secsys>
        Not applicable
      </secsys>
      <secclass>
        Unclassified
      </secclass>
      <sechandl>
        Not applicable
      </sechandl>
    </secinfo>
  </idinfo>
  <dataqual>
    <logic>
      Unspecified
    </logic>
    <complete>
      Complete
    </complete>
    <posacc>
      <horizpa>
        <horizpar>
          The horizontal position accuracy for the camera sled position is 100
meters.  There are three primary sources of this error.  The ship&apos;s positioning is based on GPS SPS, often called
standalone or non-differential GPS positioning.  SPS has a measured accuracy of under 5 meters.  The position of
the GPS antenna is used; no attempt is made to translocate this position to that of the tow block from which the
camera is deployed.  The difference between the tow block and the antenna is about 14 meters.  The camera sled
position is based on a layback calculation that use ship&apos;s course, the amount of cable out and the camera sled
depth to develop an estimate of the camera sled position. The amount of cable deployed is manually entered by the
operator during a given camera tow.
        </horizpar>
      </horizpa>
    </posacc>
    <lineage>
      <procstep>
        <procdesc>
          After a tow was completed the video tape data was reviewed by spot-checking the master and
backup tape to verify that data were recorded. Navigation data were copied from the acquisition computer to the
data archive.  A metadata extractor (glofilter.py, version 3/17/06) was run to summarize the navigation data and
test for errors. If errors were detected in a record, a copy of the data file was made (the &apos;a.glo&apos; file mentioned
above), that record was automatically flagged as invalid, and corrections were made if possible. This file&apos;s
header was updated to document what type of processing occurred.  A metadata file was recorded in the data
archive in the same location as the navigation data. Processed navigation data were then imported to ArcGIS 9.x.

Still photographs, collected every 30 seconds and averaging approximately 20 m horizontal spacing between them,
were analyzed using a point count method. Five circles approximately 0.5 mm in diameter and spaced equidistantly
were drawn in a horizontal line on a piece of clear plastic sheet taped to a computer monitor screen. Within the
center of each circle the substrate (rock, sand, rubble, etc.) living cover (seagrass, scleractinian [stony]
coral, macroalgae, etc) and growth morphology of coral colonies (branching, encrusting, etc) were identified.
Classification information was recorded on a spreadsheet for each camera tow according to the codes described in
the file BenthicHabitatClassificationCodes_Metadata.xls. The substrate within the first circle is recorded under
the column labeled S1 while the living cover and coral growth morphology within the same circle are recorded
under the columns labeled C1 and CM1. Data from the second circle are recorded under columns S2, C2, CM2, and so on.
        </procdesc>
        <procdate>
          20051117
        </procdate>
      </procstep>
    </lineage>
  </dataqual>
  <distinfo>
    <distrib>
      <cntinfo>
        <cntorgp>
          <cntorg>
            Pacific Islands Benthic Habitat Mapping Center (PIBHMC), Coral Reef Ecosystem Division (CRED), Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center (PIFSC), National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
          </cntorg>
          <cntper>
            John Rooney
          </cntper>
        </cntorgp>
        <cntaddr>
          <addrtype>
            mailing and physical address
          </addrtype>
          <address>
            1125B Ala Moana Blvd.
          </address>
          <city>
            Honolulu
          </city>
          <state>
            HI
          </state>
          <postal>
            96814
          </postal>
        </cntaddr>
        <cntvoice>
          (808) 983-3776
        </cntvoice>
        <cntfax>
          (808) 983-2902
        </cntfax>
        <cntemail>
          pibhmc@soest.hawaii.edu
        </cntemail>
        <cntinst>
          e-mail preferred
        </cntinst>
      </cntinfo>
    </distrib>
    <resdesc>
      Offline Data
    </resdesc>
    <distliab>
      These data are not to be used for navigational purposes. NOAA makes no warranty regarding these
data, expressed or implied, nor does the fact of distribution constitute such a warranty. NOAA cannot assume liability
for any damages caused by any errors or omissions in these data, nor as a result of the failure of these data to
function on a particular system.
    </distliab>
    <stdorder>
      <digform>
        <digtinfo>
          <formname>
            ASCII
          </formname>
          <formcont>
            Each comma-delimited record contains year, day of year, time, latitude, longitude,
water column depth, vehicle depth, layback, and wing angle. The field for vehicle depth does not contain useful data.
List of navigation files: The following are shape files compatible with ESRI GIS software. Each item in the
list a set of files used by ArcView/ArcGIS to display and access the associated data. Each item in the list
has associated .shp, .dbf, and .shx files. They may additionally have .prj, .sbn, and .sbx files if the
project&apos;s projection requires it.
how02001a.glo
how02002a.glo
          </formcont>
        </digtinfo>
        <digtopt>
          <offoptn>
            <offmedia>
              CD-ROM
            </offmedia>
            <recfmt>
              ISO 9660
            </recfmt>
          </offoptn>
        </digtopt>
      </digform>
      <digform>
        <digtinfo>
          <formname>
            mini digital video
          </formname>
          <formcont>
            These data were recorded on 2 video tapes. The first tape also includes data from
Baker Island.
List of video tapes:
HOW02001&amp;BAK02001A, VHS, Master
HOW02002, VHS, Master
HOW02001&amp;BAK02001A, Mini DV, Master
HOW02002, Mini DV, Master
HOW02001&amp;BAK02001A, Mini DV, Backup
HOW02002, Mini DV, Backup
          </formcont>
        </digtinfo>
        <digtopt>
          <offoptn>
            <offmedia>
              Video cassette tape
            </offmedia>
            <recfmt>
              VHS, miniDV
            </recfmt>
          </offoptn>
        </digtopt>
      </digform>
      <digform>
        <digtinfo>
          <formname>
            JPG digital still photo
          </formname>
          <formcont>
            29 still images were taken; poor photos were deleted
List of photo folders:
HOW02001: How_012802_0448 (27 photos)
HOW02002: How_020102_0532 (2 photos)
          </formcont>
        </digtinfo>
        <digtopt>
          <offoptn>
            <offmedia>
              CD-ROM
            </offmedia>
            <recfmt>
              JPEG
            </recfmt>
          </offoptn>
        </digtopt>
      </digform>
      <digform>
        <digtinfo>
          <formname>
            text file
          </formname>
          <formcont>
            The time, location and other information from each photograph, as well as
classifications of the benthic substrate and living cover and comments on specific photograph are recorded
in tabular form for each camera sled tow in the file OpticClass_TC0201_HOW.xls.
          </formcont>
        </digtinfo>
        <digtopt>
          <offoptn>
            <offmedia>
              CD-ROM
            </offmedia>
            <recfmt>
              ASCII
            </recfmt>
          </offoptn>
        </digtopt>
      </digform>
      <fees>
        None
      </fees>
    </stdorder>
  </distinfo>
  <metainfo>
    <metd>
      20121217
    </metd>
    <metc>
      <cntinfo>
        <cntorgp>
          <cntorg>
            Pacific Islands Benthic Habitat Mapping Center (PIBHMC), Coral Reef Ecosystem Division (CRED), Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center (PIFSC), National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
          </cntorg>
          <cntper>
            CRED Data Management Team
          </cntper>
        </cntorgp>
        <cntaddr>
          <addrtype>
            mailing and physical address
          </addrtype>
          <address>
            1125B Ala Moana Blvd.
          </address>
          <city>
            Honolulu
          </city>
          <state>
            HI
          </state>
          <postal>
            96814
          </postal>
        </cntaddr>
        <cntvoice>
          (808) 983-3776
        </cntvoice>
        <cntfax>
          (808) 983-2902
        </cntfax>
        <cntemail>
          pibhmc@soest.hawaii.edu
        </cntemail>
        <cntinst>
          e-mail preferred
        </cntinst>
      </cntinfo>
    </metc>
    <metstdn>
      FGDC Content Standard for Digital Geospatial Metadata
    </metstdn>
    <metstdv>
      FGDC-STD-001-1998
    </metstdv>
  </metainfo>
  <coris>
    <corid>
      20080502025256
    </corid>
    <corchild>
      None
    </corchild>
    <corbegdt>
      20020129
    </corbegdt>
    <corenddt>
      20020201
    </corenddt>
    <cormdlk>
      http://www.coris.noaa.gov/metadata/records/html/cred_toad_howland_tc0201_2002.html
    </cormdlk>
    <cortrkid>
      103
    </cortrkid>
  </coris>
  
  
  
  
  
  
</metadata>
