ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information (Mar 2020)

Applicability of a Recreational-Grade Interferometric Sonar for the Bathymetric Survey and Monitoring of the Drava River

  • Ákos Halmai,
  • Alexandra Gradwohl–Valkay,
  • Szabolcs Czigány,
  • Johanna Ficsor,
  • Zoltán Árpád Liptay,
  • Kinga Kiss,
  • Dénes Lóczy,
  • Ervin Pirkhoffer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi9030149
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3
p. 149

Abstract

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Sonar survey of shallow water bodies has challenged scientists for a long time. Although these water courses are small, still they have an increasing ecological, touristic and economical role. As maritime sonars are non-ideal tools for shallow waters, the bathymetric survey of these rivers has been taken with cross-sectional methods. Due to recent developments, interferometric surveying technology have also burst into the market of recreational-grade fish-finders. The objective of the current study was the development of a novel, complex and integrated surveying technique which is affordable, robust and applicable even at low water levels. A recreational-grade sonar system was assembled and mounted on a double-hull vessel and connected with a geodetic Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) device. We have developed a novel software which enables the bridging between a closed sonar file format and the commonly used Geographic Information System (GIS) datasets. As a result, the several month-long conventional bathymetric survey of the 146 km-long reach of the Drava River was reduced to 20 days and provided channel bathymetry of many orders of magnitude higher than the classical methods. Additionally, a large number of spatial derivatives were generated which enables the analysis of channel morphology, textural variation of channel sediments and the accurate delineation of navigational routes.

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