From PCSAR
			
												
			
[edit]  Subject 
What is this lesson plan about?
This lesson plan reviews and touches on the coordinates systems that may be used in our area:
-  UTM
 -  Geographic Coordinates (Lat/Long)
 -  Legal Land Description
 
[edit]  Authors 
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Brett Wuth
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[edit]  Prerequisites 
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[edit]  Objectives 
At the conclusion of this lesson the participants:
-  will be able to ...
 
[edit]  Time Plan 
Total Time: 120 minutes
  
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   Material
  
 
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 00:00
 3 min
 
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 Introduce topic title
 Introduce Instructor
 Present Objectives
 
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 00:03
  
 
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 Distribute maps, pencils, erasers
 
-  safe pencils to use on maps
 -  safe eraser to use on maps
  
 
 
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 coordinates systems
 A coordinate system is a way of specifying a location on map
 3 systems you're likely to use in SAR.
 
-  UTM - Universal Transverse Mercator
 -  Geographic Coordinate System - Latitude/Longitute
 -  Legal Land Description - Section, Township.  Roads and Approaches
  
 
 
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 UTM
 
-  SAR uses mostly
 -  taught in SAR fundamentals
  
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 Zones
 
-  Each zone is a grid system that stretches from near the antarctic to the far north
 -  different strips necessary because laying a square grid on a round world
 -  Each zone is 6 degrees wide
 -  Pincher Creek is right at the boundary between zone 11U (on west) and zone 12U (on east)
 -  Each map shows it's zone
  
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 Northing
 
-  how far north of the equator (in meters)
 -  written on left and right edge of map
 -  horizontal blue lines have same northing
 -  every 1000m
 -  only 2 of the digits are shown for most blue lines
  
 
 
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 Easting
 
-  relative to the center of the Zone
 -  center of Zone is 500,000m
 -  bigger number the further east you go
 -  smaller number as you fo west
 -  written on the bottom and top edge of the map
 -  vertical blue lines have same easting
 -  sometimes starts over from 99 to 00 (with carry)
  
 
 
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 Stating a UTM
 
-  order: Z - E - N
 -  e.g. 12U 710000mE 5477000mN
 -  find this location: middle of Beauvais Lake
  
 
 
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 Being more precise
 
-  estimate inside blue square
 -  using roamer
  
 
 
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 Short form UTM
 
-  used mainly over radio
 -  6 digits (3 easting, 3 northing, no zone)
 -  assumes they know which map you're using
 -  accurate to 100m
  
 
 
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 Geographic Coordinate System
 
-  Latitude and Longitude
 -  used by aircraft
 -  Better when dealing with 100's of kilometers
 -  used by untrained people (all they've heard of)
  
 
 
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 Degrees
 
-  A circle has 360 degrees.
 -  World is a sphere.  Equator is a circle.
 -  measure longitude West 180 degrees along the equator from the prime meridian (Greenwich England)
 -  measure East 180 degrees
 -  meet at about the International Date Line in the Pacific
  
-  Measure north or south along the longitude to get the latitude
 -  90 degrees Latitude North to the north pole
 -  90 degrees South to the south pole
  
 
 
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 Minutes
 
-  Degrees are too big
 -  Every degree of latitude is 60 nautical miles
  
-  On the equator a degree of longitude is also 60 nautical miles
 -  gets smaller the closer to the poles you get
  
-  Degrees are divided into 60 minutes
 -  written as '
 -  1' of latitude is 1 nautical mile
  
-  1' of longitude varies depending on how close to the poles
  
 
 
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 Seconds
 Getting even more accurate.
 
-  60 seconds in a minute
 -  written as "
 -  1" of latitude is 101 feet
 -  = 31m
  
 
 
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 Full Lat/Long
 
-  example: 49deg 23' 24" N, 114deg 20' 25" W
  
 
 
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 Reading on a map
 
-  latitude goes from bottom to top along edges of map
 -  each minute is marked by a black or white bar
 -  seconds have to be estimated
  
-  longitude goes from right to left along top and bottom edge of map
 -  size of minute is different
  
-  no lines join opposite sides of map
 -  gray lines (township and section) are sometimes close
 -  roll edge of map to create temporary straight line
 -  read degrees and minutes, estimate seconds
  
 
 
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 Exercise
 find lat/long of several features
  
 
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 Convert by GPS
 
-  create waypoint in one coordinate sytem
 -  display in another
  
-  need to match Map Datum used on map
  
 
 
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[edit]  License 
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Copyright © 2013, Brett Wuth.  
This work is licensed under a 
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.5 Canada License.
To view a copy of this license, visit 
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/ca/
or send a letter to Creative Commons, 559 Nathan Abbott Way, Stanford, California 94305, USA.
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