GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM (GPS)
and the Addition of Data
What is a GPS and why are GPS data important?
Over
the past few decades the US Government has put scores of specialized satellites
into polar orbits. A polar orbit is one that goes around the earth in an
orbit that crosses over or near the north and south poles. At any one
time, there are from 3 to 5 (sometimes more) satellites in the sky overhead
that you could see if they were not so small and so high. Each satellite
continuously sends out radio signals that identify themselves and their
location. They also send out the exact
time and other, usually military, information.
One
of the uses of this information is a Global Positioning System or GPS.
Even though these satellites are moving, if you know the exact position for any
three of them and if you know the exact time that you measure their
position, you can draw a line on a map and where the three lines cross, that is
where you are. The GPS unit does all the
measuring, calculating and plotting for you. Instead of giving you a
point on a map, however, it gives you the exact latitude and longitude of the
point where you are standing. Click for more information on Latitudes and Longitudes.
The
GPS is so good that it can give you the exact latitude and longitude of your
position within about 10 to 20 feet. That is pretty good considering the
circumference of the earth is about 24,000 miles.
A
GPS unit is relatively cheap selling for under $100 in the year 2005. They are quite small being about the size of
a cell phone. So, it is quite
reasonable to measure fairly exact positions (as latitude and longitude) of
things of interest to our family history. For example, you may want to be
able to know the exact latitude and longitude of things like your grandparents
home, cemeteries and even the grave sites of certain relatives, churches,
schools, centers of towns like Woodsfield, Lewisville, Miltonsburg, Graysville
and Way, etc. With a GPS, all these can be measured to an accuracy of
about 10 to 20 feet.
One
reason for wanting to have the latitude and longitude of these locations, of
course, is to be able to locate them easily.
Another reason is so that people 50, 100, 200 or more years from now can
pin-point these things on earth because they will have their exact
coordinates. Many of the places like those above will no longer
exist. For example, there is no longer any trace of towns such as Way,
Graham, Sprague and many of the other small towns that used to be common
knowledge among our grandparents generations.
Many ordinary cemeteries and grave sites become obscure with time. If exact latitude and longitude coordinates
are known, these sites can be located even though they may have dropped from
public sight and memory.
It
is important that the latitude and longitude data of places that we measure not
become meaningless because of some man-made or natural event. Such an event might be the abandonment of
the use of latitude and longitude measurements in favor of something
better. Or, conceivably, something like
a nuclear war or other catastrophe could disrupt GPS-type measurements. To
protect against such a possibility, we need to include the exact coordinates of
some major features on earth like a mountain, or island or something that is
likely to survive unchanged over the decades and centuries. These would
be fixed reference points for calibrating GPS data. If such major features can be found and if their latitude and longitude
coordinates can be determined, they can be used to calibrate other data. Several such major features have been
included in the list of references on this site.
GPS
data are being used to precisely locate points of interest on earth. It is a cheap and easy way to preserve historical
and genealogical information that would otherwise vanish with time.
How can I add GPS data to the Monroe County Historical and
Genealogical Website?
You
are encouraged to provide GPS data for measurements of sites of historical importance. If you would like to provide GPS data and
information to be used on this Web Site, send it to the webmaster Richard
Harrington Be sure to include all the
information that is contained in the format used on the web site. The format is given below with a brief
explanation of each item.
Name of Site: (Name of the site for
example the name of a church, the person s grave, store name, village name,
etc.)
(Site #) (If you use a site number or other reference to identify
your data, please provide this site number or other data.)
Elevation: (This is the elevation of the site you are measuring. Please adjust the elevation measurement to
ground level if at all possible.)
Latitude: North yy
o xx.xxx (Provide the
latitude as precisely as your GPS unit will measure; preferably in degrees,
minutes and decimals of minutes.
Provide the data exactly as your GPS unit measures it please, do not
convert it to different units.)
Longitude: West yyyo
xx.xxx (Provide the longitude as precisely
as your GPS unit will measure; preferably in degrees, minutes and decimals of
minutes. Provide the data exactly as
your GPS unit measures it please, do not convert it to different units.)
Description: (Describe in detail the
site/object/place to which your GPS measurement applies.)
Measurement made on date
at time and name: (Give the date and time (if possible) that the GPS
measurement was made. Give the name of
the individual who made the measurement.)
Accuracy of Lat/Long as
stated by the GPS device: (Provide the
accuracy of the reading as measured by your GPS for the measurement you are
reporting.)
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