Technical Papers
Feb 1, 2012

Evolution of NAD 83 in the United States: Journey from 2D toward 4D

Publication: Journal of Surveying Engineering
Volume 138, Issue 4

Abstract

In 1986, Canada, Greenland, and the United States adopted the North American Datum of 1983 (NAD 83) to replace the North American Datum of 1927 as their official spatial reference system for geometric positioning. The rigor of the original NAD 83 realization benefited from the extensive use of electronic distance measuring instrumentation and from the use of both TRANSIT Doppler observations and very long baseline interferometry observations. However, the original NAD 83 realization predated the widespread use of the global positioning system and the use of continuously operating reference stations. Consequently, NAD 83 has evolved significantly in the United States since 1986 to embrace these technological advances, as well as to accommodate improvements in the understanding of crustal motion. This paper traces this evolution from what started as essentially a two-dimensional (2D) reference frame and has been progressing toward a four-dimensional (4D) frame. In anticipation of future geodetic advances, the U.S. National Geodetic Survey is planning to replace NAD 83 about a decade from now with a newer, more geocentric spatial reference system for geometric positioning.

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Acknowledgments

This paper has benefited from contributions by Bernard Chovitz, Michael Cline, Michael Dennis, David Doyle, Jake Griffiths, Julie Prusky, Jim Ray, Jarir Saleh, Giovanni Sella, Dru Smith, and Tomás Soler. The paper also benefited from suggestions from three anonymous reviewers. Several figures were prepared with the General Mapping Tool software available at http://gmt.soest.hawaii.edu/ under the GNU General Public License.

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Go to Journal of Surveying Engineering
Journal of Surveying Engineering
Volume 138Issue 4November 2012
Pages: 161 - 171

History

Received: Nov 22, 2011
Accepted: Jan 30, 2012
Published online: Feb 1, 2012
Published in print: Nov 1, 2012

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Richard A. Snay [email protected]
Retired; formerly, National Geodetic Survey, 9505 Aspenwood Ct., Montgomery Village, MD 20886. E-mail: [email protected]

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