Logo OpenStreetMap OpenStreetMap

Learning to count

Postet gant chriscf da 17 August 2010 e English.

While examining the limits of the internal zones in UK waters, a recent Statutory Instrument defines one of the points on a boundary as being at longitude 02°42'95"W. Anyone know what I'm supposed to make of this? Other than the usual government incompetence, of course.

Ikon ar postel Ikon Bluesky Ikon Facebook Ikon LinkedIn Ikon Mastodon Ikon Telegram Ikon X

Kaozeadenn

Evezhiadenn a-berzh RichardB d'an 17 August 2010 da 22:43

I've seen the document for the Welsh border - and it has many points with greater than 60" - too many for it to be an isolated mistake. Perhaps they're not seconds of arc, but decimal minutes? In which case, your coord is 51º32.53' N, 2º42.95' W

Evezhiadenn a-berzh RichardB d'an 17 August 2010 da 23:37

Right, they are in decimal minutes, and not seconds of arc. The reason I can tell is because most of the coordinates are also defined in SI 1999/762 - which defines the border in the Dee & Severn Estuaries. If you convert the coords in SI1999/762 from OSBG36->WGS84 - then the points lie extremely close to those from the latest document with decimal minutes - but much further away with seconds of arc.

Evezhiadenn a-berzh chriscf d'an 18 August 2010 da 00:35

I have worked on that assumption for the Welsh points, and not on that assumption for the Scottish baseline (the points fit better as arcseconds than decimal minutes). However, I realize I may have accidentally used the decimal minute conversion for the Northern Ireland limits, so will probably need to reimport those (and redraw the lines).

Kevreañ evit skrivañ un evezhiadenn