bdh198
Well-Known Member
This is my understanding:
Chart Datum is the plane used on navigational charts to show the depth of water before accounting for the height of the tide. By calculating the tide height in a particular location and adding it to the Chart Datum the true depth of water at a particular time can be determined. Chart Datum is calculated locally and is dependent on the tidal range in that location. As such it is close to the lowest possible tide that can be predicted, although I appreciate that storm surges and unusually high atmospheric pressure can create the occasional tide that will fall below the lowest astronomical tide. Nevertheless it is rare for the tide to fall below the Chart Datum shown on a navigational chart because it is calculated locally depending on the tidal range in that location.
If that is correct then why are there some locations where the tide regularly falls below the Chart Datum? One location I currently have in mind is Bembridge Harbour. There, the low water is often calculated to be negative in the days surrounding the spring tide. This Saturday’s spring tide (which is not a particularly heavy spring) is preceded by three days of negative low waters and followed by a further three days of negative low waters (seven days of negative lows in total). The greatest negative is 0.31 meters, but for a heavy spring it can be as much as a meter or more.
Consequently, the low water in Bembridge is frequently predicted to be lower than Chart Datum, which itself is supposed to be fairly close to the lowest predictable tide. Is it the Chart Datum in Bembridge that is not as accurate as it should be, or have I missed something else completely?
Chart Datum is the plane used on navigational charts to show the depth of water before accounting for the height of the tide. By calculating the tide height in a particular location and adding it to the Chart Datum the true depth of water at a particular time can be determined. Chart Datum is calculated locally and is dependent on the tidal range in that location. As such it is close to the lowest possible tide that can be predicted, although I appreciate that storm surges and unusually high atmospheric pressure can create the occasional tide that will fall below the lowest astronomical tide. Nevertheless it is rare for the tide to fall below the Chart Datum shown on a navigational chart because it is calculated locally depending on the tidal range in that location.
If that is correct then why are there some locations where the tide regularly falls below the Chart Datum? One location I currently have in mind is Bembridge Harbour. There, the low water is often calculated to be negative in the days surrounding the spring tide. This Saturday’s spring tide (which is not a particularly heavy spring) is preceded by three days of negative low waters and followed by a further three days of negative low waters (seven days of negative lows in total). The greatest negative is 0.31 meters, but for a heavy spring it can be as much as a meter or more.
Consequently, the low water in Bembridge is frequently predicted to be lower than Chart Datum, which itself is supposed to be fairly close to the lowest predictable tide. Is it the Chart Datum in Bembridge that is not as accurate as it should be, or have I missed something else completely?