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  • At this scale 1cm on the map represents 1km on the ground. Each map covers a minimum area of 0.5 degrees longitude by 0.5 degrees latitude or about 54 kilometres by 54 kilometres. The contour interval is 20 metres. Many maps are supplemented by hill shading. These maps contain natural and constructed features including road and rail infrastructure, vegetation, hydrography, contours, localities and some administrative boundaries. Product Specifications Coverage: Australia is covered by more than 3000 x 1:100 000 scale maps, of which 1600 have been published as printed maps. Unpublished maps are available as compilations. Currency: Ranges from 1961 to 2009. Average 1997. Coordinates: Geographical and either AMG or MGA coordinates. Datum: AGD66, GDA94; AHD Projection: Universal Transverse Mercator UTM. Medium: Printed maps: Paper, flat and folded copies. Compilations: Paper or film, flat copies only.

  • Legacy product - no abstract available

  • The Australian Calibration Line (ACL) , with a total gravity interval of 3 Gal, was established during 1970 between Laiagam in Papua New Guinea and Hobart in Tasmania. During 1973 the Australian Bureau of Mineral Resources and the USSR Geodesy and Cartography Survey made joint observations along the full length of the ACL. Measurements made with eight Soviet GAG-2 gravity meters established a gravity scale for Australia to an accuracy of 2.5 parts in 105. This scale and a datum of 979 671.86 mGal for Sydney A were adopted for Australia in 1973. The Soviet scale established for the ACL appears to be within 1 part in 104 of both the IGSN71 scale established for the Western Pacific Calibration Line by absolute determinations, pendulum measurements and international gravity meter comparisons, and the scale established for the Soviet Calibration Line by OVM pendulums. The Soviet scale for the ACL defines a milligal which is 1.5 parts in 104 larger than that defined by IGSN71 values for the ACL, and 5 parts in 104 larger than the 1965 Mean Australian Milligal that was used as an Australian milligal standard between 1965 and 1973. Both of these scales are partly based on Cambridge pendulum measurements made in Australia during 1950-51. These measurements are now thought to have been incorrect in scale. LaCoste, Romberg gravity meters have been used during six surveys along the whole or part of the ACL. The LaCoste observations have been reduced using the Soviet ACL scale and the new datum for Sydney A. The most probable values for airport gravity stations, calculated from the LaCoste results, have a precision of better than 0.01 mGal and are consistent to within experimental error with values calculated from the GAG-2 results. LaCoste observations reduced using the Soviet ACL scale give more accurate values for the gravity differences of the main intra-city ties and calibration ranges along the ACL.

  • At this scale 1cm on the map represents 1km on the ground. Each map covers a minimum area of 0.5 degrees longitude by 0.5 degrees latitude or about 54 kilometres by 54 kilometres. The contour interval is 20 metres. Many maps are supplemented by hill shading. These maps contain natural and constructed features including road and rail infrastructure, vegetation, hydrography, contours, localities and some administrative boundaries. Product Specifications Coverage: Australia is covered by more than 3000 x 1:100 000 scale maps, of which 1600 have been published as printed maps. Unpublished maps are available as compilations. Currency: Ranges from 1961 to 2009. Average 1997. Coordinates: Geographical and either AMG or MGA coordinates. Datum: AGD66, GDA94; AHD Projection: Universal Transverse Mercator UTM. Medium: Printed maps: Paper, flat and folded copies. Compilations: Paper or film, flat copies only.

  • At this scale 1cm on the map represents 1km on the ground. Each map covers a minimum area of 0.5 degrees longitude by 0.5 degrees latitude or about 54 kilometres by 54 kilometres. The contour interval is 20 metres. Many maps are supplemented by hill shading. These maps contain natural and constructed features including road and rail infrastructure, vegetation, hydrography, contours, localities and some administrative boundaries. Product Specifications Coverage: Australia is covered by more than 3000 x 1:100 000 scale maps, of which 1600 have been published as printed maps. Unpublished maps are available as compilations. Currency: Ranges from 1961 to 2009. Average 1997. Coordinates: Geographical and either AMG or MGA coordinates. Datum: AGD66, GDA94; AHD Projection: Universal Transverse Mercator UTM. Medium: Printed maps: Paper, flat and folded copies. Compilations: Paper or film, flat copies only.

  • Legacy product - no abstract available