Hydrographic Survey

Applications and Equipment

A hydrographic survey implies data collection about certain bodies of water. Its purpose is to ensure the safety operation of boats and detecting any impediment that might occur. Some use the term to refer only to ocean and sea waters, while others use it in reference to any type of water, including rivers and lakes. For a hydrographic survey, scientists gather data about waves, currents and tides, aiming to create a pattern of how that water area behaves. 

While some environmental factors and characteristics of water can be predicted, such as tides, the level of temperature and salt, others are variable and do not always fall into a pattern, like wind. In the process of hydrographic survey, other factors must be included in the analysis. Specialists measure the depth of the water in rivers or oceans, taking into account the reefs and rocks undersea. 

As stated, hydrographic surveys have the purpose of insuring safety travel for vessels, therefore the analysis must follow certain strict conventions and regulations. For instance, if the depth of the water varies, the specialists must note the lowest depth possible, rather than calculating its average. Because of this, many believe that these recordings are not accurate, since they do not offer a loyal representation of the waterbed. Consequently, two different types of measurements take place in a survey – those focused on safety and those that provide accurate measurements, the latter ones being called bathymetric charts.

Applications of hydrographic survey

Maps resulting from hydrographic survey are mainly used for maritime safety and navigation. Both the public and private sector make significant investments in this field to ensure the safe navigation of their vessels and to exploit the subsea and above the sea environments in an optimum manner, gaining advantages of tactical, strategic or operational nature. The data collected is used in cable routing, research, educational purposes, dredging operations and many other applications.

Navigators are especially concerned in parameters such as the shape of the shores, depth of water, and type of ocean bed, so they can estimate correctly their navigation experience. This type of survey was usually made using either echo sounding or sonar methods, but they have been replaced with more advanced technology such as satellites with sophisticated electronic sensors. However, the traditional survey methods have not been eliminated.

The governments of many countries fund hydrographic surveys however there are also private companies that manifest increasing interest in this aspect. The strategies and methods of survey must be in accordance with the ones used by the International Hydrographic Organization.

Hydrographic Survey Equipment

The first surveys were conducted by measuring depths with sounding poles and hand lead lines, determining positions with three-point sextant fixes. In the 30’s, eco sounders were first developed, and they enabled the collection of more data than before. The hydrographic survey process was also sped up by the invention of electronic navigation systems, in the next decade. Nowadays, the nature of these surveys has become more complex and requires the use of very sophisticated technologies, that accurately measure parameters such as reefs, wrecks, banks, other obstructions, water depth, coastline position with high and low water marks (HW and LW), tide rips, fishing stakes, nature of the seafloor and the position of all floating navigation marks.

Equipment for hydrographic survey can be installed on all types of vessels, including ships, small vessels, AUVs (Autonomous underwater vehicles), UUVs (Unmanned Underwater Vehicles) or inflatable crafts. It may consist of magnetometers, sidescans, single and multibeam equipment featuring sidescan and multibeam sonars. In addition to this equipment, these surveys also use airborne remote sensing systems such as LIDAR (with laser techniques) and optronics.

For instance, in 1994, US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) used the Scanning Hydrographic Operational Airborne Lidar Survey (SHOALS) in order to encourage the investments from private sectors in Lidar bathymetry, a technique that can accurately measure depths and topographic elevations, is able to cover extensive areas and was proved more efficient than the traditional acoustic survey methods.

The magnetometer is a tool that measures magnetic fields, in terms of strength and direction. Magnetometers are especially used in geographic surveying because they can detect large deposits of ferrous materials, but also in searching the precise location of shipwrecks and in pipelines surveys. They are more difficult to use than other instruments, yet the pieces of information they provide and more accurate and reliable. 

Sidescan sonars are a type of sonar systems that are able to create images of ocean floor (or lake or river bottoms) and they are appreciated and highly popular due to their low cost. They are also known as side-imaging sonars, single-beam echo sounder, side looking sonars, or bottom classification sonars. In addition to providing seafloor samples, and information on the type of texture in the ocean floor, they can also detect debris items that may prevent navigation or the activity of oil and gas companies and asses the condition of pipelines and cables on the sea floor and also provide accurate dimensions of the items investigated. Consequently, sidescan sonars are used in several industries, such as oil and gas industry, marine research and science, education, hydrographic agencies, coastguards. 

This piece of equipment features three components – a towfish, a cable for transmission and a processing unit. The towfish transmits and receives sounds from the surrounding ocean floor area and uses the echoes to create a “picture” of the seafloor, in which the protruding objects appear in dark and the shadows are lighter. Sidescan sonars are successful in offering accurate pictures of the investigated areas, but they cannot measure depths. 

The multi beam eco sounders are in fact sidescan sonars mounted on an array. These devices create a "swath" of soundings in order to fully cover an area. 

Portable tide gauges are other instruments used in hydrographic survey, with the purpose of measuring the sea level and tsunami detection. They can also store the results of calculations of Significant Wave Height and Full Wave Frequency. 

All this equipment cannot function unless featuring proper software applications. Companies sometimes develop their own software, in order to fulfill particular tasks.

Tags: Hydrographic Survey

Image of geological samples from the seafloor that were collected via box core on April 14, 2026, in U.S. waters off American Samoa. Credit: USGS

NOAA Releases Images of Seabed Nodules From Hydrographic Survey Near American Samoa

NOAA released the first images of geologic seafloor samples from a hydrographic survey…

A view on Palavas-les-Flots coastline with waves. © Lineup Ocean

Lineup Ocean’s SURFREEF Project in Palavas-les-Flots

The Mediterranean coastline faces significant ecological and economic challenges.

© UK Centre for Seabed Mapping

UK Centre for Seabed Mapping Scientists Collaborate on Survey of the UK’s South-West Coastline

The UK Centre for Seabed Mapping (UK CSM), a group of over 30 public sector organizations…

Illustration (Credit: TGS)

TGS to Advance Offshore Seismic Development In Equatorial Guinea

Energy data and intelligence firm TGS has signed a strategic agreement with the Republic…

© Cellula Robotics

Hahn Appointed VP, Tech Transfer and Strategy at Cellula Robotics

Cellula Robotics has announced the appointment of Colleen Hahn as Vice President…

© Eyesea

Eyesea Announces Launch of New Pollution Reporting and Monitoring App

Eyesea announced the official launch of its new Pollution Reporting and Monitoring App…

© PML

Research Team Launches Coral Cartography at AAORIA 2026

An international team of scientists is launching Coral Cartography: Mapping Atlantic…

(Credit: DeepOcean)

DeepOcean, Woodside Wrap Up Dual-Scope Subsea Survey at Sangomar Field

DeepOcean and Woodside Energy have completed a combined subsea inspection and 3D…

Two SeaTrac SP-48s in the Gulf. Credit: USM/SeaTrac Systems

A Breath of Fresh Air: USVs Map Hypoxia in the Gulf

The scientific method serves as a standard for research, guiding analytical and investigative…

Falmouth Scientific Share Sensor and Survey Solutions at Oceanology International

Ocean Aero’s Triton autonomous underwater and surface vehicle (AUSV) was taken up by the Port of Gulfport last year. Credit: Ocean Aero

Integrated, Multi-Domain Port Security

An Australian Federal Police commander, noting the billions of drugs intercepted…

(Credit: NextGeo)

NextGeo Scoops $33M Terna Deal for HVDC Link Marine Surveys

Italian offshore services provider Next Geosolutions (NextGeo) has secured a contract…

Related Articles

Remote Remote Sensing – Environmental Monitoring

The two known main types of remote sensing and data gathering are: passive remote sensing and active remote sensing. The natural radiation that is emitted or reflected by the object or surrounding area is detected by the passive sensors. The…

Career Opportunities for Seekers of Marine Technology Jobs

As the energy resources of land have started to decrease by the day, scientists in research centers and universities, as well as eager businessmen, have turned their attention to developing means of energy production in the waters of the planetary ocean.

Improvements in Subsea Security Technology

Improvements in Subsea Security TechnologyIn recent years, commercial, scientific and military activity have increased exponentially within maritime areas. The material goods involved in such kind of activity – commercial ports, scientific research devices…

Seafloor Mapping And Imaging

Technology Used in Seafloor Mapping/ImagingKnowing the depth of the seafloor and locating its hazards is of the main interest to shipping. The first maps were produced to identify the near-shore hazards and only in the nineteenth century sounding…

Oceanology International 50th Anniversary Edition

Now is your chance to reach an extraordinary audience with the Oceanology International Americas 50th Anniversary edition.
The annual Oceanographic issue explores deep sea oxygen research, sonar technology, carbon sequestration, and subsea defense trends.
Read the Magazine Sponsored by

Vessel & Vehicle Announcements

Marine Technology Magazine Cover Mar 2026 -

Marine Technology Reporter is the world's largest audited subsea industry publication serving the offshore energy, subsea defense and scientific communities.

Subscribe
Marine Technology ENews subscription

Marine Technology ENews is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

Subscribe for MTR E-news