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Date: | Thu, 19 Aug 1993 14:20:30 EDT |
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----------------------------Original message----------------------------
To answer the query about having FTP access to Board on
Geographic Names data, I have some news I hope is still
correct. During the GEBCO Sub-Committee on Geographic Names
held here in the SIO Library this past April/May, two of the
attendees were high-ranking DMA BGN officials. The very
first session was by the DMA and went into great detail
about a new automated data base that would literally replace
their acres of shoe boxes full of index cards. Soon all the
DMA BGN files of terrestrial and undersea place-names will
be retrieved and archived electrically instead of manually.
I foolishly asked if the civilian sector, such as
institutions of higher education, would have any direct
access to this data via something like an FTP system. The
answer, of course (as the DMA continues to cut the civilian
sector loose), was a polite "no". Got a place-name
question for the BGN? Be nice to them, be patient, and
remember you're dealing with the DMA.
I recommend the DMA SAILING DIRECTIONS (enroute versions)
and NOS COAST PILOTS ( for U.S. territorial waters) for
searching islands by place-name. Each have excellent
gazetteers and the DMA includes Lat/Long in their lists.
I've never seen anything that would list world islands by
size, nor has such a question ever arisen in my experience.
However, the United Nations is looking into island size as
it pertains to the global warming issue and islands that are
imperiled by sea level rise. A useful tome for
understanding the island thing is Henry Stommel's LOST
ISLANDS: THE STORY OF ISLANDS THAT HAVE VANISHED FROM
NAUTICAL CHARTS (University of British Columbia Press,
1984).
- Paul Leverenz
Scripps Institution of Oceanography Library
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