Chandeleur Islands, Louisiana

Mapped by , Shannon Dosemagen, Stewart Long, Mariko Toyoji

Cartographer: Stewart Long

Published by warren

29.802910103410355 N, -88.86611555841014 E

384 views

Ground resolution: 8.31 cm/px

Capture date: 2010-05-09T00:00:00

Publication date: 2010-05-16T00:00:00

License: Public Domain


Mapped by , Shannon Dosemagen, Stewart Long, Mariko Toyoji

Cartographer: Stewart Long

Published by warren

29.802910103410355 N, -88.86611555841014 E

327 views

Ground resolution: 8.31 cm/px

Capture date: 2010-05-09T00:00:00

Publication date: 2010-05-16T00:00:00

License: Public Domain


Additional photos from this trip can be viewed on Flickr:

https://flickr.com/photos/tags/may9chandeleurmap

Here's a video of Jim from UptownAngler.com, who offered the boat to get to the Chandeleur Islands. They're about 40 miles offshore.

And here's a video of a helicopter landing on a sandbar, scaring away pelicans as the balloon mappers observe:

Notes

Jim from uptownangler.com This was a full day of field work! The boat set out from the port of Venice and it was a long rough ride out to the Chandeleur going out, and coming back. Nobody on board got ill, bu the boat was slowed by choppy seas throughout the day. GPS off Chandeleur islands While it was windy at times, the team found calm ballooning friendly conditions at mid day when the flight took place. The chemical dispersants were most dominant from our ground perspective while out along the Chandeleur. It was a chemical smell that I was not familiar with, something like gasoline fumes. Oil/tar sticking to the boat off the Chandeleur islands The actual flight was up at around 1,500' and was a gentle and prolonged drifting of the balloon and boat with the anchor not deployed. -Stewart Birds ashore


Cartographer notes

Special thanks to Jim from uptownangler.com

The balloon flight drifted along with the boat for about a half hour of continuous shooting inside the Chandeleur barrier island chain. While we observed visible oil and chemical dispersants in the water during the whole time we were out there, the extent of the mapping area was determined by the presence of ground control among the aerial images and GPS tracks.

This map is of an area in the Chandeleur where a cut has formed in the barrier island landform. There is visible reef rock, sand bar, and sand spit. The rainbow color is visible oil sheen on the surface of the water. There is also heavy oil pollution within the san spit, and in the wave action along the sandy beach. Brown Pelican (LA State bird) and Sandwich Tern are identifiable in the SE portion of the map. The Captain Jim's boat is also in the scene.

The imagery was post-processed to reduce exposure and bring out more information in general that was thinned out in the histogram from water, glare, and beach.

-Stewart



Notes

Jim from uptownangler.com

This was a full day of field work! The boat set out from the port of Venice and it was a long rough ride out to the Chandeleur going out, and coming back. Nobody on board got ill, bu the boat was slowed by choppy seas throughout the day.

GPS off Chandeleur islands

While it was windy at times, the team found calm ballooning friendly conditions at mid day when the flight took place. The chemical dispersants were most dominant from our ground perspective while out along the Chandeleur. It was a chemical smell that I was not familiar with, something like gasoline fumes.

Oil/tar sticking to the boat off the Chandeleur islands

The actual flight was up at around 1,500' and was a gentle and prolonged drifting of the balloon and boat with the anchor not deployed.

-Stewart

Birds ashore


Cartographer notes

Special thanks to Jim from uptownangler.com The balloon flight drifted along with the boat for about a half hour of continuous shooting inside the Chandeleur barrier island chain. While we observed visible oil and chemical dispersants in the water during the whole time we were out there, the extent of the mapping area was determined by the presence of ground control among the aerial images and GPS tracks.

This map is of an area in the Chandeleur where a cut has formed in the barrier island landform. There is visible reef rock, sand bar, and sand spit. The rainbow color is visible oil sheen on the surface of the water. There is also heavy oil pollution within the san spit, and in the wave action along the sandy beach. Brown Pelican (LA State bird) and Sandwich Tern are identifiable in the SE portion of the map. The Captain Jim's boat is also in the scene.

The imagery was post-processed to reduce exposure and bring out more information in general that was thinned out in the histogram from water, glare, and beach.

-Stewart



1 Comments

I've been looking for public domain reference imagery, and wrote a while ago about this here: https://publiclab.org/notes/warren/3-19-2012/rough-placement-chandeleur-map

Anyhow, I found this map layer (you have to toggle the layers a bit to see them together):

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