March 2009 Scripps Institute of Oceanography (SIO) Lidar of the Southern California Coastline: Long Beach to US/Mexico Border

This lidar point data set was collected during low tide conditions along an approximately 500-700 meter wide strip of the Southern California coastline within an area extending south from Long Beach to the US/Mexico border. Data were collected in Los Angeles, Orange and San Diego counties from south of the Downtown Long Beach Marina in Long Beach, California to Leucadia on March 8, 2009 between 19:56 and 22:59 UTC. Data were collected in Orange and San Diego counties from south of Dana Point to north of La Jolla on March 9, 2009 between 21:27 and 23:48 UTC. Data were collected in San Diego County from south of Del Mar to south of the United States-Mexico border near Playas de Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico on March 10 between 21:32 and 22:32 UTC. Data set features include water, beach, cliffs, and top of cliffs. The all points data set contains the complete point cloud of first and last return elevation and laser intensity measurements recorded during the spring 2009 airborne lidar survey conducted semi-annually by the University of Texas at Austin for the Southern California Beach Processes Study. The data set was generated by the processing of laser range, scan angle, and aircraft attitude data collected using an Optech Inc. Airborne Laser Terrain Mapper (ALTM) 1225 system and geodetic quality Global Positioning System (GPS) airborne and ground-based receivers. Instrument settings and parameters during survey were: Nominal on-ground beam diameter: 25 cm Pulse rate: 25 kHz Maximum number of returns recorded: 2 Minimum separation between detected returns from a single pulse: 4.3 m Laser wavelength: 1064 nm Frequency of GPS sampling: 1 Hz Frequency of IMU sampling: 50 Hz; Scan angle: +/- 20 degrees Nominal height of instrument above ground: 1100 m Nominal single-swath pulse density: 2 m Nominal aggregate pulse density: 0.75 Nature of vertical control: Kinematic and static GPS points

Data and Resources

Field Value
accessLevel public
accrualPeriodicity irregular
bureauCode {006:48}
catalog_@context https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.jsonld
catalog_conformsTo https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
catalog_describedBy https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
identifier March 2009 Scripps Institute of Oceanography (SIO) Lidar of the Southern California Coastline: Long Beach to US/Mexico Border
language {en-US}
modified 2011-03-01
old-spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-118.00024, 32.508919], [-117.119071, 32.508919], [-117.119071, 33.659194], [-118.00024, 33.659194], [-118.00024, 32.508919]]]}
programCode {000:000}
publisher University of Texas at Austin Center for Space Research (Point of Contact)
resource-type Dataset
source_datajson_identifier true
source_hash 5a376810965d7cf1b0680888f08880b70e45447b
source_schema_version 1.1
spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-118.00024, 32.508919], [-117.119071, 32.508919], [-117.119071, 33.659194], [-118.00024, 33.659194], [-118.00024, 32.508919]]]}
temporal 2009-03-08T00:00:00/2009-03-10T00:00:00
Groups
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tags
  • 2009
  • aliso-beach
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • arch-beach
  • balboa-beach
  • bathymetry-topography
  • beaches
  • blacks-beach
  • boomer-beach
  • california
  • central-beach
  • childrens-pool-beach
  • ckan
  • coast-royale-beach
  • coastal-elevation
  • coastal-landforms-processes
  • coronado-city-beach
  • coronado-shores-beach
  • dog-beach
  • geo
  • geoss
  • gps
  • gps-receivers
  • harbor-beach
  • huntington-city-beach
  • la-jolla-shores-beach
  • landforms
  • lidar
  • little-corona-del-mar-beach
  • los-angeles-county
  • low-tide
  • main-beach
  • march
  • marine-street-beach
  • national
  • newport-beach
  • north-america
  • north-beach
  • ocean-beach-city-beach
  • oceanside-city-beach
  • orange-county
  • poche-beach
  • saint-malo-beach
  • san-clemente-city-beach
  • san-diego-county
  • san-onofre-beach
  • shorelines
  • south-carlsbad-state-beach
  • south-oceanside-beach
  • surfside-beach
  • terrain-elevation
  • torrey-pines-city-beach
  • torrey-pines-state-beach
  • trestles-beach
  • united-states
  • victoria-beach
  • windansea-beach
  • wipeout-beach
isopen False
license_id notspecified
license_title License not specified
maintainer Roberto Gutierrez
maintainer_email oskar@mail.utexas.edu
metadata_created 2025-11-22T00:11:44.008201
metadata_modified 2025-11-22T00:11:44.008206
notes This lidar point data set was collected during low tide conditions along an approximately 500-700 meter wide strip of the Southern California coastline within an area extending south from Long Beach to the US/Mexico border. Data were collected in Los Angeles, Orange and San Diego counties from south of the Downtown Long Beach Marina in Long Beach, California to Leucadia on March 8, 2009 between 19:56 and 22:59 UTC. Data were collected in Orange and San Diego counties from south of Dana Point to north of La Jolla on March 9, 2009 between 21:27 and 23:48 UTC. Data were collected in San Diego County from south of Del Mar to south of the United States-Mexico border near Playas de Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico on March 10 between 21:32 and 22:32 UTC. Data set features include water, beach, cliffs, and top of cliffs. The all points data set contains the complete point cloud of first and last return elevation and laser intensity measurements recorded during the spring 2009 airborne lidar survey conducted semi-annually by the University of Texas at Austin for the Southern California Beach Processes Study. The data set was generated by the processing of laser range, scan angle, and aircraft attitude data collected using an Optech Inc. Airborne Laser Terrain Mapper (ALTM) 1225 system and geodetic quality Global Positioning System (GPS) airborne and ground-based receivers. Instrument settings and parameters during survey were: Nominal on-ground beam diameter: 25 cm Pulse rate: 25 kHz Maximum number of returns recorded: 2 Minimum separation between detected returns from a single pulse: 4.3 m Laser wavelength: 1064 nm Frequency of GPS sampling: 1 Hz Frequency of IMU sampling: 50 Hz; Scan angle: +/- 20 degrees Nominal height of instrument above ground: 1100 m Nominal single-swath pulse density: 2 m Nominal aggregate pulse density: 0.75 Nature of vertical control: Kinematic and static GPS points
num_resources 4
num_tags 59
title March 2009 Scripps Institute of Oceanography (SIO) Lidar of the Southern California Coastline: Long Beach to US/Mexico Border