Northeastern Section (39th Annual) and Southeastern Section (53rd Annual) Joint Meeting (March 25–27, 2004)

Paper No. 3
Presentation Time: 8:40 AM

MMS-SOUTH CAROLINA OFFSHORE SAND RESOURCE AND CRITICAL HABITAT ON-LINE DATABASE: PROVIDING GIS TECHNOLOGY TO THE PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SECTORS


CHASTAIN, Joshua L.1, GAYES, Paul T.1, HARRIS, M. Scott1, JOHNSTONE, Elizabeth1, OJEDA, German1, VAN DOLAH, Robert2, WEINBACH, Phil2 and GIORDANO, Anthony3, (1)Burroughs and Chapin Center for Marine and Wetland Studies, Coastal Carolina Univ, 1270 Atlantic Avenue, Conway, SC 29526, (2)Marine Resources Division, South Carolina Department of Nat Rscs, Post Office Box 12559, Charleston, SC 29412, (3)Minerals Mgnt Service, 381 Elden Street, Herndon, VA 20170, jchasta1@coastal.edu

In 1992 the South Carolina Task Force on Offshore Resources, with the support of the Minerals Management Service, began compiling a comprehensive database of information on marine resources of the southeastern inner continental shelf, including information pertaining to fisheries, sand resources, and critical habitat. The multi-year, inter-agency cooperative has allowed administrators and scientists from many disciplines to work together in providing the means for a more informed citizenry and a tool by which local and state authorities can view and analyze all relevant information before making decisions regarding public coastal policy. This on-going project has included the work of geologists, marine scientists, biologists, and federal and state agency administrators. It has also served as a platform for undergraduate and graduate level research.

The latest phase in the MMS-South Carolina cooperative culminated with the completion of an inter- active GIS database using the ArcIMS platform. This format, compatible with a wide variety of other ancillary information, facilitates rapid integration of data from MMS-South Carolina with other project- specific data in GIS. The MMS-South Carolina website serves as a parent document, allowing users from both the public and private sectors to readily retrieve information from any web-accessible computer by using a GIS viewer embedded within the site. Also included in the MMS-South Carolina cooperative website are an interpretive, spatially continuous habitat map of the Grand Strand inner continental shelf and a sediment thick- ness map showing the locations of potential sand reservoirs for beach nourishment. The database can be accessed at http://camelot.coastal.edu/Intermar.