Katana VentraIP

Depth sounding

Depth sounding, often simply called sounding, is measuring the depth of a body of water. Data taken from soundings are used in bathymetry to make maps of the floor of a body of water, such as the seabed topography.

Soundings were traditionally shown on nautical charts in fathoms and feet. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the agency responsible for bathymetric data in the United States, still uses fathoms and feet on nautical charts. In other countries, the International System of Units (metres) has become the standard for measuring depth.[1]

Terminology[edit]

"Sounding" derives from the Old English sund, meaning "swimming, water, sea"; it is not related to the word sound in the sense of noise or tones,[2] but to sound, a geographical term.


Traditional terms for soundings are a source for common expressions in the English language, notably "deep six" (a sounding of 6 fathoms). On the Mississippi River in the 1850s, the leadsmen also used old-fashioned words for some of the numbers; for example instead of "two" they would say "twain". Thus when the depth was two fathoms, they would call "by the mark twain!". The American writer Mark Twain, a former river pilot, likely took his pen name from this cry. The term lives on in today's world in echo sounding, the technique of using sonar to measure depth.[3]

 – Instrument that indicates depth below a reference surface

Depth gauge

Echo sounding

Multibeam echosounding

 – Electronic device used in water

Fishfinder

 – Oceanographic research expedition (1872–1876)

Challenger expedition

Media related to Depth sounding devices at Wikimedia Commons

(retrieved Sept 2006).

The Lead Line -- Construction and use