Exceed Jul/Aug 2020 - 4WD Club Magazine Volume #37 Issue #4 | Page 39

Australia has used three different geodetic datums: � AGD66 – Australian Geodetic Datum effective 6 October 1966; � GDA94 – Geocentric Datum of Australia effective 1 January 1994 (in use from 2000); � GDA2020 – Geocentric Datum of Australia effective as at 1 January 2020 (in use from 2017); From the geodetic datum a map grid is created by projecting the coordinate system (which is spherical) onto a flat surface. The most common projection used is the Universal Trans Mercator projection or UTM. We have had three map grids: � � � AMG66 – Australian Map Grid 1966 - map grid based on AGD66; MGA94 – Map Grid of Australia 1994 – map grid based on GDA94; MGA2020 – Map Grid of Australia 2020 – map grid based on GDA2020 The above map grids are fixed to the continent at a certain point in time. So MGA94 is the coordinate system fixed in 1994. This means the coordinates of a place in Australia will not change in that system at any point in time. A time dependent reference frame however will change the coordinates over time. Picture the latitude and longitude frame fixed to the centre of the Earth, but set just above the Earth’s surface, kind of like a cage. As Australia moves (at 7cm per year) across the Earth’s surface and under the frame, the coordinates of a place in Australia will change in a time dependent reference frame. Figure 2: Latitude & Longitude This is what is occurring with GPS coordinates. This means that in addition to the normal coordinates you need to specify the time of the system – Eg 2020.0 for the start of 2020 or 2020.5 for 30 June 2020. WGS84, the US system is the best known example of this type of system, but WGS and the international version called ITRF are essentially the same thing as they match at centimetre level. WGS84 (and therefore GPS coordinates) is updated twice a year to account for the continental shift. Time dependent reference frames include: � ATRF2014 – Australian Terrestrial Reference Frame 2014 � ITRF2014 – International Terrestrial Reference Frame 2014 � WGS84 – World Geodetic System 1984 Effect of GPS and Australia Moving In the 1960s Australia for the first time adopted a consistent datum and map grid. Because GPS wasn’t all that relevant then, the shape that was used for the earth (the geoid) was chosen to best fit Australia, rather than the whole world. Unfortunately, this meant the origin or centre of the coordinate system was about 200m from the centre of mass of the Earth. The difference is because the material in the Earth’s mantle and core are not regularly distributed. The reference point for this system was the Johnston Geodetic Station which is about 7km north of the SA-NT border just off the Stuart Highway. Figure 3: Stone Marker Johnston Geodetic Station