A geodetic reference datum is a known and constant surface which is used to describe the location of unknown points on Earth. Since reference datums can have different radii and different center points, a specific point on Earth can have substantially different coordinates depending on the datum used to make the measurement. There are hundreds of locally developed reference datums around the world, usually referenced to some convenient local reference point. Contemporary datums, based on increasingly accurate measurements of the shape of Earth, are intended to cover larger areas. The most common reference Datums in use in
North America are NAD27, NAD83, and
WGS 84. The
North American Datum of 1927 (NAD27) is "the horizontal control datum for the United States that was defined by a location and azimuth on the Clarke spheroid of 1866, with origin at (the survey station)
Meades Ranch (Kansas)." ... The geoidal height at Meades Ranch was assumed to be zero, as sufficient gravity data was not available, and this was needed to relate surface measurements to the datum. "Geodetic positions on the North American Datum of 1927 were derived from the (coordinates of and an azimuth at Meades Ranch) through a readjustment of the triangulation of the entire network in which Laplace azimuths were introduced, and the Bowie method was used." NAD27 is a local referencing system covering North America. The North American Datum of 1983 (NAD 83) is "The horizontal control datum for the United States, Canada, Mexico, and Central America, based on a geocentric origin and the Geodetic Reference System 1980 (
GRS80). "This datum, designated as NAD83…is based on the adjustment of 250,000 points including 600 satellite Doppler stations which constrain the system to a geocentric origin." NAD83 may be considered a local referencing system. WGS84 is the
World Geodetic System of 1984. It is the reference frame used by the
U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) and is defined by the
National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) (formerly the Defense Mapping Agency, then the National Imagery and Mapping Agency). WGS84 is used by the DoD for all its mapping, charting, surveying, and navigation needs, including its
GPS "broadcast" and "precise" orbits. WGS84 was defined in January 1987 using Doppler satellite surveying techniques. It was used as the reference frame for broadcast GPS Ephemerides (orbits) beginning January 23, 1987. At 0000 GMT January 2, 1994, WGS84 was upgraded in accuracy using GPS measurements. The formal name then became WGS84 (G730), since the upgrade date coincided with the start of GPS Week 730. It became the reference frame for broadcast orbits on June 28, 1994. At 0000 GMT September 30, 1996 (the start of GPS Week 873), WGS84 was redefined again and was more closely aligned with
International Earth Rotation Service (IERS) frame
ITRF 94. It was then formally called WGS84 (G873). WGS84 (G873) was adopted as the reference frame for broadcast orbits on January 29, 1997. Another update brought it to WGS84 (G1674). The WGS84 datum, within two meters of the NAD83 datum used in North America, is the only world referencing system in place today. WGS84 is the default standard datum for coordinates stored in recreational and commercial GPS units. Users of GPS are cautioned that they must always check the datum of the maps they are using. To correctly enter, display, and to store map related map coordinates, the datum of the map must be entered into the GPS map datum field.
Examples Examples of map datums are: •
WGS 84, 72, 66 and 60 of the
World Geodetic System •
NAD 83, the
North American Datum which is very similar to WGS84 •
NAD 27, the older
North American Datum, of which NAD83 was basically a readjustment •
OSGB36 of the
Ordnance Survey of
Great Britain •
ETRS89, the European Datum, related to
ITRS •
ED50, the older European Datum •
GDA94, the Australian Datum •
JGD2011, the Japanese Datum, adjusted for changes caused by
2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami •
Tokyo97, the older Japanese Datum •
KGD2002, the Korean Datum •
TWD67 and
TWD97, different datum currently used in Taiwan. •
BJS54 and
XAS80, old geodetic datum used in China •
GCJ-02 and
BD-09, Chinese encrypted geodetic datum. •
PZ-90.11, the current geodetic reference used by
GLONASS •
Galileo Terrestrial Reference Frame (GTRF), the geodetic reference used by
Galileo; currently defined as ITRF2005 •
CGCS2000, or
CGS-2000, the geodetic reference used by
BeiDou Navigation Satellite System; based on ITRF97 •
International Terrestrial Reference Frames (ITRF88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 96, 97, 2000, 2005, 2008, 2014), different realizations of the
ITRS. •
Hong Kong Principal Datum, a vertical datum used in Hong Kong. •
SAD69 - South American Datum 1969 ==Plate movement==