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With 50-year legacy, Digital Terrain Elevation Data Inches Towards Next Goal: 10-Meter Post Spacing

 Nov. 30, 2022

 NGA Source Directorate
 mediarelations@nga.mil
 (571) 557-5450

When NGA partners plan operations, the agency provides them with products that identify the latitude and longitude of various locations, so that they can pinpoint the path to their objective. Yet, sometimes a partner needs more than latitude and longitude to get the job done.

That’s where digital terrain elevation data comes in. 

“It gives the Z value of every location on the Earth,” David Bidinger, a Digital Terrain Elevation Data (DTED) lead in the Source Office of Geomatics, explained. “If you want to know how far a location is above sea level, what the slope of an area is or surface roughness you need a Z value, and you get that from DTED.”

In short, digital terrain elevation data is a standard of digital datasets which consists of a matrix of terrain elevation values that are essential to creating a wide range of GEOINT products for disaster relief, humanitarian aid, international cooperation, scientific research and other national security objectives.

For example, analysts in Analysis’ Office of Science and Methodologies — which applies leading scientific technologies to GEOINT applications — have used DTED to help both civil and military partners to find areas of significant flooding while estimating its impact on local facilities and infrastructure.

Meanwhile, NGA’s International Affairs directorate uses DTED during its engagements with foreign partners to support host-nation or combined military operations training. This elevation data is key to help tanks and other military equipment navigate varied terrain effectively; providing military planners a better idea of where they can conduct cross-country transit of both light and heavy equipment.

“When you are moving ordinance [supplies] through the slopes in Afghanistan, anything more than a 10 to 30% slope would make it difficult to move equipment,” Bidinger said. 
Digital terrain elevation data has been in production since 1968 when the Air Force’s Aeronautical Chart and Information Center, the oceanographic and charting services of the U.S. Naval Hydrographic Office, and the Army Map Service used it to support plastic relief mapping. These organizations later merged into the Defense Mapping Agency — an NGA predecessor agency — in 1972.

By the early 1980’s, DTED had proved its value to Defense Mapping Agency (DMA) and its partners in a wide range of mapping, charting and geodesy applications. But DMA leaders quickly found that gathering and processing DTED data was expensive. 

A massive 36-bit UNIVAC 1108 computer system like the ones that DMA used to process DTED data could cost up $3 million each, depending on which accessories and service package the purchaser bought. The UNIVAC 1108 was an early computer used in the 1960’s, 1970’s and even in the early 1980’s. Yet, the computer system operated inefficiently and was prone to errors and memory overload, as a 1978 government report noted.

UNIVAC 1108 systems were used to process digital terrain elevation data in the 1980’s (Source: NGA)
UNIVAC 1108 systems were used to process digital terrain elevation data in the 1980’s (Source: NGA)

Meanwhile, as the calendar turned from the 1980’s to the 1990’s — and computer technologies improved — DMA likewise boosted its engineering abilities in the digital terrain elevation data arena. As the tools and techniques became available, the resolution of DTED products improved.

By the early 1990’s, NGA’s military partners could use DTED to help it plan a variety of military operations — such as air navigation — while the disaster responders could use data to prepare for floods, hurricanes and other natural disasters.

But even higher resolution digital terrain elevation data — at 30-meter post spacing [the horizontal measurement between two elevation readings measured in arc-seconds] — wasn’t high enough resolution for targeting, said Bidinger. And despite the increased processing power of computers in the late 1990’s, obtaining and storing higher resolution DTED data remained expensive. Much of elevation data was collected manually, using stereo imagery on a plotter, or collected off of a map source.

“It was very labor-intensive,” Tyler Shipp, senior GEOINT officer for elevation in Source’s Foundation GEOINT Group, said of the DTED collection efforts.

Through this data acquisition process, NGA has obtained 2,063 one-degree by one-degree cells of traditional digital terrain elevation data level-2 that comprise 8% of the Earth. Those 2,063 cells take up 42 gigabytes of disk space, making it impractical to put that data on the servers that most NGA partners own. Even today, DTED data is sent to NGA partners on compact disk, instead of being uploaded to a shared server or being sent by email.

Traditional DTED level-0, level-1 and level-2 products were captured using what is known as “bare earth” data. That is to say, traditional DTED contains elevation data from the ground surface, and does not capture information about treetops and building heights, said Bidinger. This type of data is known as a Digital Terrain Model.

To make it easier to capture elevation data, in the early 2000’s, NGA shifted to Shuttle Radar Topographic Mission. SRTM was an international research effort that obtained digital elevation models from 57 degrees south of the equator to 60 degrees north of the equator. 

Shuttle Radar Topographic Mission — which stemmed from a February 2000 mission of the Space Shuttle Endeavor — is a reflective surface digital elevation model or digital surface model, a DSM, meaning that the elevation readings from the first radar return indicates treetops and tops of buildings. While SRTM is distinct from DTED, it can be saved in the same file format as traditional DTED. The shuttle mission obtained reflective elevation data, meaning that the data showed “bumps” that indicated treetops and building heights.
The resolution of SRTM elevation data was leaps and bounds better than previously captured DTED data. In fact, the November 2008 article “GEOINT Foundations Establish Tradecraft for the Agency,” noted: “The improved DTED contributed incomparable accuracy to everything from geophysics to earthquake research to the best location for cell towers to missile targeting.” 

Yet, NGA still didn’t have a global coverage for elevation data.

To fix the problem, NGA shifted again — this time to TanDEM-X, a reflective elevation data set that a German satellite collected, between 2010 and 2015. TanDEM-X — which NGA obtained starting in 2016 — is more current than legacy DTED data and has global coverage. Additionally, TanDEM-X is more accurate than this legacy digital terrain elevation data because it was collected at 10- to 12-meter post spacing, compared with DTED level-2, which was collected at 30-meter post spacing.

TanDEM-X fills the elevation data void seen in legacy DTED and SRTM data — and does it at a higher resolution than NGA previously had.

NGA’s U.S. government partners are using TanDEM-X data to support their missions, even though the raw, unprocessed data has voids and anomalies that still need to corrected. As a temporary fix, those voids are filled in with legacy DTED and SRTM data, before the TanDEM-X data is put into GeoTIFF format — a file format that contains georeferencing information such as map projections and coordinate systems.

These GeoTIFF files, in turn, are put on NGA’s Map of the World — a tool that enables NGA and its partners to visualize and access integrated intelligence content tied to accurate and reliable geographic features on Earth. The GeoTIFFs are also loaded on the Geospatial Repository and Data Management System, a database for the storage, processing, visualization and dissemination of three-dimensional point cloud data. These GeoTIFFs can likewise be put on compact disks and other storage devices.
But processing the huge volumes of TanDEM-X data and correcting the anomalies takes a lot of work. To help complete the work, NGA has joined forces with 31 other nations to finish a 12-meter resolution elevation dataset that has global coverage.

The partnership, known as the TanDEM-X High Resolution Data Exchange is working to edit the raw data and stitch it together into a seamless global elevation dataset. The goal of TREx is to have a finished TanTEM-X dataset by the spring of 2026. But even as NGA works with the TREx consortium, traditional DTED still has value — and isn’t going away.
For example, organizations that require elevation data, but which don’t have access to TanDEM-X data, will continue to use older DTED. TanDEM-X data, on the other hand, is unclassified, LIMDIS. LIMDIS is short for limited dissemination, a measure the U.S. government takes to protect information that is not publicly releasable, but isn’t at the secret level.

“What’s most impressive about DTED is that it’s been around for almost 50 years, and is still the most requested elevation product by our military and other partners,” said Bidinger. “There is an extensive range of functional use for DTED such as aeronautical, maritime, topographical, controlled imagery, mission planning and analysis.”