Online African Marine Atlas
The African Marine Atlas (http://www.africanmarineatlas.org/) provides substantial maps, images, data and information to coastalresource managers, planners and decision-makers from various administrative institutions and specialized agencies in Africa.
The Atlas will be of immense benefit to national institutions and a
variety of users such as environmentalists, local administrators, park
managers, scientific community, fishing cooperatives, tourists, hotel
keepers, teachers, NGOs, the general public, and any other interested
persons. It has over 800 downloadable* data products derived from the
fields of marine geo-sphere, hydrosphere, atmosphere, biosphere,
geopolitical and the human socio-economic dimensions.
The Atlas indicates areas of intense use along the coastline requiring
careful management and provides potential foresight on likely
consequences of specific decisions. Further, the Atlas indicates
gaps in knowledge and information base, where additional efforts may be
directed. The Atlas will also act in other ways as a guide to
recreational opportunities and tourist attractions.
In developing the Atlas, the main objective was to collate available geospatial datasets and information on the marine environment and to summarize it into an African Marine Atlas suite.
The website is one of a set of Marine Atlas products that will include web data services, web mapping and an Atlas publication when completed.
The Atlas was realized through intensive work between May 2006 and February 2007 by a team of 16 marine scientists and GIS experts from NODC’s in Benin, Ghana, Kenya, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Senegal, Seychelles, South Africa, and Tanzania. International ocean data experts provided key inputs in data analysis. It is based on an extensive survey of coastal and marine data needs undertaken in early 2006 in all the countries participating in ODINAFRICA.
Primary partners in this project were the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), and the African Coelecanth Ecosystem Programme (ACEP). UNEP will develop a clearinghouse and information system on coastal and marine resources of Eastern Africa from the regional atlas. The Atlas has brought great benefits to participating national institutions and Africa as a whole, by encouraging scientists to work together, learn new techniques, and build teams that will continue to regularly update the Atlas with national and local scale data sets.
Recent article from GeoConnexion (23 Sept 2008): 'Development of the African Marine Atlas'
*NOTE: the dynamic atlas (http://w2.vliz.be/vmdcdata/ama/) is under development, and downloadable files can be accessed from the static HTML atlas at http://iodeweb2.vliz.be/omap/OMAP/




