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ICES Statistical Rectangles (aka "ICES Rectangles") is a gridded,
latitude-longitude The geographic coordinate system (GCS) is a spherical or ellipsoidal coordinate system for measuring and communicating positions directly on the Earth as latitude and longitude. It is the simplest, oldest and most widely used of the various ...
based area notation system covering the north-east Atlantic region developed by the
International Council for the Exploration of the Sea The International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES; french: Conseil International de l'Exploration de la Mer, ''CIEM'') is a regional fishery advisory body and the world's oldest intergovernmental science organization. ICES is headqu ...
(ICES) in the 1970s, for simplified analysis and visualization of spatial data of relevance to that organization's interests.ICES, 1977. "ICES Statistical Rectangle Coding System". ICES C 1977/Gen3. The individual rectangles that make up the system each measure 1 degree of longitude by 0.5 degrees of latitude and are intended to be roughly square in real world use in the ICES region of interest, approximately 30 nautical miles by 30 nautical miles (55×55 km) at 60°N, although the actual width varies with latitude, gradually becoming wider than they are high south of 60°N, and narrower further north. The grid covers the region from 36°N to 85°30'N and from 44°W to 69°E (quoted as 68°30') using a set of alphanumeric identifiers, with row of latitude (identifiers 01 through 99, from south to north) cited first, then column of longitude (identifiers A0-A3, then B0-B9, C0-C9 etc., from west to east). The last used column identifier is M8; column identifiers A4-A9, and prefix "I" (uppercase "i") i.e. columns "I"0-"I"9 are not used. The resulting grid is 113 columns by 99 rows, comprising 11,187 labelled 1×0.5 degree cells. An example cell designation is 37F3, which designates the 1×0.5 degree rectangle of which the south-west corner is 54°00'N, 03°00'E.ICES, Denmark
ICES statistical rectangles
Accessed 24 October 2021.
Marine Scotland Information
ICES Statistical Rectangles and Areas
Accessed 24 October 2021.
The grid covers both land and sea areas across its designated region, but as per the interests of its originating body, is typically employed for use with marine data such as analysis of marine resources, fishing activities, seabed habitat, etc., refer example references below. The full extent of the grid is visible in published figures such as Figs. 5-8 in Williamson ''et al''., 2017.Williamson, K., ''et al''., 2017. "United Kingdom commercial sea fisheries landings by Exclusive Economic Zone of capture: 2012 – 2016". Marine Management Organisation, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK, 15 pp. Available at https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/647579/United_Kingdom_commercial_sea_fisheries_landings_by_Exclusive_Economic_Zone_of_capture_2012___2016.pdf. To accommodate the visualization and/or analysis of finer scale data than is supported by the "standard" (1×0.5 degree) rectangles, an optional fifth character (as digits 1 through 9) can be used which will place a location within a finer 9-cell (3 by 3) sub-grid, for which the individual sub-rectangles then measure 20' of longitude by 10' of latitude (approximately 10×10 nautical miles). Sub-rectangle designations go north to south, then west to east, with 1 at the north west corner and 9 at the south east. ICES rectangles have been used for reporting and analysis in numerous marine publications since the 1970s; for recent examples see. A vector polygon representation of the ICES Statistical Rectangles is availabl
here


See also

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List of geodesic-geocoding systems A discrete global grid (DGG) is a tessellation, mosaic that covers the entire Earth's surface. Mathematically it is a space partitioning: it consists of a set of non-empty regions that form a Partition of a set, partition of the Earth's surface. ...
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Geocode A geocode is a code that represents a geographic entity (location or object). It is a unique identifier of the entity, to distinguish it from others in a finite set of geographic entities. In general the ''geocode'' is a human-readable and ...


References


External links


Example ICES Statistical Rectangles over the North Sea
plus adjacent land areas, from marineregions.org (horizontal scale is exaggerated on this map)
Another map
(slightly larger area, sea areas only annotated; horizontal and vertical scales are essentially correctly represented) {{DEFAULTSORT:ICES Statistical Rectangles Geocodes