I wanted to share my experience finding and fixing a misplaced lake and dam as an example of what I’ve been working on in case it’s of interest to anyone else. I think I’ve picked a good example of what I’ve been finding. I also tried to make it as short and to the point as possible and then made this too long anyway. Here we go!
Finding a problem
Rowe Lake (gnis:feature_id=1640193) (node) and Rowe Lake Dam (gnis:feature_id=1640194)(node) were two nodes on the side of a mountain next to a road in Monroe County, Tennessee. There were two problems with that:
- On satellite there was no lake or dam visible in the area. Which isn’t proof this is the wrong location, but it looks like solid trees.
- The GNIS tags on both nodes had them in county 157: Shelby County, over 300 miles away on the other side of the state.
Not finding a solution
My first attempt to find the location for this lake and dam didn’t work so well but I wanted to mention this. I searched the web for Rowe Lake, and Rowe Lake, Tennessee. There are a bunch of results, but they all seem to have been generated off of those same coordinates from GNIS! Fishing, weather, hiking, and lodging, all for a patch of forest with no easy foot access! Even the ones that describe it as being in Shelby County still give the coordinates in Monroe County. So much anti-helpful content from such a small piece of information.
Actually finding it
So where is it? The county Rowe Lake is supposed to be in (Shelby) is due West of the coordinates given. What if the latitude was right, but the longitude was the problem?
In JOSM I began searching along the line at 35.325° North for anything lake-like. Shelby County is 25 miles wide however. I’m scrolling while zoomed all the way in and not finding it, at least not very quickly.
What if only part of the longitude is wrong? Shelby County extends from about -89.63°W to about -90.09°W. GNIS’s longitude was -84.0499°W. What if we try -90.0499°W at the same latitude? A whole number of degrees difference.
Hey, that’s a lake with a flat, dam-like side! But is it right? Enter the hero of this story: the United States Army Corp of Engineers’ National Inventory of Dams!
Yup, found it. So I moved the lake and dam nodes, used them when tracing the outline of the lake, and tagged the dam with the nice id number the NID provides (TN15714). I’ve also sent the correction for the lake’s coordinates to GNIS, since they don’t track dams any more. I haven’t contacted them before, hopefully they’ll make an update. Either way, this was fun for me. Thanks for reading!
Extra info
This is one example of the edits I’ve been working on for the past few weeks. There have been a bunch of lakes and dams I was able to successfully (re)locate the same way, but other patterns emerged as well. I also wanted to share that perspective (briefly-ish):
- There were many lakes and dams where a one digit change in its coordinates gets it into the county specified by GNIS, and the new location matches what is in the National Inventory of Dams (NID).
- Almost as many cases where the coordinates were right and the GNIS county was simply wrong. Again, the NID came to the rescue for confirmation.
- A bunch where the coordinates weren’t wrong they were just very close to the county border and the dam really is in both counties.
- Sometimes the coordinates were wrong but GNIS already fixed them by creating new entries that were also already imported into OSM. So you move the lake and dam nodes to the correct location but another lake and dam with the same name is already there.
- Finally, there are times where the coordinates were wrong, GNIS made new entries with the correct info, and a body of water near the incorrect location somehow picked up the same name as the one a hundred miles away. An example is Tabernacle Camp Lake at the Tabernacle Campground in Monroe County, Georgia. And then Tabernacle Camp Lake, almost exactly one degree longitude to the west, in the middle of somebody’s home or farm. So you have the NID showing a dam at the place the campground actually is, but the NHD is showing a lake with that name at the other location! So for now, I guess both exist.