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by dataflow 906 days ago
I'm confused, how does moving 2.7 inches a year translate into 656 feet over 25 years? Was it moving tens or hundreds of times faster a few decades ago?
2 comments

Basically, before 1994 the official Australia coordinate system was not optimized for GPS, which was not common when the system was developed, and so didn't exactly align with global coordinates. The 656 foot change was mostly about that, not about tectonic changes.

AGD is Australian Geodetic Datum of 1984 and GDA94 is Geocentric Datum Of Australia 1994.

> The AGD provided a reference system that best fit the shape of the earth in the Australian Region but its origin did not coincide with the centre of mass of the earth. National datums were commonly non-geocentric before satellite based navigation systems were established in the early 1970’s. The distance between the origin points of GDA94 and AGD is approximately 200 metres. When the coordinates of a point on the Earth’s surface are converted from AGD to GDA94 this translates to a coordinate difference of approximately the same amount. The difference varies slightly depending on where you are in Australia.

- https://www.icsm.gov.au/datum/australian-geodetic-datum-1966...

> Previously, a change of about 200 metres occurred in the year 2000 when Australia shifted from the Australian Geodetic Datum 1984 (AGD84) to the Australian Geocentric Datum 1994 (GDA94).

- https://www.dmp.wa.gov.au/News/Geocentric-Datum-of-Australia...

Nowadays you can use the Australian Terrestrial Reference Frame, which is time dependent and automatically adjusts to compensate for tectonic movement: https://www.icsm.gov.au/australian-terrestrial-reference-fra....

I assume that should be 6.56 feet or some similar miscalculation converting from metric to imperial measurements
Or Swedish feet (29.69 cm), perhaps an Amsterdam foot (28.3133 cm)?

Perhaps make it half and half (and undocumented) so that neighbours can embark on generational land feuds.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_units_of_measurement#O... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dutch_units_of_measurement#Voe...