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Grid References
What
is a tetrad?
Like many bird surveys the Atlas will use the Ordnance
Survey National Grid as a means of identifying locations of bird
records. There are various scales of resolution, but for the Atlas
we are working with 10-km squares and tetrads. A 10-km square as
its name suggests is a square 10 km by 10 km. A tetrad (from the
Greek tetras meaning four) on the other hand is a collection
of four 1-km squares arranged into a 2 km by 2 km square. There
are 25 tetrads within each 10-km square and these are labelled A
to Z, excluding O (to avoid confusion with zero), from bottom left
(SW) to top right (NE). The figure shows this diagrammatically.
A tetrad is then given its full reference as the 10-km square code
followed by the tetrad letter (e.g. TF73G). For more details of
giving complete grid references click here.
Do I need maps?
We strongly recommend you get an up to date map
of the area you propose to survey. Part of the fun of Atlas projects
is poring over maps, deciding on the best route to take you past
this pond, or that promising-looking wood. Ordnance Survey Landranger
maps (1:50,000) or Ordnance Survey Explorer maps (1:25,000) are
perfect for this purpose. In Ireland the Ordnance Survey of Ireland
Discovery Series (1:50,000) maps are most useful. A transparent
overlay for the Landranger maps showing a 10-km square and tetrads
is available from BTO by clicking
here.
Reading grid references
Correctly reading grid references is crucial for
many BTO surveys. A correct grid reference does not include the
map sheet number. All British grid references should begin with
two letters, those in Ireland starting with one letter, and followed
by a series of numbers (and/or the tetrad code). Correct examples
of grid references are:
TF73 - identifies a 10-km square in Britain
H64 - identifies a 10-km square in Ireland (occasionally written
as IH64)
TF7233 - identifies a 1-km square
TF722336 - identifies a point to the nearest 100 m
TF73G - identifies tetrad G within 10-km square TF73
For full details of how to read grid references
please click here.
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