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hoogten

Hoogten is the Dutch noun for heights or elevations and is used in geography, cartography and related fields to describe how high a point or surface lies relative to a reference level. In practice, hoogten can refer to natural terrain, built structures, or atmospheric phenomena when a vertical dimension is involved. The term is commonly paired with a reference datum, such as mean sea level, to specify an absolute height.

Measuring hoogten requires a vertical reference. Absolute heights are given above a standard level like mean

Measurement methods include leveling and GNSS/GPS surveys, as well as remote sensing techniques such as photogrammetry

Challenges in determining hoogten involve tidal effects, geoid variation, and land movement, which can cause height

sea
level,
while
relative
heights
describe
differences
between
locations.
In
the
Netherlands,
verticle
references
are
often
linked
to
the
NAP
(Normaal
Amsterdams
Peil)
system,
though
modern
datasets
may
be
tied
to
global
or
regional
datums
and
geoid
models.
Heights
can
be
expressed
as
meters
or
decimeters,
depending
on
precision
needs.
and
LiDAR.
Digital
elevation
models
(DEMs)
and
topographic
maps
compile
hoogten
over
large
areas
for
analysis
and
visualization.
Applications
cover
cartography,
urban
planning,
infrastructure
design,
flood
risk
assessment,
and
climate
research,
where
accurate
height
information
influences
drainage,
zoning,
and
hazard
mitigation.
values
to
differ
between
datums
or
over
time.
Converting
between
vertical
references
and
maintaining
consistent
height
data
across
datasets
are
ongoing
tasks
in
geoscience
and
engineering.
See
also
height,
elevation,
altitude,
topography,
and
digital
elevation
model.