Transcript
Page 1: Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocaching R. D. Shelton CS111 Loyola College

Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocachingand Geocaching

R. D. SheltonR. D. Shelton

CS111CS111

Loyola CollegeLoyola College

Page 2: Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocaching R. D. Shelton CS111 Loyola College

OutlineOutline

• Introduction / Theme

• Party Treasure Hunts

• Orienteering

• Global Positioning System (GPS)

• The Geocaching Movement

• Try It!

Page 3: Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocaching R. D. Shelton CS111 Loyola College

Introduction / ThemeIntroduction / Theme

• Geocaching is the latest, high-tech version of the party game of treasure hunting.

• It uses cheap, handheld GPS navigation devices to find caches placed by hobbyists.

• Caches just contain some items to prove that you have found them

• You will have a chance to check it out.• But, first, where did this game come from?

Page 4: Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocaching R. D. Shelton CS111 Loyola College

Treasure HuntsTreasure Hunts

• Usually this is a party game for children

• An adult hides a cache for each team and provides clues or a map to locate it

• Teams of children try to find the caches as quickly as possible to win a prize

• Most are thrilled when they discover the treasure

Page 5: Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocaching R. D. Shelton CS111 Loyola College

OrienteeringOrienteering

• Orienteering has been described as "running while playing chess.“

• Orienteering began in Scandinavia in the 1800s as military training. In 1919 it was organized as a competitive sport by Ernst Killander

• Players are given a topographic map with the control points circled. Each point has a flag marker and a punch to mark the scorecard.

• Competitive matches involve picking the fastest of several routes, finding the control points, and running the course as fast as possible.

Page 6: Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocaching R. D. Shelton CS111 Loyola College

Sample Orienteering Course (For small children)

© 1994 New England Orienteering Club, Inc.

Map Legend

Page 7: Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocaching R. D. Shelton CS111 Loyola College

Global Positioning SystemGlobal Positioning System

• GPS is a U.S. DOD system• GPS has 24 satellites that orbit the earth in 12

hours. There are 5 - 8 visible anywhere.• Satellite signals are processed in a small GPS

receiver to compute position, velocity and time. • Four satellite signals can compute positions in

three dimensions and the time offset in the receiver clock.

• Accuracy can be as good as 10 meters

Page 8: Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocaching R. D. Shelton CS111 Loyola College

How GPS gets its data

Page 9: Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocaching R. D. Shelton CS111 Loyola College

GeocachingGeocaching

• This growing outdoor sport is easy for anyone to play. The challenging part is finding the cache using a handheld GPS receiver.

• Once geocachers find a cache, they:– fill out the logbook– take something out of the cache– put something in the cache– return the cache to the same position

• Caches consist of a waterproof container hidden in the local terrain. The container has a logbook, plus toys, books, money, jewelry, trinkets, etc.

• The next few slides are a typical cache description on the Web

Page 10: Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocaching R. D. Shelton CS111 Loyola College

The closest cache to where we are sitting

Page 11: Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocaching R. D. Shelton CS111 Loyola College

Can you decrypt the hint?

Page 12: Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocaching R. D. Shelton CS111 Loyola College

Zooming in on the map show the location closely

Page 13: Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocaching R. D. Shelton CS111 Loyola College

Some log entries for the Stoney Run cache; note the number of caches found by these fanatics!

Page 14: Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocaching R. D. Shelton CS111 Loyola College

Try It! Your Geocaching ChallengeTry It! Your Geocaching Challenge

• Go to www.geocaching.org, create an account, find the closest cache

• Checkout the GPS unit for your team or date

• Find the cache

• Log your discovery

• If you like it, buy a GPS, place a cache, post it at the geocaching site

Page 15: Treasure Hunts, Orienteering, and Geocaching R. D. Shelton CS111 Loyola College

Links to More Links to More

• Company that organizes treasure hunts based on orienteering for kid parties http://www.treasurehuntadventures.com/parties.html

• U.S. Orienteering Federation www.us.orienteering.org/• GPS System

www.colorado.edu/geography/gcraft/notes/gps/gps_f.html

• GPS units www.garmin.com/outdoor/geocaching/units.html

• Geocaching site www.geocaching.com


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