I'm sure this is really simple if you know anything about binary files, but I'm a newbie on that score.
How would I extract the data from NASA .hgt files? Here is a description from www2.jpl.nasa.gov/srtm/faq.html:
The SRTM data files have names like "N34W119.hgt". What do the
letters and numbers refer to, and what is ".hgt" format?
Each data file covers a one-degree-of-latitude by one-degree-of-longitude
block of Earth's surface. The first seven characters indicate the southwest
corner of the block, with N, S, E, and W referring to north, south, east,
and west. Thus, the "N34W119.hgt" file covers latitudes 34 to 35 North and
longitudes 118-119 West (this file includes downtown Los Angeles,
California). The filename extension ".hgt" simply stands for the word
"height", meaning elevation. It is NOT a format type. These files are
in "raw" format (no headers and not compressed), 16-bit signed integers,
elevation measured in meters above sea level, in a "geographic" (latitude
and longitude array) projection, with data voids indicated by -32768.
International 3-arc-second files have 1201 columns and 1201 rows of data,
with a total filesize of 2,884,802 bytes ( = 1201 x 1201 x 2). United
States 1-arc-second files have 3601 columns and 3601 rows of data, with a
total filesize of 25,934,402 bytes ( = 3601 x 3601 x 2). For more
information read the text file "SRTM_Topo.txt" at
http://edcftp.cr.usgs.gov/pub/data/srtm/Readme.html
Thanks for any help! I am going to use this data in a python script, so if you could not use any language-specific tricks for any other languages, that would be awesome.
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