Marine Navigation Charts and Use of Notices To Mariners
Marine Navigation Charts and Use of Notices To Mariners
mariners
Sections IV through VI are used for correcting other Admiralty publications in use on board and
not charts. Some of these publications are the List of Lights and fog signals, Sailing Directions,
Admiralty list of Radio Signals etc. There are hundreds of such publications on board, depending
on the trade of the ship and the voyages she is likely to make.
Large corrections
1. Check the Charts carried on board against the Index of Affected Charts in the NM
2. Check which notices affect charts on board, and find the Notice in section II
3. Note that, at the bottom of each notice is a list of all charts affected by it, as well as the
previous notice which affected that chart. This previous notice may be sometimes years
old, but this information assists in confirming that the last correction(s) have been made
on the chart in question.
4. Check that the previous notice has been applied to the chart (each chart has, at its
bottom left, a list of corrections written on it by whoever corrected the chart. This
information is also available in a separate Chart correction log that is maintained on
board)
5. If any charts have not been updated, they must be corrected to the previous notice
before the current notice is applied.
6. Tracings are used to correct charts, when available.
7. Corrections are made in indelible ink, ensuring that standard symbols are used, that the
correction is made neatly and accurately and does not obscure other information on the
chart.
8. After correction, an entry is made on the bottom left of the chart as well as the chart
correction log, as indicated earlier
Small corrections
As explained in the first article on chart correction, these mainly consist of Temp and Preliminary
Notices (also called T and P notices) and Navigational warnings (nav warnings)
1. Sections III and IV (See above) are detached from the NM and file. These give a list of
T and P notices and Nav warnings still in force.
2. Charts on board and in use in the present voyage are corrected for these notices. The
correction is made in pencil, as explained in the last article. This is because these
notices are transient and will change or vanish. (information available in same sections
III and IV of subsequent NMs)
3. While on the passage, other T, P notices and Nav Warnings may be received on Navtex,
VHF etc (see previous article). Charts in use will be corrected for these as the
information comes in.
To assist mariners in chart correction, the British Admiralty started publishing these in addition to
the weekly NMs a couple of decades ago. The salient features of the Cumulative NMs are as
follows:
• Contains the numbers of all Notices affecting all the charts that exist for the last 2 years
1. He has the latest edition of each chart on board (new editions of charts are published
regularly, just like books. When this happens, the older editions are defunct and must be
replaced)
2. Since he can read off the notices affecting each chart for the last two years, he can
confirm that all corrections on board have been made and marked on either the chart
itself, or in the separate chart correction log.
3. Note that the Cumulative NM does not give any details of the small corrections like T/P
notices and Nav warnings.
Conclusion
As can be seen, chart correction is a tedious but essential exercise. Done systematically, it ensures
that a mariner is always using a chart that has the most current information on it- an essential
ingredient of safety.
It may be noted that all British Admiralty publications on board- and there are scores of them- are
also corrected in a similar manner, through the use of Notices to Mariners.