“…Although some were reduced using nearby observatories, ideally these surveys will be resubmitted along with total field values but they can likely be utilized, as is, given further isolation of the crustal field by each data user and for each affected survey. A host of other data quality issues occur such as data reported in the wrong units (e.g., fathoms instead of meters), data inappropriately scaled by factors of ten by archivists, unreconciled gravimeter drift and tare artifacts (e.g., Figure c), vessel motion artifacts, a systemic tendency to omit observed gravity from the majority of archive files (62% of gravity legs lack observed gravity measurements), ∼7,500 m depth offsets stemming from erroneous digitization of two‐way travel time echograms, inaccurate navigation especially among the many older data sets, excessive speed due to temporary loss of satellite or radio navigation signals or inappropriate filtering across geographic discontinuities, navigation passing over land, and the presence of outliers and unrealistic data gradients (Chandler & Wessel, , ; Smith, ; Wessel & Watts, ). These and a plethora of other data problems warranting our diligent supervision (e.g., hardware malfunctions, operator errors, and software crashes) continue to occur at sea.…”