데이터셋 상세
호주
Dept of Environment, Water and Natural Resources - Surface Soil Acidity (ASRIS)
Soils are classified according to the pH of the surface layer, according to the lower pH values recorded among similar soils, i.e. it is assumed that each soil class has a characteristic level of acidity, or is prone to that level of acidity under current climate and typical agricultural land use expected for that soil and locality. Surface soils are classified according to degree of acidity, and surface buffering capacity. This analysis is based on Soil Landscape Mapping of SA's agricultural districts using soil class information in the nationally-consistent Australian Soil Resource Information System (ASRIS) data format. Also available for download: Soil Acidity.
데이터 정보
연관 데이터
Dept of Environment, Water and Natural Resources - Subsoil Acidity (ASRIS)
공공데이터포털
Soils are classified according to the pH of the subsoil layer. Subsoil is defined as the depth range 30-80 cm. Rankings are made according to pH measurements and extrapolation between similar environments. The analysis is based on Soil Landscape Mapping of SA's agricultural districts using soil class information in the nationally-consistent Australian Soil Resource Information System (ASRIS) data format. Also available for download: Soil Acidity (SA-Format).
Dept of Environment, Water and Natural Resources - Subsurface Soil Acidity (ASRIS)
공공데이터포털
Soils are classified according to the pH of the subsurface layer. Subsurface soil refers to the layer immediately below the surface, and typically has a depth range of 10-20 through to 10-30 cm. The analysis is based on Soil Landscape Mapping of SA's agricultural districts using soil class information in the nationally-consistent Australian Soil Resource Information System (ASRIS) data format.
Department for Environment and Water - Current and Future Potential Soil Acidity (ASRIS)
공공데이터포털
Combines the assessment of soils that are currently acidic (or prone to acidification in the short term) and soils that are not currently recognised as acid prone, but could conceivably become acidic over the next 10-50 years (from 2015). The analysis is based on Soil Landscape Mapping of SA's agricultural districts using soil class information in the nationally-consistent Australian Soil Resource Information System (ASRIS) data format.
Dept of Environment, Water and Natural Resources - Soil Acidity
공공데이터포털
Soil acidity mapping highlights land where acidification due to normal farming practices is, or could become, a significant problem. Mapping shows surface and subsoil acidity, and surface buffering capacity (ability to withstand pH changes), while detailed proportion data are supplied for calculating respective areas of each soil acidity class (spatial data statistics). Also available for download in the Australian Soil Resource Information System format: Surface Soil Acidity; Subsurface Soil Acidity and Subsoil Acidity.