데이터셋 상세
호주
Tasmanian Flood Recovery 2019
The Tasmanian Flood Recovery 2019 LiDAR dataset is being collected in 2019 to capture a number of Rural and Human Settlement areas throughout Tasmania. LiDAR data capture began in December 2018 and will be completed by February 2020.
데이터 정보
연관 데이터
Catchment boundaries - Strahler Ordered
공공데이터포털
Catchment boundary data - high resolution, nested digital product for Tasmania (inc Bass Strait Islands)
Dept of Environment, Water and Natural Resources - SA Land Cover
공공데이터포털
The South Australian Land Cover Layers 1987- 2015 spatial land cover datasets for 6 time periods (1987-1990, 1990-1995, 1995-2000, 2000-2005, 2005-2010 and 2010-2015). This dataset can be used to inform spatial and temporal (5 year) summaries of the described land cover types for SA. The capture method and general nature of the classes are most useful for landscape and regional scale assessment.
NGSC St Arnaud Flood study 2019
공공데이터포털
Data hosted on data.gov.au
Tasmania Landsat Mosaic
공공데이터포털
Composite top of atmosphere reflectance image using Landsat 7 ETM+ and Landsat 8 OLI data acquired between November – April each year. Individual Landsat scenes have been masked for cloud and cloud shadow and then combined to produce a gap free image of Tasmania. This image has been produced to facilitate modelling of Foliage Projective Cover and woody change detection work within the Land Cover Program at DPIPWE. This mosaic currently utilises top of atmosphere reflectance imagery with a transformation applied to OLI data. A corresponding dataset, titled Tasmania Landsat Mosaic Date Codes, can be used to identify the source date for each pixel in the scene.
DCCEEW_Geospatial - Nested Catchments Data for the Australian Continent Minimum Area Threshold 50 Square Kilometres
공공데이터포털
This dataset is a vectorized version of the Nested Catchments dataset with a minimum area threshold of 50 square kilometres created by the Centre for Resource and Environmental Studies. The Nested Catchments grid dataset was available as a public download via the National Land and Water Resources Audit (NLWRA) website, and has been vectorized by staff within the Environmental Resources Information Network (ERIN) within the department.Under contract to the National Land and Water Resources Audit, the Centre for Resource and Environmental Studies at the Australian National University created a nested series of drainage basins, catchments and sub-catchments from version 2 of the 9 second digital elevation model of Australia. This dataset shows as a polygon coverage the nested catchments data with a minimum area threshold of 50 square kilometres.The revised version 2 DEM overcomes significant deficiencies in the drainage structure of the first DEM. When amalgamated, the new catchments show close but not complete agreement with the Australia's River Basins data from AUSLIG 1997. There are discrepancies in the Western Drainage Division. There are also some minor discrepancies in some catchment boundaries.NOTE: This item refers to a dataset available under a Departmental Deed. The related metadata is available for download as a Word document as necessary. Additional information about this dataset or requests for access to the data should be directed to geospatial@dcceew.gov.au
Tasmanian Land Use 2015
공공데이터포털
The Tasmanian land use 2015 spatial data set is produced at catchment scale which is undertaken through the Australian Collaborative Land Use and Management Program (ACLUMP) using standards set out in the 'Guidelines for land use mapping in Australia: principals, procedures and definitions, 4th edition 2011' and âAddendum to the Guidelines for land use mapping in Australia: principles, procedures and definition, 4th Editionâ. Land use is classified by its prime use using a hierarchical structure, Australian Land Use and Management Classification (ALUMC) v8, which allows attribution as broad classes to individual commodities. This produces nationally consistent land use mapping to plan for and achieve productive agriculture and prosperous regional communities. Land use information shows how we use the landscape, whether that is for food production, forestry, nature conservation, water storage or urban development. The data set has been derived through spatial analysis of ancillary data sets, interpretation from imagery (Google Earth, State Orthophoto and Landsat composite) and expert knowledge through stakeholder engagements. The development of a modelling process to create the data set allows a repeatable process for future iterations of land use mapping. The land use mapping coverage is available for mixed dates at a scale that varies according to the intensity of land use activities and landscape context. This iteration of land use mapping is for improved biosecurity outcomes to improve biosecurity risk management and emergency disease preparedness through updated land use mapping of horticulture and intensive animal production. Land use mapping is completed to the secondary and tertiary level with commodity information for priority land use classes focusing on dairy grazing, sheds and yards, vineyards, stock aggregation points and nurseries. Australian Land Use and Management Classification (ALUMC) v8 comprises of five primary classes, identified in order of increasing levels of intervention or potential impact on the natural landscape. Water is included separately as a sixth primary class. Primary and secondary levels relate to the principal land use. Tertiary classes may include additional information on commodity groups, specific commodities, land management practices or vegetation information. The primary, secondary and tertiary codes work together to provide increasing levels of detail about the land use. Land may be subject to a number of concurrent land uses. For example, while the main management objective of a multiple-use production forest may be timber production, it may also provide conservation, recreation, grazing and water catchment land uses. In these cases, production forestry is commonly identified in the ALUM code as the prime land use. The primary classes of land use in the ALUM Classification are: 1. Conservation and natural environments - land used primarily for conservation purposes, based on maintaining the essentially natural ecosystems present 2. Production from relatively natural environments - land used mainly for primary production with limited change to the native vegetation 3. Production from dryland agriculture and plantations - land used mainly for primary production based on dryland farming systems 4. Production from irrigated agriculture and plantations - land used mostly for primary production based on irrigated farming 5. Intensive uses - land subject to extensive modification, generally in association with closer residential settlement, commercial or industrial uses 6. Water - water features (water is regarded as an essential aspect of the classification, even though it is primarily a land cover type, not a land use)
NGSC St Arnaud Flood Study
공공데이터포털
Data hosted on data.gov.au
Catchment Boundaries of Tasmanian Rivers
공공데이터포털
The catchment boundaries of 205 Tasmanian rivers were derived from 1:100,000 map sheets for an Ocean Rescue 2000 funded study , Regional Classification of Tasmanian Coastal Waters - Stage 2, EstuariesThe report for this study is titled " A Classification of Tasmanian Estuaries and Assessment of their Conservation Significance: an Analysis using Ecological and Physical Attributes, Population and Land Use" by G.J.Edgar, N.S.Barrett and D.J.Graddon, 1999.