Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
1:1,000,000 raster map showing the County boundaries of Northern Ireland. A raster map is a static image displayed on screen which is suitable as background mapping. 1:1 000,000 Raster is smallest scale OSNI raster product giving an excellent overview of Northern Ireland. Published here for OpenData. By download or use of this dataset you agree to abide by the Open Government Data Licence.Please Note for Open Data NI Users: Esri Rest API is not Broken, it will not open on its own in a Web Browser but can be copied and used in Desktop and Webmaps
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
The OSNI Large-scale boundaries is a polygon dataset consisting of County Boundaries.The data has been extracted from OSNI Largescale database and has been topologically cleansed and attributed to create a seamless dataset. This service is published for OpenData. By download or use of this dataset you agree to abide by the LPS Open Government Data Licence.Please Note for Open Data NI Users: Esri Rest API is not Broken, it will not open on its own in a Web Browser but can be copied and used in Desktop and Webmaps
Polygon dataset showing the 6 counties of Northern Ireland e.g. County Armagh, County Tyrone etc which were the primary local government geography of Northern Ireland before the introduction of unitary authorities in 1972. A PNG map showing the Northern Ireland county boundaries was downloaded from wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Northern_Ireland_-_Counties.png The PNG was georeferenced in QGIS using control points with reference to an OGL dataset downloaded from the UK Data Service showing the Northern Ireland coastline. Internal county boundaries were digitised from the georeferenced PNG as a set of polylines. These polylines were then snapped to the coastline features and polygons were generated. A county name was then assigned to each polygon in the attribute table. GIS vector data. This dataset was first accessioned in the EDINA ShareGeo Open repository on 2014-02-24 and migrated to Edinburgh DataShare on 2017-02-22.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. The work resulted in a series of 21 data layers which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of: Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand. Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat. The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap NI dataset. A user guide 'The Mineral Resources of Northern Ireland digital dataset (version 1)' OR/12/039 describing the creation and use of the data is available. A companion set of data with the internal boundaries retained is also available.
http://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licencehttp://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licence
Counties were formerly administrative units across the whole of the UK. Due to various administrative restructurings, however, the only administrative areas still referred to as 'counties' are the Non-Metropolitan Districts of England. The English Metropolitan Districts, although no longer administrative units, are also used for statistical purposes.
The Counties area list contains 35 areas of the following constituent English geographies:
Please visit ONS Beginner's Guide to UK Geography for more info.
The boundaries are available as either extent of the realm (usually this is the Mean Low Water mark but in some cases boundaries extend beyond this to include off shore islands) or
clipped to the coastline (Mean High Water mark).
This map shows the extent of the various datasets comprising the World Elevation dynamic (Terrain, TopoBathy) and tiled (Terrain 3D, TopoBathy 3D, World Hillshade, World Hillshade (Dark)) services.The tiled services (Terrain 3D, TopoBathy 3D, World Hillshade, World Hillshade (Dark)) also include an additional data source from Maxar's Precision3D covering parts of the globe.Topography sources listed in the table below are part of Terrain, TopoBathy, Terrain 3D, TopoBathy 3D, World Hillshade and World Hillshade (Dark), while bathymetry sources are part of TopoBathy and TopoBathy 3D only. Data Source Native Pixel Size Approximate Pixel Size (meters) Coverage Primary Source Country/Region
Topography
Australia 1m 1 meter 1 Partial areas of Australia Geoscience Australia Australia
Moreton Bay, Australia 1m 1 meter 1 Moreton Bay region, Australia Moreton Bay Regional Council Australia
New South Wales, Australia 5m 5 meters 5 New South Wales State, Australia DFSI Australia
SRTM 1 arc second DEM-S 0.0002777777777779 degrees 31 Australia Geoscience Australia Australia
Burgenland 50cm 0.5 meters 0.5 Burgenland State, Austria Land Burgenland Austria
Upper Austria 50cm 0.5 meters 0.5 Upper Austria State, Austria Land Oberosterreich Austria
Austria 1m 1 meter 1 Austria BEV Austria
Austria 10m 10 meters 10 Austria BEV Austria
Wallonie 50cm 0.5 meters 0.5 Wallonie state, Belgium Service public de Wallonie (SPW) Belgium
Vlaanderen 1m 1 meter 1 Vlaanderen state, Belgium agentschap Digitaal Vlaanderen Belgium
Canada HRDEM 1m 1 meter 1 Partial areas of Canada Natural Resources Canada Canada
Canada HRDEM 2m 2 meter 2 Partial areas of the southern part of Canada Natural Resources Canada Canada
Denmark 40cm 0.4 meters 0.4 Denmark KDS Denmark
Denmark 10m 10 meters 10 Denmark KDS Denmark
England 1m 1 meter 1 England Environment Agency England
Estonia 1m 1 meter 1 Estonia Estonian Land Board Estonia
Estonia 5m 5 meters 5 Estonia Estonian Land Board Estonia
Estonia 10m 10 meters 10 Estonia Estonian Land Board Estonia
Finland 2m 2 meters 2 Finland NLS Finland
Finland 10m 10 meters 10 Finland NLS Finland
France 1m 1 meter 1 France IGN-F France
Bavaria 1m 1 meter 1 Bavaria State, Germany Bayerische Vermessungsverwaltung Germany
Berlin 1m 1 meter 1 Berlin State, Germany Geoportal Berlin Germany
Brandenburg 1m 1 meter 1 Brandenburg State, Germany GeoBasis-DE/LGB Germany
Hamburg 1m 1 meter 1 Hamburg State, Germany LGV Hamburg Germany
Hesse 1m 1 meter 1 Hesse State, Germany HVBG Germany
Nordrhein-Westfalen 1m 1 meter 1 Nordrhein-Westfalen State, Germany Land NRW Germany
Saxony 1m 1 meter 1 Saxony State, Germany Landesamt für Geobasisinformation Sachsen (GeoSN) Germany
Sachsen-Anhalt 2m 2 meters 2 Sachsen-Anhalt State, Germany LVermGeo LSA Germany
Hong Kong 50cm 0.5 meters 0.5 Hong Kong CEDD Hong Kong SAR
Italy TINITALY 10m 10 meters 10 Italy INGV Italy
Japan DEM5A *, DEM5B * 0.000055555555 degrees 5 Partial areas of Japan GSI Japan
Japan DEM10B * 0.00011111111 degrees 10 Japan GSI Japan
Latvia 1m 1 meters 1 Latvia Latvian Geospatial Information Agency Latvia
Latvia 10m 10 meters 10 Latvia Latvian Geospatial Information Agency Latvia
Latvia 20m 20 meters 20 Latvia Latvian Geospatial Information Agency Latvia
Lithuania 1m 1 meters 1 Lithuania NZT Lithuania
Lithuania 10m 10 meters 10 Lithuania NZT Lithuania
Netherlands (AHN3/AHN4) 50cm 0.5 meters 0.5 Netherlands AHN Netherlands
Netherlands (AHN3/AHN4) 10m 10 meters 10 Netherlands AHN Netherlands
New Zealand 1m 1 meters 1 Partial areas of New Zealand Land Information New Zealand (Sourced from LINZ. CC BY 4.0) New Zealand
Northern Ireland 10m 10 meters 10 Northern Ireland OSNI Northern Ireland
Norway 10m 10 meters 10 Norway NMA Norway
Poland 1m 1 meter 1 Partial areas of Poland GUGIK Poland
Poland 5m 5 meters 5 Partial areas of Poland GUGIK Poland
Scotland 1m 1 meter 1 Partial areas of Scotland Scottish Government et.al Scotland
Slovakia 1m 1 meter 1 Slovakia ÚGKK SR Slovakia
Slovakia 10m 10 meters 10 Slovakia GKÚ Slovakia
Slovenia 1m 1 meter 1 Slovenia ARSO Slovenia
Madrid City 1m 1 meter 1 Madrid city, Spain Ayuntamiento de Madrid Spain
Spain 2m (MDT02 2019 CC-BY 4.0 scne.es) 2 meters 2 Partial areas of Spain IGN Spain
Spain 5m 5 meters 5 Spain IGN Spain
Spain 10m 10 meters 10 Spain IGN Spain
Varnamo 50cm 0.5 meters 0.5 Varnamo municipality, Sweden Värnamo Kommun Sweden
Canton of Basel-Landschaft 25cm 0.25 meters 0.25 Canton of Basel-Landschaft, Switzerland Geoinformation Kanton Basel-Landschaft Switzerland
Grand Geneva 50cm 0.5 meters 0.5 Grand Geneva metropolitan, France/Switzerland SITG Switzerland and France
Switzerland swissALTI3D 50cm 0.5 meters 0.5 Switzerland and Liechtenstein swisstopo Switzerland and Liechtenstein
Switzerland swissALTI3D 10m 10 meters 10 Switzerland and Liechtenstein swisstopo Switzerland and Liechtenstein
OS Terrain 50 50 meters 50 United Kingdom Ordnance Survey United Kingdom
Douglas County 1ft 1 foot 0.3048 Douglas County, Nebraska, USA Douglas County NE United States
Lancaster County 1ft 1 foot 0.3048 Lancaster County, Nebraska, USA Lancaster County NE United States
Sarpy County 1ft 1 foot 0.3048 Sarpy County, Nebraska, USA Sarpy County NE United States
Cook County 1.5 ft 1.5 foot 0.46 Cook County, Illinois, USA ISGS United States
3DEP 1m 1 meter 1 Partial areas of the conterminous United States, Puerto Rico USGS United States
NRCS 1m 1 meter 1 Partial areas of the conterminous United States NRCS USDA United States
San Mateo County 1m 1 meter 1 San Mateo County, California, USA San Mateo County CA United States
FEMA LiDAR DTM 3 meters 3 Partial areas of the conterminous United States FEMA United States
NED 1/9 arc second 0.000030864197530866 degrees 3 Partial areas of the conterminous United States USGS United States
3DEP 5m 5 meter 5 Alaska, United States USGS United States
NED 1/3 arc second 0.000092592592593 degrees 10 conterminous United States, Hawaii, Alaska, Puerto Rico, and Territorial Islands of the United States USGS United States
NED 1 arc second 0.0002777777777779 degrees 31 conterminous United States, Hawaii, Alaska, Puerto Rico, Territorial Islands of the United States; Canada and Mexico USGS United States
NED 2 arc second 0.000555555555556 degrees 62 Alaska, United States USGS United States
Wales 1m 1 meter 1 Wales Welsh Government Wales
WorldDEM4Ortho 0.00022222222 degrees 24 Global (excluding the countries of Azerbaijan, DR Congo and Ukraine) Airbus Defense and Space GmbH World
SRTM 1 arc second 0.0002777777777779 degrees 31 all land areas between 60 degrees north and 56 degrees south except Australia NASA World
EarthEnv-DEM90 0.00083333333333333 degrees 93 Global N Robinson,NCEAS World
SRTM v4.1 0.00083333333333333 degrees 93 all land areas between 60 degrees north and 56 degrees south except Australia CGIAR-CSI World
GMTED2010 7.5 arc second 0.00208333333333333 degrees 232 Global USGS World
GMTED2010 15 arc second 0.00416666666666666 degrees 464 Global USGS World
GMTED2010 30 arc second 0.0083333333333333 degrees 928 Global USGS World
Bathymetry
Canada west coast 10 meters 10 Canada west coast Natural Resources Canada Canada
Gulf of Mexico 40 feet 12 Northern Gulf of Mexico BOEM Gulf of Mexico
MH370 150 meters 150 MH370 flight search area (Phase 1) of Indian Ocean Geoscience Australia Indian Ocean
Switzerland swissBATHY3D 1 - 3 meters 1, 2, 3 Lakes of Switzerland swisstopo Switzerland
NCEI 1/9 arc second 0.000030864197530866 degrees 3 Puerto Rico, U.S Virgin Islands and partial areas of eastern and western United States coast NOAA NCEI United States
NCEI 1/3 arc second 0.000092592592593 degrees 10 Partial areas of eastern and western United States coast NOAA NCEI United States
CRM 1 arc second (Version 2) 0.0002777777777779 degrees 31 Southern California coast of United States NOAA United States
NCEI 1 arc second 0.0002777777777779 degrees 31 Partial areas of northeastern United States coast NOAA NCEI United States
CRM 3 arc second 0.00083333333333333 degrees 93 United States Coast NOAA United States
NCEI 3 arc second 0.00083333333333333 degrees 93 Partial areas of northeastern United States coast NOAA NCEI United States
Northern Ireland Housing Executive Web Mapping Portal
https://www.ons.gov.uk/methodology/geography/licenceshttps://www.ons.gov.uk/methodology/geography/licences
A PDF map shows the Regions and their constituent counties, metropolitan counties, Greater London authority and unitary authorities in England, council areas in Scotland, unitary authorities in Wales and district council areas in Northern Ireland as at April 2011. (File Size - 638 KB).
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Karst is a type of landscape where the bedrock has dissolved and created features such as caves, enclosed depressions (sinkholes), disappearing streams, springs and turloughs (seasonal lakes). Limestone is the most common type of soluble rock. As rain falls it picks up carbon dioxide (CO2) in the air. When this rain reaches the ground and passes through the soil it picks up more CO2 and forms a weak acid solution. The acidified rain water trickles down through cracks and holes in the limestone and over time dissolves the rock. After traveling underground, sometimes for long distances, this water is then discharged at springs, many of which are cave entrances. There are many kinds of karst landforms, ranging in size from millimetres to kilometres. Dolines or sinkholes are small to medium sized enclosed depressions. Uvalas and poljes are large enclosed depressions. A swallow hole is the point where surface stream sinks underground. Turloughs are seasonal lakes. Springs occur where groundwater comes out at the surface, karst springs are usually much bigger than non-karst springs. Estevelles can act as springs or swallow holes. Dry valleys are similar to normal river valleys except they do not have a stream flowing at the bottom. A cave is a natural underground opening in rock large enough for a person to enter. Superficial Solution Features can be seen on rocks dissolved by rain and include pits, grooves, channels, clints (blocks) and grikes (joints). Please read the lineage for further details. This map shows the currently mapped karst landforms in Ireland. Geologists map and record information in the field. They also examine old maps and aerial photos. We collect new data to update our map and also use data made available from other sources such as academia and consultants. It is NOT a complete database and only shows areas that have been mapped by GSI, or submitted to the GSI. Many karst features are not included in this database. The user should not rely only on this database, and should undertake their own site study for karst features in the area of interest if needed. It is a vector dataset. Vector data portray the world using points, lines, and polygons (areas). The karst data is shown as points. Each point holds information on: Karst Feature Unique ID, Historic GSI Karst Feature ID, Karst Feature Type, Karst Feature Name, if it’s within another Karst Feature, Location Accuracy, Data Source, Comments, Details and County. Water tracing means ‘tagging’ water, usually by adding a colour or dye, to see where it goes. Dye is usually added to a sinking stream and all possible outlet points (such as springs and rivers) are tested for the dye. Water traces are recorded as a straight line between the location of tracer input (e.g. swallow hole) and detection (e.g. spring), but they don’t show the actual path water may take underground, which is likely to be much more winding. It is mainly used in karst areas to find out groundwater flow rates, the direction the water is travelling underground and to help define catchments (Zone of Contributions). The dataset should be used alongside the Karst Landforms 1:40,000 Ireland (ROI/NI) ITM. Geologists map and record information in the field. We collect new data to update our map and also use data made available from other sources such as Academia and Consultants. It is a vector dataset. Vector data portray the world using points, lines, and polygons (areas). The karst data is shown as lines. Each line holds information on: Tracer Line Unique ID, Input Site, Input Historic GSI Karst Feature ID, Output Site. Output Historic GSI Karst Feature ID, Tracer Test Date, Weather Conditions, Tracer Used, Quantity, Operator, Results, Minimum Groundwater Flow Rate, Hydraulic Gradient (slope of water table), Data Source, Catchment, Peak Concentration, Other Information, Flow Path, County, Length (m), Direction and Quality Checked.
In 2023, almost nine million people lived in Greater London, making it the most populated ceremonial county in England. The West Midlands Metropolitan County, which contains the large city of Birmingham, was the second-largest county at 2.98 million inhabitants, followed by Greater Manchester and then West Yorkshire with populations of 2.95 million and 2.4 million, respectively. Kent, Essex, and Hampshire were the three next-largest counties in terms of population, each with around 1.89 million people. A patchwork of regions England is just one of the four countries that compose the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, with England, Scotland and Wales making up Great Britain. England is therefore not to be confused with Great Britain or the United Kingdom as a whole. Within England, the next subdivisions are the nine regions of England, containing various smaller units such as unitary authorities, metropolitan counties and non-metropolitan districts. The counties in this statistic, however, are based on the ceremonial counties of England as defined by the Lieutenancies Act of 1997. Regions of Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland Like England, the other countries of the United Kingdom have their own regional subdivisions, although with some different terminology. Scotland’s subdivisions are council areas, while Wales has unitary authorities, and Northern Ireland has local government districts. As of 2022, the most-populated Scottish council area was Glasgow City, with over 622,000 inhabitants. In Wales, Cardiff had the largest population among its unitary authorities, and in Northern Ireland, Belfast was the local government area with the most people living there.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
About this layerThis data represents NIEA surveys and may not represent the entire extent of habitat or species across Northern Ireland.The Fen, swamp and flush Inventory incorporates evidence collected from a research contract to identify and survey areas of lowland fens of high nature conservation value in Counties Down and Armagh together with ongoing surveys by NIEA Conservation Science Habitat Survey Team (HST). The research focused on identifying fens in Counties Down and Armagh where the incidence of inter-drumlin fens is high. These fens are particularly important within Annex 1 of the Habitats Directive. The most extensive and diverse priority Lowland Fens and Reedbeds have also been identified in county Tyrone through surveys by HST. This only represents a partial dataset and does not include the complete priority Lowland Fen and Reedbed resource in Northern Ireland. Where point data only is available for older fen surveys across Northern Ireland, further mapping is required to provide a fuller representation of all priority fen communities in Counties Fermanagh, Derry/Londonderry and Antrim. Upland Flushes, Fens and Swamps are largely unrecorded.Data Sources:HST - Northern Ireland Environment AgencyDown and Armagh Fen Survey – Sheffield University - 1995Habitat Survey Team, Conservation Science: 1985 - 2014What can you do with the layer?Visualisation: This layer can be used for visualisation online in web maps.Analysis: This layer can be used in dashboards.Download: The data is downloadable.
Rivers Agency- An agency within the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development
http://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licencehttp://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licence
Local Authority is a generic term used to cover London Boroughs, Metropolitan Districts, Non-Metropolitan Districts, and Unitary Authorities in England; Unitary Authorities in Wales; Council Areas in Scotland; and Local Government Districts in Northern Ireland.
The Local Authorities area list contains 404 areas of the following constituent geographies:
Please visit ONS Beginner's Guide to UK Geography for more info.
The boundaries are available as either extent of the realm (usually this is the Mean Low Water mark but in some cases boundaries extend beyond this to include off shore islands) or
clipped to the coastline (Mean High Water mark).
http://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licencehttp://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licence
Electoral Wards/Divisions are the key building blocks of UK administrative geography. They are the spatial units used to elect local government councillors in metropolitan and non-metropolitan districts, unitary authorities and the London boroughs in England; unitary authorities in Wales; council areas in Scotland; and district council areas in Northern Ireland.
The Wards and Electoral Divisions list contains 9,481 areas of the following constituent geographies:
Please visit ONS Beginner's Guide to UK Geography for more info.
The boundaries are available as either extent of the realm (usually this is the Mean Low Water mark but in some cases boundaries extend beyond this to include off shore islands) or
clipped to the coastline (Mean High Water mark).
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Connected wind farm locations in Ireland (ex Northern Ireland) extracted from SEAI's Wind Atlas. Connected wind farms as per Eirgrid and ESB Networks reports which correspond to the wind farm layer on the SEAI Wind Atlas. (See references at description end.) In interpreting the information, PLEASE NOTE the following cautions: 1) Grid coordinates of substations have been used where the wind farm grid coordinates were not available in the planning application information. However, as a substation may or may not be located within the site of the wind farm it serves, it should be noted that the precise accuracy of this coordinate information cannot be assured. 2) Possible stand-alone projects not intended for connection to the Irish electricity grid are not included in this map. 3) The map entries are not necessarily all discrete wind farms. Some could be extensions to existing wind farms, and some could be formal registered capacity additions involving no physical addition of new wind turbines. Zipped collections of shapefiles are available in two spatial reference or coordinate systems: 1) Irish Transverse Mercator (ITM, EPSG:2157) 2) WGS 84 Web Mercator (EPSG:3857) References ESB Generator Statistics EirGrid Connected and Contracted Generators -- Ireland
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
This dataset is part of the Geographical repository maintained by Opendatasoft. This dataset contains data for regions in the United Kingdom.Government offices for the regions (GOR) were established across England in 1994. Reflecting a number of government departments, their aim was to work in partnership with local people and organisations in order to maximise prosperity and the quality of life within their area. In 1996 the GORs became the primary classification for the presentation of regional statistics. GORs were built up of complete counties/unitary authorities, so although they were subject to change, they always reflected administrative boundaries as at the end of the previous year. Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland were not subdivided into GORs but are listed with them as regions in UK-wide statistical comparisons. After the Comprehensive Spending Review, it was confirmed that the GORs would close on 31 March 2011, shifting focus away from regions to local areas. However, there is still a requirement to maintain a region-level geography for statistical purposes. Processors and tools are using this data.EnhancementsAdd ISO 3166-3 codes.Simplify geometries to provide better performance across the services.Add administrative hierarchy.
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Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
1:1,000,000 raster map showing the County boundaries of Northern Ireland. A raster map is a static image displayed on screen which is suitable as background mapping. 1:1 000,000 Raster is smallest scale OSNI raster product giving an excellent overview of Northern Ireland. Published here for OpenData. By download or use of this dataset you agree to abide by the Open Government Data Licence.Please Note for Open Data NI Users: Esri Rest API is not Broken, it will not open on its own in a Web Browser but can be copied and used in Desktop and Webmaps