4 datasets found
  1. g

    Cooper GW point data - salinity and hydrochemistry

    • gimi9.com
    • data.gov.au
    Updated May 23, 2020
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    (2020). Cooper GW point data - salinity and hydrochemistry [Dataset]. https://gimi9.com/dataset/au_95dbecf4-6e6c-4f84-a93e-289346cd21ae
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    Dataset updated
    May 23, 2020
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Abstract The dataset was derived by the Geological and Bioregional Assessment Program from Geoscience Australia's groundwater bore database. The processes undertaken to produce this derived dataset are described in the History field in this metadata statement. ## Attribution Geological and Bioregional Assessment Program ## History Pressure data compiled from petroleum well reports and PEP-SA database was converted to equivalent hydraulic head value. For wells that had equivalent Hydraulic head in the Hutton Sandstone, measurements in the well situated nearest to top of Hutton Sandstone were then extracted from the equivalent hydraulic head dataset then converted to a shapefile for spatial analysis in ArcGIS. In this Excel workbook, Pressure data compiled from Qld petroleum well reports for the Geological Bioregional Programme, as well as from PEP-SA database have been compiled in this spreadsheet. Pressure data was assessed for its suitability for conversion to an equivalent hydraulic head. Those passed QC were then converted to equivalent hydraulic head value. This dataset includes a summary of all compiled pressure data from Qld and SA datasources, the formulas and parameters used to convert the pressures to an equivalent hydraulic head. This Excel workbook, contains petroleum well formation test information, including pressure and temperature data that was compiled from Qld petroleum well completion reports for the Geological Bioregional Programme. Well completion reports were downloaded from QDEX. This Excel workbook, contains petroleum well formation test information, including pressure and temperature data that was extracted from PEPS-SA petroleum database for the Geological Bioregional Programme.

  2. g

    HUN SW Modelling Reaches and HRV lookup 20171121 v05 | gimi9.com

    • gimi9.com
    + more versions
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    HUN SW Modelling Reaches and HRV lookup 20171121 v05 | gimi9.com [Dataset]. https://gimi9.com/dataset/au_8c330d59-2ecc-4c35-8f9e-68b91a4ae98a
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    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Abstract The dataset was derived by the Bioregional Assessment Programme from multiple source datasets. The source datasets are identified in the Lineage field in this metadata statement. The processes undertaken to produce this derived dataset are described in the History field in this metadata statement. Contains line shapefiles and an excel spreadsheet and csv text file lookup table. The line shapefile derived from the Geofabric Surface Water Network streams (source data) and spatially represents the reaches described in the accompanying lookup table so that surface water modelling based Hydrological Response Variables (HRVs) can be applied spatially along stream lengths. Differs from previous versions in that some reaches previous designated as Ph (potentially impacted but not quantified) have now been assigned to a surface water modelling node. They include reach sections with no modelled change, no inferred change etc and thus extend outside the SW ZoPHC. All reaches described in interpolations spreadsheet are intact in that they extent outside the ZoPHC and event the PAE. Also included are the "rch_200" and "rch_300 reaches". These are reaches identified as additional potentially impacted reaches over and above those described by the interpolations spreadsheet. Also included is the revised reach to SW node lookup table for the HRVs. ## Dataset History Line segments from the Geofabric Network Streams source dataset were grouped into reach sections based on descriptions in the accompanying interpolations lookup table (supplied by Surface Water Modelling team) using the surface water node locations and described river junctions and other defined locations as spatial reference. Reaches were given a unique ID and dissolved into a multipart lines. In addition to the reaches described in the interpolations spreadsheet, additional reaches were identified (using the riverine perenniality classified stream network) as subject to potential hydrological change. These were non-ephemeral streams (LC_id = 22, 23, 25) rising out of or intersecting the groundwater zone of potential hydrological change (rch_200) and ephemeral reaches (LC_id = 24) rising out of or intersecting baseline mine pits (rch_300). ## Dataset Citation Bioregional Assessment Programme (2017) HUN SW Modelling Reaches and HRV lookup 20171121 v05. Bioregional Assessment Derived Dataset. Viewed 13 March 2019, http://data.bioregionalassessments.gov.au/dataset/8c330d59-2ecc-4c35-8f9e-68b91a4ae98a. ## Dataset Ancestors * Derived From HUN SW Model nodes 20170110 * Derived From HUN AWRA-L simulation nodes_v01 * Derived From National Surface Water sites Hydstra * Derived From Geofabric Surface Network - V2.1 * Derived From HUN AWRA-L simulation nodes v02 * Derived From HUN River Perenniality v01 * Derived From Geofabric Surface Network - V2.1.1

  3. w

    Grey-headed Flying-fox Camp Boundaries

    • data.wu.ac.at
    • data.nsw.gov.au
    pdf, zip
    Updated Jun 15, 2018
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    Office of Environment and Heritage (OEH) (2018). Grey-headed Flying-fox Camp Boundaries [Dataset]. https://data.wu.ac.at/schema/data_nsw_gov_au/YjMzOGY1Y2YtZWUyNi00MWFkLWE2OWEtODBlOGMyZjc5OTE2
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    zip, pdfAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 15, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    Office of Environment and Heritage (OEH)
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    896d9137cc23ccec839a74bd3b160a2e5996fd7f
    Description

    This dataset contains information on grey-headed and black flying-fox camp boundaries for coastal New South Wales. The data represents locations that have been used by grey-headed flying-foxes or black flying-foxes since 1990. Flying-foxes change their use of these areas from season to season and year to year. Few sites will be occupied continuously, and some may only be used every few years. The use of sites by flying-foxes will generally reflect the availability of native food (pollen and fruits of native trees). It is intended to be indicative of the location of such camps and is not exact. ; ; The majority of camp locations were documented during range-wide surveys of grey-headed flying-foxes conducted from 1998 to 2004. The dataset provides presence/absence data only, ie. it does not include abundance estimates. ; ; The flying-fox camp database is an Excel spreadsheet which contains AMG Zone 56 Eastings and Northings. The spreadsheet has been converted to a point locality GIS layer (ESRI shapefile) via these coordinates but then reprojected to GDA GCS. The AMG coordinates in the table have also been converted to MGA coordinates. ; ; A polygon shapefile which is described here is also provided for camp boundaries. Camp boundaries are only present if the coverage of the camp is known. There was no set cut off size however all boundaries would be >10x10m. Camp dimensions and boundaries vary through time with changing population size and movement of animals around the site. The boundaries provided are the greatest extent documented and are not static.; ; In 2006/7 DEC engaged a contractor to update the Grey-headed Flying-fox (GHFF) and the Black Flying-fox (BFF) database for NSW. The current dataset contains information on the locations of camps known to be used by grey-headed flying-foxes as of April 2008.

  4. w

    Grey-headed Flying-fox Camps

    • data.wu.ac.at
    • data.nsw.gov.au
    pdf, url, zip
    Updated Jun 15, 2018
    + more versions
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    Office of Environment and Heritage (OEH) (2018). Grey-headed Flying-fox Camps [Dataset]. https://data.wu.ac.at/schema/data_nsw_gov_au/MDFhNjUwNDktODRkNy00ODkyLWIzZTUtMWQ2OWZkNzUwNzRk
    Explore at:
    pdf, zip, urlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 15, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    Office of Environment and Heritage (OEH)
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    a15829d82b70665d212afede3012a0f81ec80b3b
    Description

    Note: The NSW database of flying-fox camps is no longer maintained.

    An interactive flying-fox web viewer hosted by the Australian Government Department of the Environment and Energy has been developed to visually present data from the National Flying-fox Monitoring Programme.

    The viewer allows users to explore flying-fox camps and the numbers of each species counted over time. This information spans the data gathered from November 2012 to present.

    http://www.environment.gov.au/webgis-framework/apps/ffc-wide/ffc-wide.jsf

    See above for superseded data description; this dataset is no longer available as of 25/10/16.

    This dataset contains information on grey-headed and black flying-fox camp locations for coastal New South Wales and notes whether little red flying-foxes are also present. The data represents locations that have been used by grey-headed flying-foxes or black flying-foxes since 1990. Flying-foxes change their use of these areas from season to season and year to year. Few sites will be occupied continuously, and some may only be used every few years. The use of sites by flying-foxes will generally reflect the availability of native food (pollen and fruits of native trees). It is intended to be indicative of the location of such camps and is not exact.

    The majority of camp locations were documented during range-wide surveys of grey-headed flying-foxes conducted from 1998 to 2004. The dataset provides presence/absence data only, ie. it does not include abundance estimates.

    The flying-fox camp database is an Excel spreadsheet which contains AMG Zone 56 Eastings and Northings. The spreadsheet has been converted to a point locality GIS layer (ESRI shapefile) via these coordinates but then reprojected to GDA GCS. The AMG coordinates in the table have also been converted to MGA coordinates.

    An accompanying polygon shapefile is also provided for camp boundaries. Camp boundaries are only present if the coverage of the camp is known. There was no set cut off size however all boundaries would be >10x10m. Camp dimensions and boundaries vary through time with changing population size and movement of animals around the site. The boundaries provided are the greatest extent documented and are not static.

    In 2006/7 DEC engaged a contractor to update the Grey-headed Flying-fox (GHFF) and the Black Flying-fox (BFF) database for NSW. The current dataset contains information on the locations of camps known to be used by grey-headed flying-foxes as of April 2008.

    Please note that users should refer to the Wildlife Atlas (and any other datasets) to obtain the latest information.

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Share
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Click to copy link
Link copied
Close
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(2020). Cooper GW point data - salinity and hydrochemistry [Dataset]. https://gimi9.com/dataset/au_95dbecf4-6e6c-4f84-a93e-289346cd21ae

Cooper GW point data - salinity and hydrochemistry

Explore at:
Dataset updated
May 23, 2020
License

Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically

Description

Abstract The dataset was derived by the Geological and Bioregional Assessment Program from Geoscience Australia's groundwater bore database. The processes undertaken to produce this derived dataset are described in the History field in this metadata statement. ## Attribution Geological and Bioregional Assessment Program ## History Pressure data compiled from petroleum well reports and PEP-SA database was converted to equivalent hydraulic head value. For wells that had equivalent Hydraulic head in the Hutton Sandstone, measurements in the well situated nearest to top of Hutton Sandstone were then extracted from the equivalent hydraulic head dataset then converted to a shapefile for spatial analysis in ArcGIS. In this Excel workbook, Pressure data compiled from Qld petroleum well reports for the Geological Bioregional Programme, as well as from PEP-SA database have been compiled in this spreadsheet. Pressure data was assessed for its suitability for conversion to an equivalent hydraulic head. Those passed QC were then converted to equivalent hydraulic head value. This dataset includes a summary of all compiled pressure data from Qld and SA datasources, the formulas and parameters used to convert the pressures to an equivalent hydraulic head. This Excel workbook, contains petroleum well formation test information, including pressure and temperature data that was compiled from Qld petroleum well completion reports for the Geological Bioregional Programme. Well completion reports were downloaded from QDEX. This Excel workbook, contains petroleum well formation test information, including pressure and temperature data that was extracted from PEPS-SA petroleum database for the Geological Bioregional Programme.

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