This map was produced by the Australian Institute of Urban Studies and Plant Location International, on a base map compiled by Cumberland County Council.
It shows: zoned area 1969; release areas 1969 and 1970; areas used 1956, 1961 and 1967.
The scale 3" = 4 miles.
(X1354). 1 map.
Note:
This description is extracted from Concise Guide to the State Archives of New South Wales, 3rd Edition 2000.
These maps and charts were produced by Government departments and other sources.
(SR Map Nos.52571-76). 6 maps.
Note:
This description is extracted from Concise Guide to the State Archives of New South Wales, 3rd Edition 2000.
These maps were compiled by the University of Sydney from Cumberland County Council maps, and were printed at the Lands Department (62.431).
They are annotated with the price per acre for industrial land and what services are available.
The scale is 1" = 3 miles.
(SR Map Nos.52686-87). 2 maps.
Note:
This description is extracted from Concise Guide to the State Archives of New South Wales, 3rd Edition 2000.
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Overview Australia's agricultural industries 2016 map provides a snapshot of agriculture's status and trend. It shows where Australia's broad agricultural land uses are located and statistics on …Show full descriptionOverview Australia's agricultural industries 2016 map provides a snapshot of agriculture's status and trend. It shows where Australia's broad agricultural land uses are located and statistics on their area and land tenure. The map reports on the top 5 livestock, crop and horticulture commodities based on gross value of production. Trends in agricultural production, employment and exports are also given including for Australia's top 5 export commodities and destinations. The map presents information in a simple and easy to understand manner and provides a useful resource for planning and regional development. NOTE: Map revised October 2017 (v1.1.1). Update revises the area of almonds and includes a note on the scope of the Agricultural survey data.
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Overview Australia's Agricultural Industries 2017 map provides a snapshot of agriculture's status and trend. It shows where Australia's broad agricultural land uses are located and statistics on their area and land tenure. The map reports on the top 5 livestock, crop and horticulture commodities based on gross value of production. Trends in agricultural production, employment and exports are also given including for Australia's top 5 export commodities and destinations. The map presents information in a simple and easy to understand manner and provides a useful resource for planning and regional development. This map replaces the 2016 map with updated agricultural and employment data. Key Issues • The map presents published data of current status and historical trends from ABARES and the Australian Bureau of Statistics on a single page. A change in scope of the agricultural census 2015-16 data has impacted on commodity data, particularly with some horticultural commodities. • This map complements ABARES Australia's Forestry Industry 2017 map.
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Companies in the Surveying and Mapping Services industry have struggled with volatile downstream demand over the past few years. Demand for surveying services fluctuates in response to construction activity, as surveyors are a necessity for construction projects. Although demand for surveying services has risen in areas like heavy and civil engineering construction, as well as exploration, these gains haven’t been enough to counterbalance a drop in demand from residential building construction. Slow growth in the number of surveyors has constrained the market’s size, as more experienced surveyors are retiring while fewer young people are interested in pursuing surveying as a career. Overall, revenue is expected to have contracted at an annualised 3.9% over the five years through 2024-25 to $4.0 billion, including an anticipated plummet of 7.1% in 2024-25. Technological advancements in surveying and mapping services have influenced the industry’s performance. Cost-effective drone surveying technology with fast processing speeds has allowed some companies to provide value-added products that appeal to time-sensitive clients. However, some downstream clients with large capital resources have bypassed third-party surveying service providers, even though they can offer specialised services, and developed in-house surveying capabilities for cost efficiency, limiting surveyors’ pricing ability. Some large-scale surveyors have capitalised on a flurry of high-profile projects to build stronger reputations and expand their market share. Over the coming years, a recovery in key downstream sectors, including residential housing construction, as interest rates ease will improve the industry’s performance. As softening interest rates improve downstream conditions, surveyors working in construction markets will be in a better position to capitalise on improved downstream conditions. Investment in apartment and townhouse construction will also rally, driven by government efforts to solve housing supply shortages over the coming years. Industry revenue is projected to climb at an annualised 2.2% over the five years through 2029-30 to $4.1 billion.
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Land located wholly or partially in industrial zones, including anticipated future industrial zones, and assessed as either vacant, agricultural or developed.
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Overview
Australia's agricultural industries 2016 map provides a snapshot of agriculture's status and trend. It shows where Australia's broad agricultural land uses are located and statistics on their area and land tenure. The map reports on the top 5 livestock, crop and horticulture commodities based on gross value of production. Trends in agricultural production, employment and exports are also given including for Australia's top 5 export commodities and destinations.
The map presents information in a simple and easy to understand manner and provides a useful resource for planning and regional development.
NOTE: Map revised October 2017 (v1.1.1). Update revises the area of almonds and includes a note on the scope of the Agricultural survey data.
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This dataset is available on Brisbane City Council’s open data website – data.brisbane.qld.gov.au. The site provides additional features for viewing and interacting with the data and for downloading the data in various formats.
A set of employment forecasts which reflect the Brisbane City Council view of the likely SEQ Regional Employment patterns in the period between 2011 and 2041. These were prepared by the National Institute of Economic and Industrial Research.
Brisbane City Council forecasts of employment by ANZSIC 2 at SA2 geography. Figures are for Place of work employment.
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This dataset was supplied to the Bioregional Assessment Programme by a third party and is presented here as originally supplied. Metadata was not provided and has been compiled by the Bioregional Assessment Programme based on the known details at the time of acquisition.
A list of hard copy maps. The map catalogue list almost 250 map titles. It contains maps that can be divided into three categories: (1) Statewide Geology, geophysical and thematic maps (2) Geology - Standard series geology maps covering a map sheet, mainly 1:250,000 and 1:100,000 scales with some at 1:500,00, 1:50,000 and 1:25,000. (3) Metallogenic - Maps depicting mineral resources, mainly 1:250,00 scale. Contact: geoscience.products@minerals.nsw.gov.au
This dataset has been provided to the BA Programme for use within the programme only. Third parties should contact the NSW Department of Industry. http://www.industry.nsw.gov.au/
This shapefile consists of published geological maps by Geological Survey of NSW for various locations located in NSW and held by NSW Department of Trade and Investment.
NSW Trade and Investment (2004) Geological Maps Combined for NSW. Bioregional Assessment Source Dataset. Viewed 18 July 2018, http://data.bioregionalassessments.gov.au/dataset/f507bb28-8095-43f8-901e-565699a290b5.
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URL: https://geoscience.data.qld.gov.au/dataset/mr000219
The Esk series map was published in 1987 at 1:100 000 as part of the Industrial Rock and Mineral Resources 1:100 000 series to provide an interpretation of known industrial rock information. The map product is available to all government agencies, industry and the public for reference and is located within the Esk (9343) 1:100 000 map area.
GSQ Record 1979/18 Revision of Industrial Rock and Mineral Resources - Gatton Shire 1987. Deposits of Extractive Materials ESK 1:100 000 series 9343.
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License information was derived automatically
Overview Australia's agricultural industries 2016 map provides a snapshot of agriculture's status and trend. It shows where Australia's broad agricultural land uses are located and statistics on their area and land tenure. The map reports on the top 5 livestock, crop and horticulture commodities based on gross value of production. Trends in agricultural production, employment and exports are also given including for Australia's top 5 export commodities and destinations. The map presents information in a simple and easy to understand manner and provides a useful resource for planning and regional development. NOTE: Map revised October 2017 (v1.1.1). Update revises the area of almonds and includes a note on the scope of the Agricultural survey data.
These maps were prepared by the Commonwealth Bureau of Census and Statistics. They show the statistical divisions for metropolitan Sydney, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria and Western Australia. A number of the maps have an index to Local Government areas on the back. They are small scale maps.
(SR Map Nos.52635-40). 6 maps.
Note:
This description is extracted from Concise Guide to the State Archives of New South Wales, 3rd Edition 2000.
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This is Version 1 of the Australian Soil pH - CaCl2 product of the Soil and Landscape Grid of Australia.
The Soil and Landscape Grid of Australia has produced a range of digital soil attribute products. Each product contains six digital soil attribute maps, and their upper and lower confidence limits, representing the soil attribute at six depths: 0-5cm, 5-15cm, 15-30cm, 30-60cm, 60-100cm and 100-200cm. These depths are consistent with the specifications of the GlobalSoilMap.net project (http://www.globalsoilmap.net/). The digital soil attribute maps are in raster format at a resolution of 3 arc sec (~90 x 90 m pixels).
These maps are generated by combining the best available Digital Soil Mapping (DSM) products available across Australia.
Attribute Definition: pH of 1:5 soil/0.01M calcium chloride extract; Units: None; Period (temporal coverage; approximately): 1950-2013; Spatial resolution: 3 arc seconds (approx 90m); Total number of gridded maps for this attribute: 18; Number of pixels with coverage per layer: 2007M (49200 * 40800); Total size before compression: about 8GB; Total size after compression: about 4GB; Data license : Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC BY); Target data standard: GlobalSoilMap specifications; Format: GeoTIFF.
Lineage: The National Soil Attribute Maps are generated by combining the best available digital soil mapping to calculate a variance weighted mean for each pixel. Two DSM methods have been utilised across and in various parts of Australia, these being:
1) Decision trees with piecewise linear models with kriging of residuals developed from soil site data across Australia. (Viscarra Rossel et al., 2015a); 2) Disaggregation of existing polygon soil mapping using DSMART (Odgers et al. 2015a).
Version 1 of the National Digital Soil Property Maps combines mapping from the:
1) Australia-wide three-dimensional Digital Soil Property Maps; 2) South Australian Agricultural Areas Polygon Disaggregation Maps.
These individual mapping products are also available in the Data Access Portal. Please refer to these individual products for more detail on the DSM methods used.
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This layer is displayed on the Industry, community infrastructure and agriculture land interface area overlay map in City Plan version 7 as 'Industry interface area'. The layer is also available in Council’s City Plan interactive mapping tool. For further information on City Plan, please visit http://www.goldcoast.qld.gov.au/planning-and-building/city-plan-2015-19859.html
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License information was derived automatically
URL: https://geoscience.data.qld.gov.au/dataset/mr000464
The Beenleigh series map was published in 1974 at 1:100 000 as part of the Deposits of Extractive Materials 1:100 000 series to provide an interpretation of known industrial rock information. The map product is available to all government agencies, industry and the public for reference and is located within the Beenleigh (9542) 1:100 000 map area.
GSQ Record 1974/41 Deposits of Extractive Materials Brisbane and Environs
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AbstractCatchment Scale Land Use of Australia (CLUM) depicted as five broad agricultural industries - Grazing native vegetation, Grazing modified pastures, Cropping, Horticulture, and Intensive plant and animal industries (and other non-agricultural uses).The Catchment Scale Land Use of Australia – Update December 2023 version 2 dataset is the national compilation of catchment scale land use data available for Australia, as at December 2023. It replaces the Catchment Scale Land Use of Australia – Update December 2020.The Catchment Scale Land Use of Australia – Update December 2023 version 2 dataset is the national compilation of catchment scale land use data available for Australia (CLUM), as at December 2023. It replaces the Catchment Scale Land Use of Australia – Update December 2020.Land use is classified according to the Australian Land Use and Management (ALUM) Classification version 8. It has been compiled from vector land use datasets collected as part of state and territory mapping programs and other authoritative sources, through the Australian Collaborative Land Use and Management Program (ACLUMP). Catchment scale land use data was produced by combining land tenure and other types of land use information including, fine-scale satellite data, ancillary datasets, and information collected in the field.The date of mapping (2008 to 2023) and scale of mapping (1:5,000 to 1:250,000) vary, reflecting the source data, capture date and scale. Date and scale of mapping are provided in supporting datasets.CurrencyDate modified: June 2024Modification frequency: As requiredData extentSpatial extentNorth: -8.03°South: -45.5°East: 161.5°West: 105.7°Source informationData, Metadata, Maps and Interactive views are available from Catchment Scale Land Use of Australia - Update December 2023Catchment Scale Land Use of Australia - Update December 2023 – Descriptive metadataThe data was obtained from Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry - Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences (ABARES). ABARES is providing this data to the public under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license.Lineage statementABARES has produced this raster dataset from vector catchment scale land use data provided by state and territory agencies, as follows:Catchment Scale Land Use Mapping for the Australian Capital Territory 20122017 NSW Land Use v1.5Land Use Mapping Project of the Northern Territory, 2016 – 2022 (LUMP)Land use mapping – 2021 – Great Barrier Reef NRM regionsLand use mapping – 1999 to Current – Queensland (June 2019)[South Australia] Land Use (ACLUMP) (2017)Tasmanian Land Use 2022Victorian Land Use Information System [VLUIS] 2021-22Catchment Scale Land Use Mapping for Western Australia 2018Australian Tree Crops, Australian Protected Cropping Structures and Queensland Soybean Crops maps (as at 30 November 2023)Applied Agricultural Remote Sensing Centre (AARSC), University of New England.Links to land use mapping datasets and metadata are available at the ACLUMP data download page at agriculture.gov.au.State and territory vector catchment scale land use data were produced by combining land tenure and other types of land use information, fine-scale satellite data and information collected in the field, as outlined in 'Guidelines for land use mapping in Australia: principles, procedures and definitions, 4th edition' (ABARES 2011). The Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria and Western Australia were mapped to version 8 of the ALUM classification (‘The Australian Land Use and Management Classification Version 8’, ABARES 2016).The Australian Capital Territory was mapped to version 7 of the ALUM classification and converted to version 8 using a look-up table based on Appendix 1 of ABARES (2016).The following agricultural (excluding intensive uses) classes were included from the Queensland Great Barrier Reef NRM Regions 2021 modified ALUM classification schema dataset:2.2.0 Grazing native vegetation3.2.0 Grazing modified pastures3.3.0 Cropping3.3.5 Sugar3.4.0 Perennial horticulture3.4.1 Tree fruits3.5.0 Seasonal horticulture3.6.0 Land in transition4.2.0 Grazing irrigated modified pastures4.3.0 Irrigated cropping4.3.5 Irrigated sugar4.4.0 Irrigated perennial horticulture4.4.1 Irrigated tree fruits4.5.0 Irrigated seasonal horticulture4.6.0 Irrigated land in transitionFixes to known issues include:In Western Australia, ALUM classes 4.0.0 Production from Irrigated Agriculture and Plantations, 5.0.0 Intensive Uses and 6.0.0 Water have been attributed to secondary level by visual interpretation using satellite data.In South Australia, through consultation with the South Australian Department of Environment and Water, the mining area (ALUM class 5.8.0 Mining) within mining tenements is more accurately delineated. The area within mining tenements that is not used for mining is now attributed as grazing of native vegetation (ALUM class 2.1.0) within pastoral areas and residual native cover (ALUM class 1.3.3) outside of pastoral areas.NODATA voids in Adelaide, South Australia were filled with data from mesh block land use attributes (Australian Bureau of Statistics 2021) according to Table 8. All other NODATA voids were filled using the ESRI ArcGIS focal statistics command.For the purposes of web viewing, the data was reprojected to EPSG:3857 - Web Mercator.Land use classificationThe Australian Land Use and Management (ALUM) Classification version 8 is a three-tiered hierarchical structure. There are 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 concurrent 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.Table 1: Agricultural Industries classification symbology as RGB and hexadecimal colour valuesVALUE (ALUM)AGINDRedGreenBlueHex210Grazing native vegetation217214207#D9D6CF320; 321; 322; 323; 324; 325; 360; 361; 362; 363; 364; 365; 420; 421; 422; 423; 424; 460; 461; 462; 463; 464; 465Grazing modified pastures20521370#CDD546330; 331; 332; 333; 334; 335; 336; 337; 338; 430; 431; 432; 433; 434; 435; 436; 437; 438; 439Cropping11413626#72881A340; 341; 342; 343; 344; 345; 346; 347; 348; 350; 351; 352; 353; 440; 441; 442; 443; 444; 445; 446; 447; 448; 449; 450; 451; 452; 453; 454Horticulture23000#E60000510; 511; 512; 513; 514; 515; 520; 521; 522; 523; 524; 525; 526; 527; 528Intensive plant and animal industries115223255#73DFFF110; 111; 112; 113; 114; 115; 116; 117; 120; 121; 122; 123; 124; 125; 130; 131; 132; 133; 134; 220; 221; 222, 310; 311; 312; 313; 314; 410; 411; 412; 413; 414; 530; 531; 532; 533; 534; 535; 536; 537; 538; 540; 541; 550; 551; 552; 553; 554; 555; 560; 561; 562; 563; 564; 565; 566; 567; 570; 571; 572; 573; 574; 575; 542; 543; 544; 545; 580; 581; 582; 583; 584; 590; 591; 592; 593; 594; 595; 610; 611; 612; 613; 614; 620; 621; 622; 623; 630; 631; 632; 633; 640; 641; 642; 643; 650; 651; 652; 653; 654; 660; 661; 662; 663Other uses255255255#FFFFFFNote: Codes refer to the Australian Land Use and Management (ALUM) Classification, version 8. Data dictionaryAttribute nameDescriptionOIDInternal feature number that uniquely identifies each row.VALUEALUM code as a three digit integer. First digit is primary code, second digit is secondary code, and third digit is tertiary code.COUNTCount of the number of raster cells in each class of VALUE.LU_CODEV8ALUM code as a string.LU_V8NALUM code as a three digit integer. First digit is primary code, second digit is secondary code, and third digit is tertiary code.TERTV8ALUM tertiary code and description as a string.SECV8ALUM secondary code and description as a string.PRIMV8ALUM primary code and description as a string.SIMPNCode for simplified land use classification.SIMPDescription of the simplified land use classification.AGINDDescription of agricultural industries.Red, Green, BlueRGB values for classification colours ContactDepartment of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry (ABARES), info.ABARES@aff.gov.au
These maps were produced by the Premier's Department, and show the numbers employed in secondary industries in country centres and rural regions. The population of each town is noted, and the type of secondary industry and the number of people engaged in that industry is shown. The information in these maps is based on the 1954 Commonwealth Census.
(SR Map Nos.52721-22). 2 maps.
Note:
This description is extracted from Concise Guide to the State Archives of New South Wales, 3rd Edition 2000.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
A set of employment forecasts which reflect the Brisbane City Council view of the likely SEQ Regional Employment patterns in the period between 2011 and 2041. These were prepared by the National Institute of Economic and Industrial Research.Brisbane City Council forecasts of employment by ANZSIC 2 at SA2 geography. Figures are for Place of work employment.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
URL: https://geoscience.data.qld.gov.au/dataset/mr009530
The Laguna Bay map was published as part of the Deposits of Extractive Materials 1:100 000 series to provide an interpretation of known industrial rock information. The map product is available to all government agencies, industry and the public for reference and is located within the Laguna Bay (9545) 1:100 000 map area.
Geological Survey of Queensland - Deposits of Extractive Materials Sunshine Coast Region. Dyeline.
This map was produced by the Australian Institute of Urban Studies and Plant Location International, on a base map compiled by Cumberland County Council.
It shows: zoned area 1969; release areas 1969 and 1970; areas used 1956, 1961 and 1967.
The scale 3" = 4 miles.
(X1354). 1 map.
Note:
This description is extracted from Concise Guide to the State Archives of New South Wales, 3rd Edition 2000.