This is a view service of the CEH 1:50k rivers dataset. This is a river centreline network, based originally on OS 1:50,000 mapping. There are four layer: rivers; canals; surface pipes (man-made channels such as aqueducts and leats) and miscellaneous channels (including estuary and lake centre-lines and some underground channels).The dataset was produced within a long-term project of the Institute of Hydrology (now CEH) between the mid-1970s and the late 1990s. The project digitised, (either manually or using 'laser scanners') the "blue line" layer of the Ordnance Survey's 1:50,000 2nd series (Landranger) maps. The dataset consists of all the single blue lines from the source maps, plus centre-lines from double sided rivers, lakes and estuaries. All gaps in the source material have been closed, using local knowledge where necessary, to give a river network that is continuous from source to mouth
This dataset comprises river centrelines, digitised from OS 1:50,000 mapping. It consists of four components: rivers; canals; surface pipes (man-made channels for transporting water such as aqueducts and leats); and miscellaneous channels (including estuary and lake centre-lines and some underground channels). This dataset is a representation of the river network in Great Britain as a set of line segments, i.e. it does not comprise a geometric network.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
Statutory Main Rivers Map is a spatial (polyline) dataset that defines statutory watercourses in England designated as Main Rivers by the Environment Agency.
Watercourses designated as ‘main river’ are generally the larger arterial watercourses. The Environment Agency has permissive powers, but not a duty, to carry out maintenance, improvement or construction work on designated main rivers.
All other open water courses in England are determined by statute as an ‘ordinary watercourse’. On these watercourses the Lead Local flood Authority or, if within an Internal Drainage District, the Internal Drainage Board have similar permissive powers to maintain and improve.
Data shows the location of Priority Habitat Chalk rivers and Streams. Replaces the existing 1:50,000 scale data.Based on Environment Agency Detailed River Network (DRN) version 3. All fields from DRN have been retained. This subset of chalk rivers uses the old 1:50,000 Biodiversity Action Plan (BAP) chalk river data, BGS geology, WWF report "The State of England’s Chalk Streams" and stakeholder knowledge to produce an updated chalk river network for England.Full metadata can be viewed on data.gov.uk (to follow).
ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
This is a collection of simple maps in PDF format that are designed to be printed off and used in the classroom. The include maps of Great Britain that show the location of major rivers, cities and mountains as well as maps of continents and the World. There is very little information on the maps to allow teachers to download them and add their own content to fit with their lesson plans. Customise one print out then photocopy them for your lesson. data not available yet, holding data set (7th August). Other. This dataset was first accessioned in the EDINA ShareGeo Open repository on 2012-08-07 and migrated to Edinburgh DataShare on 2017-02-22.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
The Statutory Main River Map Variations dataset defines proposed changes to the Statutory Main River Map.
Statutory Main Rivers Map defines statutory watercourses in England designated as Main Rivers by Environment Agency.
Watercourses designated as ‘main river’ are generally the larger arterial watercourses. The Environment Agency has permissive powers, but not a duty, to carry out maintenance, improvement or construction work on designated main rivers.
All other open water courses in England are determined by statute as an ‘ordinary watercourse’. On these watercourses the Lead Local flood Authority or, if within an Internal Drainage District, the Internal Drainage Board have similar permissive powers to maintain and improve.
The Environment Agency notifies the public and interested parties of our intentions to make a change to the statutory main river map and decides which watercourses are designated as Main Rivers following a legal process to determine and publish changes.
The change, or variation, to the Statutory Main River Map is either a deletion (also known as a demainment) or an addition (also known as an enmainment).
There are two reasons for a change to the Statutory Main River Map - Designation and Factual.
Designation changes are required when we make a decision to lengthen or shorten the section of a river designated as a 'main river'. These changes will determine which risk management authority may carry out maintenance, improvement or construction work on the watercourse. These changes result also in differing legislation applying to the riparian owner and others with an interest.
Factual changes may be required to update the map to represent the real position of the watercourse. They do not involve any changes of authority or management. Typical examples of factual changes are when: a watercourse has changed course naturally, a watercourse has been diverted or a survey of a culvert shows a different alignment.
A change to the Statutory Main River Map goes through the following stages (identified as Status within the data):
OS Open Rivers is a generalised open water network showing the flow and the locations of rivers, streams, lakes and canals across the whole of Great Britain. The new product is part of the OS Open suite and is designed to be used with other OpenData product sets. It’s mapping that can help you question, visualise and share results quickly and clearly. With OS Open Rivers you can: Understand the water network at a ‘high level’ with generalised geometry and network connectivity.View a network of main rivers, identifying the main river course along its full length.Pin information on the connected network for personal or business use. Take an informed overview of a situation along the network to manage it strategically. Compare and monitor stretches of water. Share information, such as flood alerts and flood risk areas.The currency of this data is 04/2025 The coverage of the map service is GB. The map projection is British National Grid.
One of the two datasets that make up the Priority River Habitat Map. Consists of rivers and streams that exhibit a high degree of naturalness. The naturalness classification used to map priority river habitat is based on recent work to review the river SSSI series. It evaluates four main components of habitat integrity: hydrological, physical, physico-chemical (water quality) and biological. An additional classification of the naturalness of headwaters (defined as streams with a catchment area of <10km2 to coincide with WFD typology boundaries) uses land cover data as a surrogate for direct information on river habitat condition (information which is generally lacking on headwaters). Streams and rivers operating under natural processes, free from anthropogenic impact and with a characteristic and dynamic mosaic of small-scale habitats that supports characteristic species assemblages (including priority species), are the best and most sustainable expression of river ecosystems. Key elements are: a natural flow regime; natural nutrient and sediment delivery regimes; minimal physical modifications to the channel, banks and riparian zone; natural longitudinal and lateral hydrological and biological connectivity; an absence of non-native species; low intensity fishery activities. These conditions provide the best defence against climate change, maximising the ability of riverine ecosystems to adapt to changing conditions. They also provide the most valuable and effective transitional links with other priority habitats, including lakes, mires and coastal habitats. In English rivers and streams, high levels of naturalness are rare.Full metadata can be viewed on data.gov.uk.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
"One of the two datasets that make up the Priority River Habitat Map. Consists of rivers and streams that exhibit a high degree of naturalness. The naturalness classification used to map priority river habitat is based on recent work to review the river SSSI series. It evaluates four main components of habitat integrity: hydrological, physical, physico-chemical (water quality) and biological. An additional classification of the naturalness of headwaters (defined as streams with a catchment area of <10km2 to coincide with WFD typology boundaries) uses land cover data as a surrogate for direct information on river habitat condition (information which is generally lacking on headwaters). Streams and rivers operating under natural processes, free from anthropogenic impact and with a characteristic and dynamic mosaic of small-scale habitats that supports characteristic species assemblages (including priority species), are the best and most sustainable expression of river ecosystems. Key elements are: a natural flow regime; natural nutrient and sediment delivery regimes; minimal physical modifications to the channel, banks and riparian zone; natural longitudinal and lateral hydrological and biological connectivity; an absence of non-native species; low intensity fishery activities. These conditions provide the best defence against climate change, maximising the ability of riverine ecosystems to adapt to changing conditions. They also provide the most valuable and effective transitional links with other priority habitats, including lakes, mires and coastal habitats. In English rivers and streams, high levels of naturalness are rare. "
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
The Flood Map for Planning (Rivers and Sea) includes several layers of information. This layer and documentation covers Flood Zone 2. It is the Environment Agency's best estimate of the areas of land at risk of flooding, when he presence of flood defences are ignored and covers land between Zone 3 and the extent of the flooding from rivers or the sea with a 1 in 1000 (0.1%) chance of flooding each year. This dataset also includes those areas defined in Flood Zone 3.This dataset is designed to support flood risk assessments in line with Planning Practice Guidance ; and raise awareness of the likelihood of flooding to encourage people living and working in areas prone to flooding to find out more and take appropriate action. This dataset is republished by the West of England Combined Authority for supplementing information within our Local Nature Recovery Strategy. If you are using it for statutory purposes, you should refer to the Environment Agency's canonical version, linked in the Attributions field below as this is likely to be more current.
This is a web map service of the UKCEH digital river network of Great Britain (1:50,000). It is a river centreline network, based originally on OS 1:50,000 mapping. There are four layers: rivers; canals; surface pipes (man-made channels such as aqueducts and leats) and miscellaneous channels (including estuary and lake centre-lines and some underground channels).
There are 49 rivers in England and 31 rivers in Wales that regularly support salmon, although some of the stocks are very small and support minimal catches. Of these, 64 rivers were designated ‘principal salmon rivers’ on the basis of the prospect of annual rod catches of at least 50 fish around the time (~1996) of the development of Salmon Action Plans (SAPs*).These data are recreated from SALMON STOCKS AND FISHERIES IN ENGLAND AND WALES, 2021 figure 1 using OS Open Rivers. Attributes include if a river has a SAP and if it is designated as a Special Area of Conservation (SAC) in which salmon must be maintained or restored to favourable conservation status (SALMON STOCKS AND FISHERIES IN ENGLAND AND WALES, 2021 Table 1).These data are intended for visualisation only and should not be used for statutory purposes or connectivity modelling.*Salmon Action Plans in Wales are now referred to as ‘Know Your Rivers’ reports.
PLEASE NOTE: This dataset has been retired. It has been superseded by https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/04532375-a198-476e-985e-0579a0a11b47.The Flood Map for Planning (Rivers and Sea) includes several layers of information. This dataset covers Flood Zone 2 and should not be used without Flood Zone 3. It is our best estimate of the areas of land at risk of flooding, when the presence of flood defences are ignored and covers land between Zone 3 and the extent of the flooding from rivers or the sea with a 1 in 1000 (0.1%) chance of flooding each year. This dataset also includes those areas defined in Flood Zone 3.This dataset is designed to support flood risk assessments in line with Planning Practice Guidance ; and raise awareness of the likelihood of flooding to encourage people living and working in areas prone to flooding to find out more and take appropriate action.The information provided is largely based on modelled data and is therefore indicative rather than specific. Locations may also be at risk from other sources of flooding, such as high groundwater levels, overland run off from heavy rain, or failure of infrastructure such as sewers and storm drains.The information indicates the flood risk to areas of land and is not sufficiently detailed to show whether an individual property is at risk of flooding, therefore properties may not always face the same chance of flooding as the areas that surround them. This is because we do not hold details about properties and their floor levels. Information on flood depth, speed or volume of flow is not included.NOTE: We have paused quarterly updates of this dataset. Please visit the “Pause to Updates of Flood Risk Maps” announcement on our support pages for further information. We will provide notifications on the Flood Map for Planning website to indicate where we have new flood risk information. Other data related to the Flood Map for Planning will continue to be updated, including data relating to flood history, flood defences, and water storage areas.
Available for England, Scotland and Wales as a Network, polygon and line representation in a number of Ordnance Survey (OS) products: MasterMap Water Network Layer, Open Rivers, Open Names, MasterMap Topography Layer, Vector Map Local and Vector Map District. Small-scale cartographic representations are also available. All data is collected by Ordnance Survey. Culvert data within OS MasterMap Water Network Layer is sourced from Scottish Local Authorities. as part of their role as the National Mapping Agency of Great Britain. This data is often used for environmental monitoring and risk assessment, navigation, statistical analysis. Keywords: Hydrography, Rivers, Streams, Watercourses
Click on the map below to start exploring. Click on a river to see more information. Or filter to show a single river catchment.
Web Map containing Statutory Main River Map, Statutory Main River Map Variations 2022 and Statutory Main River Variations pre 2021 feature layers.Created for use by Web Mapping Application: Main River Map
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
http://inspire.ec.europa.eu/metadata-codelist/LimitationsOnPublicAccess/noLimitationshttp://inspire.ec.europa.eu/metadata-codelist/LimitationsOnPublicAccess/noLimitations
OS Open Rivers GIS data contains over 144,000 km of water bodies and watercourses map data. These include freshwater rivers, tidal estuaries and canals.
Understand how water bodies and watercourses in Great Britain join up.
OS Open Rivers provides a comprehensive datset of Great Britain's River Network, which approximately indicates the central alignment of the watercourse. Inland and tidal rivers are represented by a series of connected link and node features which are assigned with river name and flow direction.
Riparian Shade data from the Environment Agency. Shows relative shading of rivers and streams by vegetation and topography. Areas with least shade are ideal areas for tree planting to provide a benefit to freshwater ecology.Tile Map Service showing national coverage down to sub-catchment scale (ca. 1:18,000)For larger scales, add in the Riparian Shade Detail layer to your map and swap the visible range over at Neighbourhood scale.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Two subsets of data derived from national data sets collected by the Environment Agency and Natural Resources Wales (© Environment Agency copyright and database right 2023; Natural Resources Wales information © Natural Resources Wales and Database Right. All rights Reserved) which were supplied under the Open Government Licence https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/ The full data sets can be accessed from the Environment Agency's Ecology and Fish Data Explorer (https://environment.data.gov.uk/ecology/explorer/) and NBNAtlas for Natural Resources Wales data (https://registry.nbnatlas.org/public/show/dr2116).Data set 1: england_wales_t1_t2_t3.csvData set for creating maps of macroinvertebrate communities across England and Wales at three time points. Data comprise 13921 rows and seven columns:time = time period when data were collected: t1 = 1991-3, t2 = 2004-6, t3 = 2017-19site = site code, prefixed with 'S'.easting = x-coordinate of each site on the British National Gridnorthing = y-coordinates of each site on the British National GridYear = year the sample was collectedrichness = number of macroinvertebrate families present in the sampleca1.score = measure of macroinvertebrate community composition. Larger values indicate that a higher proportion of pollution-sensitive taxa are present.Data set 2: england_wales_SEM_GWR.csv Data set for running structural equation modelling and geographically-weighted regression analyses to explain macroinvertebrate community composition across England and Wales. Data comprise 3632 rows and 15 columns:Column 1: site = site code, prefixed with 'S'.Columns 2-3 (easting and northing) = x- and y-coordinates of each site on the British National GridColumn 4: year = year the macroinvertebrate sample was collectedColumns 5-9 (pH, temperature, BOD, nitrate, phosphate) are median values in the 12 months prior to an invertebrate sample for: pH, water temperature (degrees Celsius), biochemical oxygen demand (mg l-1), nitrate (mg l-1) and orthophosphate (mg l-1)Columns 10-12 (arable, imp.grass, urban) represent the percentage of the river's catchment covered by three different land cover types (arable agriculture, improved grassland, urban)Column 13 (scaled.med.discharge) is the annual median discharge at a site, divided by the catchment area; units = m3 s-1 km-2)Column 14: richness = number of macroinvertebrate families present in the sampleColumn 15: ca1.score = measure of macroinvertebrate community composition. Larger values indicate that a higher proportion of pollution-sensitive taxa are present.Research results based upon these data are published at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.174369
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
This dataset has been produced as part of the Mapping Potential for Working with Natural Processes research project (SC150005). The project created a toolbox of mapped data and methods which enable operational staff in England to identify potential locations for Working with Natural Processes (WWNP).
Data has been produced for each intervention covered by the project. The final outputs include the following datasets: • Floodplain Woodland Planting Potential • Riparian Woodland Planting Potential • Wider Catchment Woodland • Floodplain Reconnection Potential • Runoff Attenuation Features 3.3% AEP • Runoff Attenuation Features 1% AEP • Woodland Constraints
WWNP Floodplain Reconnection Potential is our best estimate of locations where it may be possible to establish reconnection between a watercourse and its natural floodplain, especially during high flows. The dataset is designed to support signposting of areas where there is currently poor connectivity such that flood waters are constrained to the channel and flood waves may therefore propagate downstream rapidly. The dataset is based upon the Risk of Flooding from Rivers and Sea probability maps, and identifies areas of low and very low probability that are close to a watercourse, but which do not contain residential property or key services.
The areas may contain non-residential property so it is important to consider this and recent buildings or defences when considering floodplain reconnection. Locations identified may have more recent building or land use than available data indicates. It is important to note that land ownership and change to flood risk have not been considered, and it may be necessary to model the impacts of significant reconnection.
Further information on the Working with Natural Processes project, including a mapping user guide, can be found in the reports published here:
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/working-with-natural-processes-to-reduce-flood-risk
This is a view service of the CEH 1:50k rivers dataset. This is a river centreline network, based originally on OS 1:50,000 mapping. There are four layer: rivers; canals; surface pipes (man-made channels such as aqueducts and leats) and miscellaneous channels (including estuary and lake centre-lines and some underground channels).The dataset was produced within a long-term project of the Institute of Hydrology (now CEH) between the mid-1970s and the late 1990s. The project digitised, (either manually or using 'laser scanners') the "blue line" layer of the Ordnance Survey's 1:50,000 2nd series (Landranger) maps. The dataset consists of all the single blue lines from the source maps, plus centre-lines from double sided rivers, lakes and estuaries. All gaps in the source material have been closed, using local knowledge where necessary, to give a river network that is continuous from source to mouth