100+ datasets found
  1. 1940-1947 Bartholomew historic map

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    Updated Apr 26, 2018
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    Esri UK Education (2018). 1940-1947 Bartholomew historic map [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/EsriUkeducation::1940-1947-bartholomew-historic-map/about
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 26, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    Esrihttp://esri.com/
    Authors
    Esri UK Education
    Area covered
    Description

    Colourful and easy to use, Bartholomew’s maps became a trademark series. The maps were popular and influential, especially for recreation, and the series sold well, particularly with cyclists and tourists. To begin with, Bartholomew printed their half-inch maps in Scotland as stand-alone sheets known as 'District Sheets' and by 1886 the whole of Scotland was covered. They then revised the maps into an ordered set of 29 sheets covering Scotland in a regular format. This was first published under the title Bartholomew’s Reduced Ordnance Survey of Scotland. The half-inch maps of Scotland formed the principal content for Bartholomew's Survey Atlas of Scotland published in 1895. Bartholomew then moved south of the Border to the more lucrative but competitive market in England and Wales, whilst continuing to revise the Scottish sheets. This Bartholomew series at half-inch to the mile, covered Great Britain in 62 sheets in the 1940s, Bartholomew’s first to cover Great Britain at this scale (their previous series covering Scotland and then England and Wales). The series provides an attractive and useful snapshot of 1940s Britain. By this time, Bartholomew had altered the range of information on their maps compared to the 1900s. There were more categories of roads, Ministry of Transport road numbers were added, and new recreational features such as Youth Hostels and Golf Courses. Bartholomew’s topographic information was gathered partly from original Ordnance Survey maps, and partly from information sent in to Bartholomew from map users. One important user community for Bartholomew were cyclists. From the 1890s, Bartholomew entered into a formal relationship with the Cyclists’ Touring Club, then numbering around 60,500 cyclists, proposing that club members supplied Bartholomew with up-to-date information. In return, Bartholomew provided the CTC with discounted half-inch maps. The relationship worked very well, turning CTC members into an unofficial surveying army, feeding back reliable and accurate topographical information which Bartholomew would then use to update their maps. You can read more about this and see selected letters from cyclists at: http://digital.nls.uk/bartholomew/duncan-street-explorer/cyclists-touring-club.html.

    Usually Bartholomew made revisions the sheets right up to the time of publication, so the date of publication is the best guide to the approximate date of the features shown on the map. You can view the dates of publication for the series at: https://maps.nls.uk/series/bart_half_great_britain.html

  2. c

    Data from: Historic Parishes of England and Wales : an Electronic Map of...

    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    Updated Nov 28, 2024
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    Kain, R. J. P., University of Exeter; Oliver, R. R., University of Exeter (2024). Historic Parishes of England and Wales : an Electronic Map of Boundaries before 1850 with a Gazetteer and Metadata [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-4348-1
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 28, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Department of Geography
    Authors
    Kain, R. J. P., University of Exeter; Oliver, R. R., University of Exeter
    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 1998 - Jan 1, 2001
    Area covered
    Wales, England
    Variables measured
    Administrative units (geographical/political), National, Parishes
    Measurement technique
    Compilation or synthesis of existing material
    Description

    Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.


    This research project aimed to fill a major lacuna militating against the effective exploitation of many post-medieval to mid-Victorian historical sources collected by local administrative areas: the lack of information on the boundaries of those administrative areas, the so-called 'historic' or 'ancient' parishes of England and Wales. It is known that these districts came into being during the Middle Ages, that the map of these ecclesiastical parishes was essentially complete by the fifteenth century, that these ecclesiastical boundaries were adopted during the early modern period for secular and judicial purposes, and that boundaries remained essentially unchanged until a number of reforms from the mid-nineteenth century onwards reorganised the local administrative geography of the country. The project aimed to reconstruct those boundaries as they were before the post-nineteenth century changes.
    Main Topics:

    The digitised maps cover the whole of England and Wales, and are organised by Ordnance Survey Sheet number. The maps contain a scanned bitmap image of the Ordnance Survey one inch to one mile (1:63,360) New Popular Edition maps (1945-8) with National Grid. They contain the boundaries of some 18,233 places, and are arranged as three electronic 'layers'. The first is a scan of the Ordnance Survey maps stored as grey tone sheet images. This enables Ordnance Survey physical, cultural and place-name content to be readily visible in the background for orientation and general location purposes, while not obscuring the added boundary and reference number material. The second layer consists of the boundaries, stored as solid red lines; and the third layer contains the reference numbers that link places on the map to the gazetteer/metadata dataset that accompanies the maps.

    The maps are available on CD-ROM in Adobe Illustrator (ISBN:0-9540032-2-5) or Adobe Acrobat (ISBN:0-9540032-1-7) PDF formats. We recommend using the Adobe Illustrator format if you already have the software (as it enables you to edit the maps and select the layers to view). However, the Adobe Acrobat PDF format is perfectly suitable for viewing the maps, and we will supply the necessary reader software.

    An accompanying book Historic Parishes of England and Wales: An Electronic Map of Boundaries before 1850 with a Gazetteer and Metadata by Roger Kain and Richard Oliver (ISBN:0-9540032-0-9) provides an introduction to the provenance of the maps. It also includes an abbreviated version of the gazetteer/metadata dataset, and a discussion of historical boundaries.

    This unique combination publication is set to become a standard reference resource and is an invaluable tool for all those interested in plotting local area-based data from the past (population, agricultural, statistics, tax data etc.) from the fourteenth to the nineteenth centuries.

    Please note: this study does not include information on named individuals and would therefore not be useful for personal family history research.


  3. Historic Maps Collection

    • metadata.bgs.ac.uk
    • data-search.nerc.ac.uk
    • +1more
    http
    Updated 2000
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    British Geological Survey (2000). Historic Maps Collection [Dataset]. https://metadata.bgs.ac.uk/geonetwork/srv/api/records/9df8df51-6409-37a8-e044-0003ba9b0d98
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    httpAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    2000
    Dataset authored and provided by
    British Geological Surveyhttps://www.bgs.ac.uk/
    License

    http://inspire.ec.europa.eu/metadata-codelist/LimitationsOnPublicAccess/INSPIRE_Directive_Article13_1dhttp://inspire.ec.europa.eu/metadata-codelist/LimitationsOnPublicAccess/INSPIRE_Directive_Article13_1d

    Time period covered
    1880 - 1940
    Area covered
    Description

    This dataset comprises 2 collections of maps. The facsmile collection contains all the marginalia information from the original map as well as the map itself, while the georectified collection contains just the map with an associated index for locating them. Each collection comprises approximately 101 000 monochrome images at 6-inch (1:10560) scale. Each image is supplied in .tiff format with appropriate ArcView and MapInfo world files, and shows the topography for all areas of England, Wales and Scotland as either quarter or, in some cases, full sheets. The images will cover the approximate epochs 1880's, 1900's, 1910's, 1920's and 1930's, but note that coverage is not countrywide for each epoch. The data was purchased by BGS from Sitescope, who obtained it from three sources - Royal Geographical Society, Trinity College Dublin and the Ordnance Survey. The data is for internal use by BGS staff on projects, and is available via a customised application created for the network GDI enabling users to search for and load the maps of their choice. The dataset will have many uses across all the geoscientific disciplines across which BGS operates, and should be viewed as a valuable addition to the BGS archive. There has been a considerable amount of work done during 2005, 2006 and 2007 to improve the accuracy of the OS Historic Map Collection. All maps should now be located to +- 50m or better. This is the best that can be achieved cost effectively. There are a number of reasons why the maps are inaccurate. Firstly, the original maps are paper and many are over 100 years old. They have not been stored in perfect condition. The paper has become distorted to varying degrees over time. The maps were therefore not accurate before scanning. Secondly, different generations of maps will have used different surveying methods and different spatial referencing systems. The same geographical object will not necessarily be in the same spatial location on subsequent editions. Thirdly, we are discussing maps, not plans. There will be cartographic generalisations which will affect the spatial representation and location of geographic objects. Finally, the georectification was not done in BGS but by the company from whom we purchased the maps. The company no longer exists. We do not know the methodology used for georectification.

  4. Ordnance survey historic map 1885-1903 (Mature Support)

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    Updated Apr 26, 2018
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    Esri UK Education (2018). Ordnance survey historic map 1885-1903 (Mature Support) [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/04d6caf68bbe4c3a918a2109c6756dfe
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 26, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    Esrihttp://esri.com/
    Authors
    Esri UK Education
    Area covered
    Description

    This item is in mature support and will be retired in September 2022. Please use the new version instead in your maps and apps. This map is the one inch to the mile "hills" edition made by the Ordnance Survey in the period 1885-1903. It has been kindly provided by the National Library of Scotland. More information about this map series can be found here: https://maps.nls.uk/os/introduction.html

  5. Bartholomew historic map 1897-1907

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    Updated Apr 26, 2018
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    Esri UK Education (2018). Bartholomew historic map 1897-1907 [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/288c7624509f4036bfa3a17f15cabe34
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 26, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    Esrihttp://esri.com/
    Authors
    Esri UK Education
    Area covered
    Description

    To begin with, Bartholomew printed their half-inch maps in Scotland as stand-alone sheets known as 'District Sheets' and by 1886 the whole of Scotland was covered. They then revised the maps into an ordered set of 29 sheets covering Scotland in a regular format. This was first pubilshed under the title Bartholomew’s Reduced Ordnance Survey of Scotland. The half-inch maps formed the principal content for Bartholomew's Survey Atlas of Scotland published in 1895. Bartholomew then moved south of the Border to the more lucrative but competitive market in England and Wales, whilst continuing to revise the Scottish sheets. The first complete coverage of Great Britain at the half-inch scale was achieved by 1903 with 67 individual half-inch sheets. Generally at this time, the English sheets sold three times more quickly, at three times the volume of the Scottish sheets. As for Scotland, Bartholomew used their half-inch sheets of England and Wales in the Survey Atlas of England and Wales published in 1903. From 1901, following a copyright complaint from Ordnance Survey, Bartholomew was forced to drop 'Ordnance' from their map titles. The series was initially renamed 'Bartholomew's Reduced Survey', and by 1903 'Bartholomew's half inch to the mile map'.Bartholomew revised the most popular half-inch sheets every couple of years, ensuring that their maps were more up to date than their main rival, Ordnance Survey. Popular sheets had print runs of several tens of thousands per edition, involving nearly 20 different layer colour plates for hillier areas with more colour.More information: http://geo.nls.uk/maps/bartholomew/great_britain/further_info.html

  6. Map based index (GeoIndex) old series 1 inch geological maps

    • data.europa.eu
    • metadata.bgs.ac.uk
    • +3more
    unknown
    Updated Oct 13, 2021
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    British Geological Survey (BGS) (2021). Map based index (GeoIndex) old series 1 inch geological maps [Dataset]. https://data.europa.eu/data/datasets/map-based-index-geoindex-old-series-1-inch-geological-maps1?locale=de
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    unknownAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 13, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    British Geological Surveyhttps://www.bgs.ac.uk/
    Authors
    British Geological Survey (BGS)
    Description

    This layer of the map based index (GeoIndex) shows the availability of 1:63360 scale geological maps. The maps are available for most of England and Wales and show early geological mapping covering the OS Old Series one inch map sheet areas.

  7. d

    Ancient Woodland - Revised (England) - Completed Counties

    • environment.data.gov.uk
    • roadmap-to-climate-resilience-tep-thames.hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Dec 9, 2024
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    Natural England (2024). Ancient Woodland - Revised (England) - Completed Counties [Dataset]. https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/5d5d1352-7505-4906-b574-b666dcfb16b4
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 9, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Natural Englandhttp://www.gov.uk/natural-england
    License

    Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Updated Boundaries of Ancient Woodland polygons covering England. This is the updated spatial dataset that describes the geographic extent and location of ancient woodland in England (excluding the Isles of Scilly). Ancient Woodland features will be approved county-by-county for publication throughout the first year of production until the data product coverage extends across England. Where available this dataset takes precedence over the Ancient Woodland – England dataset. The update revises the inventory to address problems and gaps in the previous iteration. Technological advances mean that small ancient woodlands (0.25-2ha) are being represented within the inventory for the first time as well as wood pasture and parkland being represented as its own category.

    The inventory identifies ancient woodland sites in England. Ancient woodland is identified by studying the presence or absence of woods from historic maps, information about the wood's name, shape, internal boundaries, location relative to other features, ground survey, and aerial photography. The information recorded about each wood and stored on the Inventory Database includes its grid reference, its area in hectares and how much is semi-natural or replanted. Prior to the digitisation of the boundaries, only paper maps depicting each ancient wood at 1:50 000 scale were available. Attribution statement: © Natural England 2024. Contains OS data © Crown copyright and database rights 2024. OS AC0000851168. It includes Ancient Semi-Natural Woodland (ASNW), which retains a native tree and shrub cover; Plantation on Ancient Woodland Sites (PAWS), where the original tree cover has been felled and replaced by planting, often with conifers; Ancient Wood Pasture (AWPP), where the trees are managed in tandem with a long established tradition of grazing, characteristically with at least some veteran trees or shrubs or; Infilled Ancient Wood Pasture (IAWPP) which has become infilled with trees arising from planting or natural regeneration.

  8. E

    Data from: Old and New Town of Edinburgh and Leith with the proposed docks

    • find.data.gov.scot
    • dtechtive.com
    xml, zip
    Updated Feb 21, 2017
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    University of Edinburgh (2017). Old and New Town of Edinburgh and Leith with the proposed docks [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7488/ds/1822
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    zip(30.11 MB), xml(0.0039 MB)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 21, 2017
    Dataset provided by
    University of Edinburgh
    License

    Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Leith, Edinburgh
    Description

    Georeferenced map of 'Old and New Town of Edinburgh and Leith with the proposed docks' By John Ainslie (1804) as part of the Visualising Urban Geographies project- view other versions of the map at http://geo.nls.uk/urbhist/resources_maps.html. Scanned map. This dataset was first accessioned in the EDINA ShareGeo Open repository on 2011-05-31 and migrated to Edinburgh DataShare on 2017-02-21.

  9. Historic Flood Map

    • environment.data.gov.uk
    • data.europa.eu
    Updated Feb 6, 2025
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    Environment Agency (2025). Historic Flood Map [Dataset]. https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/889885c0-d465-11e4-9507-f0def148f590
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 6, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Environment Agencyhttps://www.gov.uk/ea
    License

    Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The Historic Flood Map is a GIS layer showing the maximum extent of individual Recorded Flood Outlines from river, the sea and groundwater springs that meet a set criteria. It shows areas of land that have previously been subject to flooding in England. This excludes flooding from surface water, except in areas where it is impossible to determine whether the source is fluvial or surface water but the dominant source is fluvial.

    The majority of records began in 1946 when predecessor bodies to the Environment Agency started collecting detailed information about flooding incidents, although we hold limited details about flooding incidents prior to this date.

    If an area is not covered by the Historic Flood Map it does not mean that the area has never flooded, only that we do not currently have records of flooding in this area that meet the criteria for inclusion. It is also possible that the pattern of flooding in this area has changed and that this area would now flood or not flood under different circumstances. Outlines that don’t meet this criteria are stored in the Recorded Flood Outlines dataset.

    The Historic Flood Map takes into account the presence of defences, structures, and other infrastructure where they existed at the time of flooding. It will include flood extents that may have been affected by overtopping, breaches or blockages.

    Flooding is shown to the land and does not necessarily indicate that properties were flooded internally.

  10. E

    Data from: Plan of Edinburgh and Leith, from the Survey Atlas of Scotland

    • dtechtive.com
    • find.data.gov.scot
    xml, zip
    Updated Feb 21, 2017
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    University of Edinburgh (2017). Plan of Edinburgh and Leith, from the Survey Atlas of Scotland [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7488/ds/1825
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    zip(10.99 MB), xml(0.0039 MB)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 21, 2017
    Dataset provided by
    University of Edinburgh
    License

    Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Scotland, Leith, Edinburgh
    Description

    Georeferenced map of 'Plan of Edinburgh and Leith, from the Survey Atlas of Scotland' By J.G. Bartholomew (1912)as part of the Visualising Urban Geographies project- view other versions of the map at http://geo.nls.uk/urbhist/resources_maps.html. Scanned map. This dataset was first accessioned in the EDINA ShareGeo Open repository on 2011-05-31 and migrated to Edinburgh DataShare on 2017-02-21.

  11. o

    Turnpike Road map for England and Wales 1700 to 1838

    • openicpsr.org
    Updated Nov 13, 2023
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    Alan Rosevear; Dan Bogart; Leigh Shaw-Taylor; Max Satchell (2023). Turnpike Road map for England and Wales 1700 to 1838 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.3886/E195126V1
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 13, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    University of Cambridge
    Cambridge University
    University of California-Irvine
    CAMPOP
    Authors
    Alan Rosevear; Dan Bogart; Leigh Shaw-Taylor; Max Satchell
    License

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

    Time period covered
    1700 - 1838
    Area covered
    England
    Description

    An ARC GIS PRO shapefile mapping the turnpike roads in England and Wales for the 18th and early 19th century. The data includes details of the Turnpike Acts, years of operation, the quality of the road and the routes used by Mail coaches. The data forms the basis of the paper "Government, trusts, and the making of better roads in early nineteenth century England & Wales by Rosevear, Bogart & Shaw-Taylor.

  12. BGS 1:63 360 / 1:50 000 series geological maps

    • metadata.bgs.ac.uk
    http
    Updated 1856
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    British Geological Survey (1856). BGS 1:63 360 / 1:50 000 series geological maps [Dataset]. https://metadata.bgs.ac.uk/geonetwork/srv/api/records/120e1002-dcdd-1b22-e063-0937940ae43d
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    httpAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    1856
    Dataset authored and provided by
    British Geological Surveyhttps://www.bgs.ac.uk/
    License

    http://inspire.ec.europa.eu/metadata-codelist/LimitationsOnPublicAccess/noLimitationshttp://inspire.ec.europa.eu/metadata-codelist/LimitationsOnPublicAccess/noLimitations

    Time period covered
    1856 - 2015
    Area covered
    Description

    The 1:63 360 / 1:50 000 scale map series are the most useful scale for most purposes. They provide almost complete coverage of onshore Great Britain. The BGS collection of 1:63 360 and 1:50 000 scale maps comprises two map series: - Geological Survey of England and Wales 1:63 360 / 1:50 000 Geological Map Series [New Series]. These maps are based on the Ordnance Survey One-inch New Series topographic basemaps and provide almost complete coverage of England and Wales, with the exception of sheet 180 (Knighton). The quarter-sheets of 1:63 360 Old Series sheets 91 to 110 coincide with sheets 1 to 73 of the New Series maps. These earlier maps often carry two sheet numbers which refer to the Old Series and the New Series. - Geological Survey of Scotland 1:63 360 / 1:50 000 Geological Map Series. These maps are based on the Ordnance Survey First, Second, Third and Fourth editions of the One-inch map of Scotland. The maps used the most recent topographic basemap available at the time. In the Western Isles, one-inch mapping was abandoned and replaced by maps at 1:100 000 scale, which are associated with this series. Sheets were traditionally issued at 1:63 360 scale, with the first 1:50 000 maps appearing in 1972. Sheets at 1:50 000 scale may be either facsimile enlargements of an existing 1:63 360 sheets, or may contain new geology and cartography. The latter bear the additional series designation '1:50 000 series'. Within the Scottish series, new mapping at 1:50 000 scale was split into east and west sheets. For example, the original one-inch sheet 32 became 1:50 000 sheets 32E and 32W. A number of irregular sheets were also introduced with the new 1:50 000 scale mapping. There are a number of irregular special sheets within both series. Geological maps represent a geologist's compiled interpretation of the geology of an area. A geologist will consider the data available at the time, including measurements and observations collected during field campaigns, as well as their knowledge of geological processes and the geological context to create a model of the geology of an area. This model is then fitted to a topographic basemap and drawn up at the appropriate scale, with generalization if necessary, to create a geological map, which is a representation of the geological model. Explanatory notes and vertical and horizontal cross sections may be published with the map. Geological maps may be created to show various aspects of the geology, or themes. The most common map themes held by BGS are solid (later referred to as bedrock) and drift (later referred to as superficial). These maps are, for the most part, hard-copy paper records stored in the National Geoscience Data Centre (NGDC) and are delivered as digital scans through the BGS website.

  13. s

    open data - archaeology historic environment records events

    • data.stirling.gov.uk
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Aug 28, 2024
    + more versions
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    Stirling Council - insights by location (2024). open data - archaeology historic environment records events [Dataset]. https://data.stirling.gov.uk/maps/stirling-council::open-data-archaeology-historic-environment-records-events
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 28, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Stirling Council - insights by location
    Area covered
    Description

    This dataset is published as Open Data on Stirling Council's Open Data platform https://data.stirling.gov.uk. The dataset is also an amalgamation of two records sets therefore some elements are incomplete or missing, including site locations and coordinates. Historic Environment Records Events, this dataset is points only.HERs (Historic Environment Records) developed out of SMRs (Sites and Monuments Records). SMRs were established from the 1960s onwards in response to the loss of the archaeological resource through urban and rural development. From their original remit of recording archaeological sites, they have been developed to encompass a wide range of information about the historic environment which has been reflected in the change of name from SMR to HER. Today they provide a unique information resource, forming the basis for sustainable conservation and playing an important role in informing public understanding and enjoyment of the local historic environment. The historic environment includes all aspects of our surroundings that have been built, formed or influenced by human activities from earliest to most recent times. A Historic Environment Record stores and provides access to systematically organised information about these surroundings in a given area. It is maintained and updated for public benefit in accordance with national and international standards and guidance. An HER makes information accessible to all in order to: - advance knowledge and understanding of the historic environment; - inform its care and conservation; - inform public policies and decision-making on land-use planning and management; - contribute to environmental improvement and economic regeneration; - contribute to education and social inclusion; - encourage participation in the exploration, appreciation and enjoyment of the historic environment.Local authorities and most National Park authorities maintain records of the archaeological, built and natural environment. However, many services group together to form archaeological services to collate their standardised records. Specialist staff are employed to curate these records and also to provide specialist advice for land-use planning and public information services.This dataset has two distinct data layers: - Historic Environment Sites (including Known Site Extents and Areas of Archaeological Interest) - Historic Environment Events (also known as interventions)

  14. E

    Data from: A plan of the city and suburbs of Edinburgh

    • dtechtive.com
    • find.data.gov.scot
    xml, zip
    Updated Feb 21, 2017
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    University of Edinburgh (2017). A plan of the city and suburbs of Edinburgh [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7488/ds/1821
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    zip(25.53 MB), xml(0.0039 MB)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 21, 2017
    Dataset provided by
    University of Edinburgh
    License

    Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Edinburgh
    Description

    Georeferenced map of 'A plan of the city and suburbs of Edinburgh' By Alexander Kincaid (1784) as part of the Visualising Urban Geographies project- view other versions of the map at http://geo.nls.uk/urbhist/resources_maps.html. Scanned map. This dataset was first accessioned in the EDINA ShareGeo Open repository on 2011-05-31 and migrated to Edinburgh DataShare on 2017-02-21.

  15. c

    Great Britain Historical Database: Digital Boundaries for Registration...

    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    Updated Nov 29, 2024
    + more versions
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    Southall, H. R., University of Portsmouth, School of the Environment; Burton, N., University of Portsmouth; Gregory, I., University of London, Queen Mary and Westfield College; Aucott, P., University of Portsmouth (2024). Great Britain Historical Database: Digital Boundaries for Registration Districts of England and Wales, 1851-1911 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-9032-1
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 29, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Department of Geography
    Geography and Geosciences
    Authors
    Southall, H. R., University of Portsmouth, School of the Environment; Burton, N., University of Portsmouth; Gregory, I., University of London, Queen Mary and Westfield College; Aucott, P., University of Portsmouth
    Time period covered
    Sep 30, 1994 - Sep 29, 2004
    Area covered
    Wales, England
    Variables measured
    Administrative units (geographical/political), Subnational
    Measurement technique
    Transcription
    Description

    Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.


    These digital boundaries were created by the Great Britain Historical GIS Project and form part of the Great Britain Historical Database, which contains a wide range of geographically-located statistics, selected to trace the emergence of the north-south divide in Britain and to provide a synoptic view of the human geography of Britain, generally at sub-county scales.

    They represent the boundaries of Registration Districts in England and Wales as in use at the date of each Census of Population between 1851 and 1911, 1911 being the last census to report extensively on these units.


    Main Topics:

    These digital boundaries can be used to map economic, social and demographic statistics from the Censuses of Population, 1851 to 1911, the Registrar-General's reports from the same period, and other relevant statistical sources. They can also be used as reference maps for these administrative units.

    Note that these Registration Districts were mostly identical to the Poor Law Unions which existed in the same period, but there are significant exceptions, most often where one Registration District was divided into multiple Poor Law Unions. These differences have been recorded by the Great Britain Historical GIS.

    The boundary data contain the same numerical identifiers as are included in the GBHD transcriptions of census and vital registration statistics for Registration Districts, making statistical mapping straightforward.

  16. c

    1851 England and Wales ancient counties

    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    Updated Mar 8, 2025
    + more versions
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    Satchell, M; Shaw-Taylor, L; Wrigley, E; Kitson; Newton, G (2025). 1851 England and Wales ancient counties [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-852942
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 8, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    P
    The Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure
    Authors
    Satchell, M; Shaw-Taylor, L; Wrigley, E; Kitson; Newton, G
    Time period covered
    Mar 1, 2006 - Feb 28, 2009
    Area covered
    United Kingdom, Wales, England
    Description

    ArcGIS shapefile of 244 polygons providing boundary and attribute data for the fifty-five ancient counties of England and Wales as given in the 1851 census for England and Wales.

    These data were created as part of a research program directed by Leigh Shaw-Taylor and Tony Wrigley, which aims ultimately to reconstruct the evolution of the occupational structure of Britain from the late medieval period down to the early twentieth century.

  17. c

    Enclosure, Rating, Drainage and Sanitary Maps of England and Wales in Public...

    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    Updated Nov 28, 2024
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    Oliver, R. R., University of Exeter; Kain, R. J. P., University of Exeter (2024). Enclosure, Rating, Drainage and Sanitary Maps of England and Wales in Public Archives, 1598-1936 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-3820-1
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 28, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Department of Geography
    Authors
    Oliver, R. R., University of Exeter; Kain, R. J. P., University of Exeter
    Time period covered
    Mar 1, 1993 - Nov 1, 1997
    Area covered
    Wales, England
    Variables measured
    Administrative units (geographical/political), National, Maps
    Measurement technique
    Transcription of existing materials, data were collected by examination of maps in public archives and recording of their characteristics as per the codebook.
    Description

    Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.


    The aims of the project were :
    to ascertain how many enclosure, parochial assessment, drainage and sanitary maps survive in England and Wales;
    to analyse their cartographic characteristics, including scale, date and mapmaker;
    to analyse the way in which central and local government and their agencies used maps as instruments with which to implement policy relating to the ownership, use and taxation of land;
    to analyse regional and temporal variations in the coverage of England and Wales by various types of map;
    to obtain data on historic parish and township boundaries in England and Wales.
    Main Topics:

    The dataset covers all the enclosure, parochial assessment, drainage and sanitary maps of England and Wales which were available for public consultation at the time of data collection (1993-1997). For all maps, the date of the map, its scale, its centroid on the National Grid, its dimensions, its maker (where known) and all details as to the types of information (boundaries, communications, settlement, land use, water features, public boundaries, cadastral information) contained on each map are recorded. It is possible to analyse the data by late nineteenth century county, by date and by type of map.

    Please note: this study does not include information on named individuals and would therefore not be useful for personal family history research.

  18. Historic Land Use associated with Mineral Planning Permissions for England

    • brightstripe.co.uk
    • metadata.bgs.ac.uk
    • +2more
    Updated Apr 12, 2024
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    British Geological Survey (BGS) (2024). Historic Land Use associated with Mineral Planning Permissions for England [Dataset]. https://www.brightstripe.co.uk/dataset/8f5f30f6-2811-4e4b-b90c-fda39d4f2631/historic-land-use-associated-with-mineral-planning-permissions-for-england.html
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Apr 12, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    British Geological Surveyhttps://www.bgs.ac.uk/
    Authors
    British Geological Survey (BGS)
    License

    https://www.data.gov.uk/dataset/8f5f30f6-2811-4e4b-b90c-fda39d4f2631/historic-land-use-associated-with-mineral-planning-permissions-for-england#licence-infohttps://www.data.gov.uk/dataset/8f5f30f6-2811-4e4b-b90c-fda39d4f2631/historic-land-use-associated-with-mineral-planning-permissions-for-england#licence-info

    Description

    Between 2001 and 2003 BGS received approximately 1400 1:25 000 paper maps and associated card index from the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister (now Department for Communities and Local Government (CLG)). The maps, originally compiled by the Minerals Division of the Ministry of Housing and Local Government (CLGs historic predecessor), contain hand drawn boundaries for permitted, withdrawn and refused mineral planning permissions, and worked ground. They also contain hand drawn boundaries for land use at each site. These 'MHLG' maps show information collated from the 1940s (retrospectively to 1930) to the mid 1980s. The index cards provide supplementary information regarding name, operator, dates and relevant local authority. Data depicted on the maps are for England only and include; [a] all planning appeals, departures and called in cases whether permitted or refused; [b] all planning permission and refusal data for various local authority areas which were obtained by Departmental officials through visits to authorities in a staged programme spread over many years. Priority was placed on areas that were giving rise to then current casework issues thus at the time when the maintenance of the maps ended (mid 1985), some authority information had been updated recently but other areas had not been visited for many years. [c] land use present at each site. Categories include: derelict areas, restored quarries (filled and unfilled), tip heaps and spoil heaps, and wet areas. The variable completeness of the data sets should be kept in mind when this material is being used. Land use polygons have been digitised from the MHLG maps and attribute information has been provided from the map legend and the appropriate card in the card index. The principal aim of the data is to show land use present in areas of land that have been affected by the extraction of minerals.

  19. d

    Ancient Woodland (England)

    • environment.data.gov.uk
    • data.europa.eu
    zip
    Updated May 17, 2024
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    Natural England (2024). Ancient Woodland (England) [Dataset]. https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/f425f1e1-fc18-4b5a-88d8-76934125627c
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    zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 17, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Natural Englandhttp://www.gov.uk/natural-england
    License

    Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    England
    Description

    The inventory identifies over 52,000 ancient woodland sites in England. Ancient woodland is identified using presence or absence of woods from old maps, information about the wood's name, shape, internal boundaries, location relative to other features, ground survey, and aerial photography. The information recorded about each wood and stored on the Inventory Database includes its grid reference, its area in hectares and how much is semi-natural or replanted. Prior to the digitisation of the boundaries, only paper maps depicting each ancient wood at 1:50 000 scale were available.

  20. T

    United States Exports of maps, hydrographic or similar charts (printed) to...

    • tradingeconomics.com
    csv, excel, json, xml
    Updated Feb 7, 2020
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    TRADING ECONOMICS (2020). United States Exports of maps, hydrographic or similar charts (printed) to United Kingdom [Dataset]. https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/exports/united-kingdom/maps-hydrographic-charts-atlases
    Explore at:
    csv, json, xml, excelAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 7, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    TRADING ECONOMICS
    License

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

    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 1990 - Dec 31, 2025
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    United States Exports of maps, hydrographic or similar charts (printed) to United Kingdom was US$551.04 Thousand during 2024, according to the United Nations COMTRADE database on international trade. United States Exports of maps, hydrographic or similar charts (printed) to United Kingdom - data, historical chart and statistics - was last updated on March of 2025.

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Esri UK Education (2018). 1940-1947 Bartholomew historic map [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/EsriUkeducation::1940-1947-bartholomew-historic-map/about
Organization logo

1940-1947 Bartholomew historic map

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Dataset updated
Apr 26, 2018
Dataset provided by
Esrihttp://esri.com/
Authors
Esri UK Education
Area covered
Description

Colourful and easy to use, Bartholomew’s maps became a trademark series. The maps were popular and influential, especially for recreation, and the series sold well, particularly with cyclists and tourists. To begin with, Bartholomew printed their half-inch maps in Scotland as stand-alone sheets known as 'District Sheets' and by 1886 the whole of Scotland was covered. They then revised the maps into an ordered set of 29 sheets covering Scotland in a regular format. This was first published under the title Bartholomew’s Reduced Ordnance Survey of Scotland. The half-inch maps of Scotland formed the principal content for Bartholomew's Survey Atlas of Scotland published in 1895. Bartholomew then moved south of the Border to the more lucrative but competitive market in England and Wales, whilst continuing to revise the Scottish sheets. This Bartholomew series at half-inch to the mile, covered Great Britain in 62 sheets in the 1940s, Bartholomew’s first to cover Great Britain at this scale (their previous series covering Scotland and then England and Wales). The series provides an attractive and useful snapshot of 1940s Britain. By this time, Bartholomew had altered the range of information on their maps compared to the 1900s. There were more categories of roads, Ministry of Transport road numbers were added, and new recreational features such as Youth Hostels and Golf Courses. Bartholomew’s topographic information was gathered partly from original Ordnance Survey maps, and partly from information sent in to Bartholomew from map users. One important user community for Bartholomew were cyclists. From the 1890s, Bartholomew entered into a formal relationship with the Cyclists’ Touring Club, then numbering around 60,500 cyclists, proposing that club members supplied Bartholomew with up-to-date information. In return, Bartholomew provided the CTC with discounted half-inch maps. The relationship worked very well, turning CTC members into an unofficial surveying army, feeding back reliable and accurate topographical information which Bartholomew would then use to update their maps. You can read more about this and see selected letters from cyclists at: http://digital.nls.uk/bartholomew/duncan-street-explorer/cyclists-touring-club.html.

Usually Bartholomew made revisions the sheets right up to the time of publication, so the date of publication is the best guide to the approximate date of the features shown on the map. You can view the dates of publication for the series at: https://maps.nls.uk/series/bart_half_great_britain.html

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