https://www.ons.gov.uk/methodology/geography/licenceshttps://www.ons.gov.uk/methodology/geography/licences
A PDF map that shows the counties and unitary authorities in the United Kingdom as at 1 April 2023. (File Size - 583 KB)
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License information was derived automatically
Dosya Dosya geçmişi Dosya kullanımı Küresel dosya kullanımıDaha yüksek çözünürlüğe sahip sürüm bulunmamaktadır Tyne and
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Dosya Dosya geçmişi Dosya kullanımı Küresel dosya kullanımıDaha yüksek çözünürlüğe sahip sürüm bulunmamaktadır East Suss
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Supplementary information files for article: 'The future scope of large-scale solar in the UK: site suitability and target analysis'.Abstract:This paper uses site suitability analysis to identify locations for solar farms in the UK to help meet climate change targets. A set of maps, each representing a given suitability criterion, is created with geographical information systems (GIS) software. These are combined to give a Boolean map of areas which are appropriate for large-scale solar farm installation. Several scenarios are investigated by varying the criteria, which include geographical (land use) factors, solar energy resource and electrical distribution network constraints. Some are dictated by the physical and technical requirements of large-scale solar construction, and some by government or distribution network operator (DNO) policy. It is found that any suitability map which does not heed planning permission and grid constraints will overstate potential solar farm area by up to 97%. This research finds sufficient suitable land to meet Future Energy Scenarios (UK National Grid outlines for the coming energy landscape).
http://inspire.ec.europa.eu/metadata-codelist/LimitationsOnPublicAccess/noLimitationshttp://inspire.ec.europa.eu/metadata-codelist/LimitationsOnPublicAccess/noLimitations
The UKSeaMap Predictive Habitats Map 2025 (version 1) is a broad-scale prediction that uses physical models of depth, light, sediment and energy to predict the physical seabed habitats for the whole UK seabed. This map covers the UK extended Continental Shelf as defined by the Continental Shelf (Designation of Areas) Order 2013, but excluding the intertidal zone, Dee Estuary and Morecambe Bay.
Two habitat classification systems are present in the final output:
EUNIS habitat classification system version 2007-11 The Marine Habitat Classification for Britain and Ireland (https://mhc.jncc.gov.uk/) version 22.04 The attribute table includes a column for each of level 2, level 3 and level 4 of each of these two classification schemes. In some cases, there were 2-3 options of habitat type, which were both included and separated by the word “OR“. There is also a column containing the most detailed unique habitat type for each of the two classification systems.
The habitats were determined by combining 4 categorical input layers called 'habitat descriptors', which are the basis for describing physical habitats in the Marine Habitat Classification for Britain and Ireland. These are also present in the geodatabase.
Habitat descriptor data layers:
Seabed substrate type - created using the British Geological Survey's national broad-scale predictive sediment map - Marchant et al. (2025) and the JNCC-BGS-Cefas national broad-scale predictive rock map (JNCC, 2019) Biological zone (also known as biozone) - created using the depth to seabed, wave disturbance at the seabed and amount of light reaching the seabed. Kinetic energy at the seabed - created using energy from tidal currents and energy from waves Salinity regime - created using the Annex I Habitats Regulations datasets for coastal lagoons and estuaries features A methods report will be published in due course.
The UKSeaMap Predictive Map forms part of the UK Atlas of Seabed Habitats (UKASH), a suite of mapping products, offering the most complete characterisation of seabed habitats in the UK in the Marine Habitat Classification for Britain and Ireland and the European standard classification system, EUNIS. UKASH is composed of:
UKASH Library of Localised Maps: A standardised collection of individual, ground-truthed habitat maps from various sources. UKASH Mosaic of Localised Maps: A unified, non-overlapping map product that prioritises the most reliable maps from the UKASH Library of Localised Maps. UKSeaMap Predictive Map: A seamless, full-coverage predictive map of physical seabed habitats in the UK. UKASH Combined Map: The UKASH Mosaic of Localised Maps, with gaps filled by the UKSeaMap Predictive Map.
Further info: https://jncc.gov.uk/our-work/uk-atlas-of-seabed-habitats-ukash/#ukseamap
Historic Flood Map is a GIS layer showing the maximum extent of all individual Recorded Flood Outlines from river, the sea and groundwater springs and shows areas of land that have previously been subject to flooding in England. Records began in 1946 when predecessor bodies to the Environment Agency started collecting detailed information about flooding incidents, although we may hold limited details about flooding incidents prior to this date. This dataset differs from the Recorded Flood Outline dataset in that it contains only those flood outlines that are 'considered and accepted' if the following criteria are met:photographic/video evidence with the location referencedrecorded flood levels with the location referencedevidence that the outline represents the time of peak water level (for example date / time stamped photo)evidence that the source of flooding is from rivers, the sea or groundwater and not surface water/overland runoff. The absence of coverage by the Historic Flood Map for an area does not mean that the area has never flooded, only that we do not currently have records of flooding in this area. It is also possible that the pattern of flooding in this area has changed and that this area would now flood under different circumstances. The Historic Flood Map will take into account of 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 shown to the land and does not necessarily indicate that properties were flooded internally. The Historic Flood Map consists of spatial data only.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Dosya Dosya geçmişi Dosya kullanımı Küresel dosya kullanımıBu önizlemenin boyutu 758 600 piksel Diğer çözünürlükler 303
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
Recorded Flood Outlines is a GIS layer which shows all our records of historic flooding from rivers, the sea, groundwater and surface water. Each individual Recorded Flood Outline contains a consistent list of information about the recorded flood.
Records began in 1946 when predecessor bodies to the Environment Agency started collecting detailed information about flooding incidents, although we may hold limited details about flooding incidents prior to this date.
The absence of coverage by Recorded Flood Outlines for an area does not mean that the area has never flooded, only that we do not currently have records of flooding in this area.
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.
The Recorded Flood Outlines take into account the presence of defences, structures, and other infrastructure where they existed at the time of flooding. It includes flood extents that may have been affected by overtopping, breaches or blockages.
Any flood extents shown do not necessarily indicate that properties were flooded internally.
A companion dataset Historic Flood Map contains a subset of these Recorded Flood Outlines which satisfy a certain criteria.
This dataset is now retired and replaced with the following:
Reservoir Flood Extents - Fluvial Contribution (National) https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/db114020-465a-412b-b289-be393d995a75 Reservoir Flood Extents - Wet Day (National) https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/d81646cf-37e5-4e71-bbcf-b7d5b9ca3a1c Reservoir Flood Extents - Dry Day (National) https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/c66ee97f-49d2-454e-9a19-d48a47bd22ad
This is the simplified version of the outline Reservoir Flood Map Outline (Extent) as shown on the gov.uk Flood Risk website. This is one of 3 available "Risk of Flooding from Reservoirs" Web Mapping Services; Maximum Flood Depth, Maximum Flood Extent, Maximum Flood Speed.
Simplified in this context refers to the fact that unlike the detailed product, individual reservoir flood map extents are not shown separately, and one merged outline shows the maximum flood extent for all reservoir flooding scenarios together.
This is a data layer showing a combined reservoir flood map for 2,092 Large Raised Reservoirs. The data shows the maximum extent of flood should reservoirs be breached, and although the location of each reservoir can be inferred they are not explicitly shown on the maps. The Reservoir Flood Map Maximum Flood Outline (Extent) in its simplified form is referred to externally as Risk of Flooding from Reservoirs – Maximum Flood Extent.
The Reservoir Flood Map Outline (Extent) shows the largest area that might be flooded if a reservoir were to fail and release the water it holds. Since this is a prediction of a credible worst case scenario, it’s unlikely that any actual flood would be this large. These data are intended for emergency planning only and are not reliable for large scale flood risk assessments.
Please note that only flood maps for large reservoirs are displayed. Flood maps are not displayed for smaller reservoirs or for reservoirs commissioned after reservoir mapping began in spring 2009.
Information Warning: The Maximum extent category is available under the standard OGL terms when supplied as a WMS. This excludes the underlying data. Attribution statement: © Environment Agency copyright and/or database right 2019. All rights reserved.
This dataset is refreshed on a weekly basis from the datasets the team works on daily.Last update date: 05 June 2025.National Highways Operational Highway Boundary (RedLine) maps out the land belonging to the highway for the whole Strategic Road Network (SRN). It comprises two layers; one being the an outline and another showing the registration status / category of land of land that makes up the boundary. Due to the process involved in creating junctions with local highway authority (LHA) roads, land in this dataset may represent LHA highway (owned by National Highways but the responsibility of the LHA to maintain). Surplus land or land held for future projects does not form part of this dataset.The highway boundary is derived from:Ordnance Survey Mastermap Topography,HM Land Registry National Polygon Service (National Highway titles only), andplots researched and digitised during the course of the RedLine Boundary Project.The boundary is split into categories describing the decisions made for particular plots of land. These categories are as follows:Auto-RedLine category is for plots created from an automated process using Ordnance Survey MasterMap Topography as a base. Land is not registered under National Highways' name. For example, but not limited to, unregistered ‘ancient’ highway vested in Highways England, or bridge carrying highways over a rail line.NH Title within RedLine category is for plots created from Land Registry Cadastral parcels whose proprietor is National Highways or a predecessor. Land in this category is within the highway boundary (audited) or meets a certain threshold by the algorithm.NH Title outside RedLine category is for plots created in the same way as above but these areas are thought to be outside the highway boundary. Where the Confidence is Low, land in this category is yet to be audited. Where the Confidence is High, land in this category has been reviewed and audited as outside our operational boundary.National Highways (Technician) Data category is for plots created by National Highways, digitised land parcels relating to highway land that is not registered, not yet registered or un-registerable.Road in Tunnel category, created using tunnel outlines from Ordnance Survey MasterMap Topography data. These represent tunnels on Highways England’s network. Land is not registered under National Highways' name, but land above the tunnel may be in National Highways’ title. Please refer to the definitive land ownership records held at HM Land Registry.The process attribute details how the decision was made for the particular plot of land. These are as follows:Automated category denotes data produced by an automated process. These areas are yet to be audited by the company.Audited category denotes data that has been audited by the company.Technician Data (Awaiting Audit) category denotes data that was created by National Highways but is yet to be audited and confirmed as final.The confidence attribute details how confident you can be in the decision. This attribute is derived from both the decisions made during the building of the underlying automated dataset as well as whether the section has been researched and/or audited by National Highways staff. These are as follows:High category denotes land that has a high probability of being within the RedLine boundary. These areas typically are audited or are features that are close to or on the highway.Moderate category denotes land that is likely to be within the highway boundary but is subject to change once the area has been audited.Low category denotes land that is less likely to be within the highway boundary. These plots typically represent Highways England registered land that the automated process has marked as outside the highway boundary.Please note that this dataset is indicative only. For queries about this dataset please contact the GIS and Research Team.
This dataset is now retired and replaced with the following:
Reservoir Flood Extents - Fluvial Contribution (National) https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/db114020-465a-412b-b289-be393d995a75 Reservoir Flood Extents - Wet Day (National) https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/d81646cf-37e5-4e71-bbcf-b7d5b9ca3a1c Reservoir Flood Extents - Dry Day (National) https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/c66ee97f-49d2-454e-9a19-d48a47bd22ad
This is the simplified version of the outline Reservoir Flood Map Outline (Speed) as shown on the gov.uk Flood Risk website. This is one of 3 available "Risk of Flooding from Reservoirs" Web Mapping Services; Maximum Flood Depth, Maximum Flood Extent, Maximum Flood Speed.
. Simplified in this context refers to the fact that unlike the detailed product, individual reservoir flood map speeds are not shown separately, and one merged outline shows the maximum flood speeds for all reservoir flooding scenarios together.
This is a data layer showing a combined reservoir flood map for 2,092 Large Raised Reservoirs including attributed data. The data shows the maximum speed of flooding should reservoirs be breached, and although the location of each reservoir can be inferred they are not explicitly shown on the maps. The Reservoir Flood Map Maximum Flood Outline (Speed) in its simplified form is referred to externally as Risk of Flooding from Reservoirs – Maximum Flood Speed.
The Reservoir Flood Map Outline (Speed) shows the maximum flood speeds that might be expected if a reservoir were to fail and release the water it holds. Since this is a prediction of a credible worst case scenario, it’s unlikely that any actual flooding would create speeds this high. These data are intended for emergency planning only and are not reliable for large scale flood risk assessments.
Please note that only flood maps for large reservoirs are displayed. Flood maps are not displayed for smaller reservoirs or for reservoirs commissioned after reservoir mapping began in spring 2009.
Information Warning: Only the Maximum extent, velocity and depth categories are available under the standard OGL terms when supplied as a WMS. This excludes the underlying data. Attribution statement: © Environment Agency copyright and/or database right 2019. All rights reserved.
Various data recorded by Historic England relating to aerial investigation and mapping projects. N.B. This is a dynamic dataset that is constantly evolving, not only with the addition of newly completed projects, but also with the reassessment of some earlier projects. See https://historicengland.org.uk/research/methods/airborne-remote-sensing/aerial-investigation/ for further details of Historic England's work with aerial sources.It's currently not possible to provide download access to the earlier hand drawn projects, which are only available as raster files, but these can be viewed via the Aerial Archaeology Mapping Explorer. We aim to create vector monument polygons for these features as the next phase of the project.More information and help with these the layers Detailed MappingThis layer shows the detailed mapping of archaeological features derived from aerial imagery; this includes photographic imagery from many decades taken specifically for archaeological purposes, as well as other photography taken for other reasons and airborne lidar. The data are symbolised initially based on their physical form i.e. cut/negative (e.g. pit, ditch etc) or built/positive (e.g. mound, bank etc) .
Field name
Field alias
Description
Mandatory Y/N
LAYER
LAYER
The layer used for mapping
Y
PROJECT
PROJECT
Project name
Y
PERIOD
PERIOD
The presumed date/period assigned to the feature (terminology from FISH thesaurus)
Y
MONUMENT_TYPE
MONUMENT_TYPE
The presumed type/function assigned to the feature (terminology from FISH thesaurus)
Y
EVIDENCE_1
EVIDENCE_1
The primary evidence for the feature e.g. cropmark, earthwork etc (terminology from FISH thesaurus)
Y
SOURCE_1
SOURCE_1
The primary source for the feature e.g. aerial photo reference, documentary source etc
Y
EVIDENCE_2
EVIDENCE_2
Where available the latest evidence for the feature e.g. cropmark, earthwork etc (terminology from FISH thesaurus) N.B. This was the latest evidence seen and does not necessarily represent the current status of the feature.
N
SOURCE_2
SOURCE_2
Where available the latest source for the feature N.B. This was the latest evidence seen and does not necessarily represent the current status of the feature.
N
HE_UID
HE_UID
Composite of Unique identifier(s) used by Historic England
Y
HER_NO
HER_NO
Composite of Unique identifier(s) used by Historic Environment Records
N
DHEUID_1
DHEUID_1
Primary Unique identifier used by Historic England
Y
DHEUID_2
DHEUID_2
Secondary Unique identifier used by Historic England. Used where a feature may relate to more than one Historic England record
N
DHEUID_3 ~ 5
DHEUID_3 ~ 5
Additional Unique identifier used by Historic England. Used where a feature may relate to more than one Historic England record
N
HE_URL1
HE_URL1
URL link to the relevant Historic England record in Heritage Gateway
Y
HE_URL2
HE_URL2
URL link to the relevant Historic England record in Heritage Gateway
N
HE_URL3 ~ 5
HE_URL3 ~ 5
URL link to the relevant Historic England record in Heritage Gateway
N
DHERNO_1
DHERNO_1
Primary unique identifier used by the relevant Historic Environment Record (HER)
Y
DHERNO_2
DHERNO_2
Secondary unique identifier used by the relevant Historic Environment Record. Used where a feature may relate to more than one HER record
N
DHERNO_3 ~ 5
DHERNO_3 ~ 5
Tertiary unique identifier used by the relevant Historic Environment Record. Used where a feature may relate to more than one HER record
N
DHERPREF_1
DHERPREF_1
Primary alternative unique identifier used by the relevant Historic Environment Record. Some HERs use the same number for both the HER No. and the reference to link to the record; others use different numbers and give them different names e.g MonUID
Y
DHERPREF_2
DHERPREF_2
Secondary alternative unique identifier used by the relevant Historic Environment Record. Some HERs use the same number for both the HER No. and the reference to link to the record; others use different numbers and give them different names e.g MonUID Used where a feature may relate to more than one HER record
N
DHERPREF_3 ~ 5
DHERPREF_3 ~ 5
Additional alternative unique identifier used by the relevant Historic Environment Record. Some HERs use the same number for both the HER No. and the reference to link to the record; others use different numbers and give them different names e.g MonUID Used where a feature may relate to more than one HER record
N
HER_LINK_1
HER_LINK_1
URL link to the relevant Historic Environment Record (HER) record in Heritage Gateway
Y
HER_LINK_2
HER_LINK_2
URL link to the relevant Historic Environment Record (HER) record in Heritage Gateway
N
HER_LINK_3 ~ 5
HER_LINK_3 ~ 5
URL link to the relevant Historic Environment Record (HER) record in Heritage Gateway
N
The data are symbolised initially based on their physical form i.e. cut/negative (e.g. pit, ditch etc) or built/positive (e.g. mound, bank etc)
Layer name
Colour (Hex)
Description
Bank #A50026 Used to outline banks, platforms, mounds and spoil heaps.
Ditch #313695 Used to outline cut features such as ditches, ponds, pits or hollow ways.
Extent of Feature
#FDAE61 (Dashes)
Used to depict the extent of large area features such as airfields, military camps, or major extraction.
Ridge and Furrow Alignment
#74ADD1
Line or arrow(s) (hand drawn not a symbol) depicting the direction of the rigs in a block of ridge and furrow.
Ridge and Furrow Area
#74ADD1 (Dots)
Used to outline a block of ridge and furrow .
Slope
#4575B4
The top of the “T” indicates the top of slope and the body indicates the length and direction of the slope. Used to depict scarps, edges of platforms and other large earthworks.
Structure
#F46D43
Used to outline structures including stone, concrete, metal and timber constructions e.g., buildings, Nissen huts, tents, radio masts, camouflaged airfields, wrecks, fish traps, etc.
You can find instructions on how to create a QGIS style file (.qml) to recreate our mapping symbology in QGIS via our Open Data Downloads page under Aerial Investigation Mapping data.Monument ExtentsThis layer shows the general extent of the monuments, created from multiple sources, primarily aerial imagery, but referring to other sources such as earthwork surveys, documentary evidence and any information available from the relevant Historic Environment Record etc. This differs from the 'Detailed Mapping' layer, which shows the individual features as they appear on the ground.
Field name
Field alias
Description
Mandatory Y/N
LAYER
LAYER
The layer used for mapping
Y
HE_UID
HE_UID
Composite of Unique identifier(s) used by Historic England
Y
HER_NO
HER_NO
Composite of Unique identifier(s) used by Historic Environement Records
N
HE_UID1
HE_UID1
Primary Unique identifier used by Historic England
Y
HE_UID2
HE_UID2
Secondary Unique identifier used by Historic England. Used where a feature may relate to more than one Historic England record
N
HE_UID3 ~ 5
HE-UID3 ~ 5
Additional Unique identifier used by Historic England. Used where a feature may relate to more than one Historic England record
N
HE_URL1
HE_URL1
URL link to the relevant Historic England record in Heritage Gateway
Y
HE_URL2
HE_URL2
URL link to the relevant Historic England record in Heritage Gateway
N
HE_URL3 ~ 5
HE_URL3 ~ 5
URL link to the relevant Historic England record in Heritage Gateway
N
HERNO_1
HERNO_1
Primary unique identifier used by the relevant Historic Environment Record (HER)
Y
HERNO_2
HERNO_2
Secondary unique identifier used by the relevant Historic Environment Record. Used where a feature may relate to more than one HER record
N
HERNO_3 ~ 25
HERNO_3 ~ 25
Tertiary unique identifier used by the relevant Historic Environment Record. Used where a feature may relate to more than one HER record
N
HERPREF_1
HERPREF_1
Primary alternative unique identifier used by the relevant Historic Environment Record. Some HERs use the same number for both the HER No. and the reference to link to the record; others use different numbers and give them different names e.g MonUID
Y
HERPREF_2
HERPREF_2
Secondary alternative unique identifier used by the relevant Historic Environment Record. Some HERs use the same number for both the HER No. and the reference to link to the record; others use different numbers and give them different names e.g MonUID Used where a feature may relate to more than one HER record
N
HERPREF_3 ~ 25
HERPREF_3 ~ 25
Additional alternative unique identifier used by the relevant Historic Environment Record. Some HERs use the same number for both the HER No. and the reference to link to the record; others use different numbers and give them different names e.g MonUID Used where a feature may relate to more than one HER record
N
HER_LINK_1
HER_LINK_1
URL link to the relevant Historic Environment Record (HER) record in Heritage Gateway
Y
HER_LINK_2
HER_LINK_2
URL link to the relevant Historic Environment Record (HER) record in Heritage Gateway
N
HER_LINK_3 ~ 25
HER_LINK_3 ~ 25
URL link to the relevant Historic Environment Record (HER) record in Heritage Gateway
N
PROJECT
project
Project name
Y
Project AreaThis layer shows the extent of the
A free mapping tool that allows you to create a thematic map of London without any specialist GIS skills or software - all you need is Microsoft Excel. Templates are available for London’s Boroughs and Wards. Full instructions are contained within the spreadsheets.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Fayl Faylın tarixçəsi Faylın istifadəsi Faylın qlobal istifadəsiBu SVG faylın PNG formatındakı bu görünüşünün ölçüsü 750
https://www.nstauthority.co.uk/footer/access-to-information/https://www.nstauthority.co.uk/footer/access-to-information/
Seismic Data from the previous (V1) National Data Repository, last updated on June 30th 2021.Seismic Header Information:
NDR_2dseis_eab
Navigation information for all offshore 2D seismic surveys, as reported to BEIS OPRED in seismic survey close out reports. The NSTA did not create this data set and cannot vouch for its completeness or accuracy.
NDR_3dseis
Survey outline information for all offshore 3D seismic surveys, including those acquired using Ocean Bottom Node and Ocean Bottom Cable techniques, as reported to BEIS OPRED in seismic survey close out reports. The NSTA did not create this data set and cannot vouch for its completeness or accuracy.
Reported Seismic Data:
NDR_SDS_2D_Lines
Navigation information for offshore 2D seismic surveys which had Post-Stack SEG-Y data available online in the legacy NDR, the data having been reported to the NSTA via the NDR. The seismic trace data has been migrated to the current NDR service, which also holds field and pre-stack seismic data online. Seismic data may be obtained from the NDR https://ndr.nstauthority.co.uk
NDR_SDS_3D_Outlines
Survey outline information for offshore 3D seismic surveys, including those acquired using Ocean Bottom Node and Ocean Bottom Cable techniques, which had Post-Stack SEG-Y data available online in the legacy NDR, the data having been reported to the NSTA via the NDR. The seismic trace data has been migrated to the current NDR service, which also holds field and pre-stack seismic data online. Seismic data may be obtained from the NDR https://ndr.nstauthority.co.uk
Dieser Datensatz wird nun zurückgezogen und durch Folgendes ersetzt:
Reservoir Flood Extents - Fluvial Contribution (National) (englisch) https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/db114020-465a-412b-b289-be393d995a75 Reservoir Flood Extents - Wet Day (National) (englisch) https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/d81646cf-37e5-4e71-bbcf-b7d5b9ca3a1c Reservoir Flood Extents - Dry Day (National) (englisch) https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/c66ee97f-49d2-454e-9a19-d48a47bd22ad
Dies ist die vereinfachte Version der Gliederung Reservoir Flood Map Outline (Tiefe), wie auf der gov.uk Flood Risk Website gezeigt. Dies ist eines von 3 verfügbaren Web-Mapping-Diensten "Überschwemmungsrisiko aus Reservoirs"; Maximale Hochwassertiefe, maximale Hochwasserausdehnung, maximale Hochwassergeschwindigkeit.
Vereinfacht in diesem Zusammenhang bezieht sich auf die Tatsache, dass im Gegensatz zum detaillierten Produkt einzelne Reservoir-Hochwasserkartentiefen nicht separat dargestellt werden, und eine zusammengeführte Gliederung zeigt die maximale Hochwassertiefe für alle Reservoir-Hochwasserszenarien zusammen.
Dies ist eine Datenschicht, die eine kombinierte Reservoir-Hochwasserkarte für 2.092 große erhöhte Reservoirs einschließlich zugeordneter Daten zeigt. Die Daten zeigen die maximale Tiefe der Überschwemmungen, sollten Reservoirs durchbrochen werden, und obwohl die Lage jedes Reservoirs abgeleitet werden kann, werden sie nicht explizit auf den Karten angezeigt. Die Reservoir Flood Map Maximum Flood Outline (Depth) in ihrer vereinfachten Form wird extern als Flooding Risk of Reservoirs – Maximum Flood Depth bezeichnet.
Die Reservoir Flood Map Outline (Depth) zeigt die maximalen Hochwassertiefen, die zu erwarten wären, wenn ein Reservoir ausfallen und das Wasser, das es enthält, freisetzen würde. Da dies eine Vorhersage eines glaubwürdigen Worst-Case-Szenarios ist, ist es unwahrscheinlich, dass eine tatsächliche Überschwemmung so tief wäre. Diese Daten sind nur für die Notfallplanung bestimmt und für groß angelegte Hochwasserrisikobewertungen nicht zuverlässig.
Bitte beachten Sie, dass nur Hochwasserkarten für große Stauseen angezeigt werden. Hochwasserkarten werden nicht für kleinere Reservoirs oder für Reservoirs angezeigt, die nach Beginn der Reservoirkartierung im Frühjahr 2009 in Betrieb genommen wurden.
Hinweishinweis: Nur die Kategorien Maximale Ausdehnung, Geschwindigkeit und Tiefe sind unter den Standard-OGL-Bedingungen verfügbar, wenn sie als WMS geliefert werden. Dies schließt die zugrunde liegenden Daten aus. Erklärung zur Namensnennung: © Copyright und/oder Datenbankrecht der Umweltbehörde 2019. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.
This dataset defines the boundaries of twelve Nature Recovery Projects forming a key part of the 25 Year Environment Plan’s commitment to deliver the Nature Recovery Network (NRN). The twelve projects included in this dataset are: East of Eden, Purple Horizons, Somerset Coast Levels and Moors, G7 Legacy, Wye Valley, Wendling Beck, Lost Wetlands, Heathland Connections, Bradford & South Pennines, Seaford to Eastbourne: Drink-in the Downs, Tees Estuary Recovering Nature (TERN), Cambridge Nature Network. The boundary for the Lost Wetlands Project has not yet been confirmed and is subject to change.The Nature Recovery Projects form a key part of the 25 Year Environment Plan’s commitment to deliver the Nature Recovery Network (NRN). They aim to follow Lawton principles to create more, bigger, better and, crucially, connected, sustained and functional wildlife-rich places. Places that counter biodiversity loss, adapt to climate change and support the needs of local communities. They will provide natural solutions to reduce carbon emissions, enhance our landscapes and cultural heritage, manage flood risk and enable people to enjoy and connect with nature where they live, work and play – benefiting health and wellbeing. This dataset shows the location and boundaries of Nature Recovery Projects throughout England. The main outline of each one was provided by the project lead, and in some cases these were refined by following geographic or administrative boundairies as listed below: OS Open rivers (OGL), AONBs (OGL), County Boundaries (OGL), OS Open Roads (OGL), SSSIs (OGL), Environmentally Sensitive Areas (OGL), Flood Risk Zone 3 (OGL), NNRs (OGL), Marine Conservation Zone (OGL).Full metadata can be viewed on data.gov.uk.
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https://www.ons.gov.uk/methodology/geography/licenceshttps://www.ons.gov.uk/methodology/geography/licences
A PDF map that shows the counties and unitary authorities in the United Kingdom as at 1 April 2023. (File Size - 583 KB)