Metadata 1576
The D layer is the depth to the water table from the surface. The Boyne study area is based on 401 historical water level data points along with spring data and data from groundwater surface water interactions. Spatial interpolation using kriging was used and then the values were classified into the D index values. The highest D values correspond to where the water table is shallowest, generally found in the lower areas in the catchment, with the lowest D values meaning greater depth to the watertable, fou...
D layer represents depth to groundwater table from the surface, where values are reclassified values into D index values from 1 to 10. High values of "D" factor correspond mostly with alluvial aquifers in NE part of the area where shallow groundwater prevails. Low values correspond mainly with steepest mountainous areas and deeper aquifers.
The D layer is the depth to the water table from the surface. The Rockingham study area is based on 120 historical water level data points along with spring data and data from groundwater surface water interactions. Spatial interpolation using kriging was used and then the values were classified into the D index values. The highest D values correspond to where the water table is shallowest, generally found in the lower areas in the catchment, with the lowest D values meaning greater depth to the watertable...
factor D of DRASTIC groundwater vulnerability of Traun-Enns-Platte/AUSTRIA
Depth to water table, for Sarmatian aquifer in Dobrogea de Sud, Romania
Samba contains information on drilling and geophysical surveys on Danish territory, carried out according to license under the Danish underground law. That is: seismic surveys as well as boreholes for exploration, delimitation and production wells concerning oil/gas, geothermal energy, gas storage and salt as well as scientific drilling. The data sets contain technical, administrative and geological information from drillings and geophysical measurements undertaken in boreholes (boreholelogs and reports) a...
Jupiter is GEUS ' nationwide database for groundwater, drinking water, raw materials, environmental and geotechnical data. The database is the single public data base in the field and is included in the National Environmental Portal. The database is publicly available.
The first layer is a Landslide density map (LANDEN). The second layer is an average landslide density for each administrative area. A detailed explanation of these layers can be found in: Herrera, G., Mateos, R. M., García-Davalillo, J. C., Grandjean, G., Poyiadji, E., Maftei, R., ... and Trigila, A. (2017). Landslide databases in the Geological Surveys of Europe. Landslides, 1-21.https://doi.org/10.1007/s10346-017-0902-z.
This dataset contains point locations of mineral deposits (metallic, non-metallic and radioactive). The attributes consist of descriptive data (free text or from dictionaries) on the following topics: (general data, geological data, economic data and free text description. The process of completion of attributes is in the developing stage.
The database includes basic attributes describing mineral deposits (exploitation and exploration spaces) for which the state has granted concession.