Digital Geological Map Data of Great Britain - 10k (DiGMapGB-10) Linear version 2
British Geological Survey;
2013
|| British Geological Survey - National Geoscience Data Centre (UKRI/NERC)
Linear features (shown as polylines) represent seven classes of geological structural features e.g. faults, folds or landforms e.g. buried channels, glacial drainage channels at the ground or bedrock surface (beneath superficial deposits). The scale of the data is 1:10 000 scale. Onshore coverage is partial with approximately 30% of England, Scotland and Wales available in the version 2 data release. BGS intend to continue developing coverage at this scale; current focus is to include all large priority urban areas, along with road and rail transport corridors. Linear features are associated most closely with the bedrock theme either as an intrinsic part of it for example marine bands or affecting it in the case of faults. However landform elements are associated with both bedrock and superficial deposits. The linear features are organised into seven main categories: Alteration area indicating zones of change to the pre-existing rocks due to the application of heat and pressure can occur round structural features such as faults and dykes. Fault where a body of bedrock has been fractured and displaced by a large scale process affecting the earth’s crust. Fold where strata are bent or deformed resulting from changes or movement of the earth’s surface creating heat and pressure to reshape and transform the original horizontal strata. Folds appear on all scales, in all rock types and from a variety of causes. Fossil horizons where prolific fossil assemblages occur and can be used to help establishing the order in which deposits were laid down (stratigraphy). These horizons allow correlation where sediments of the same age look completely different due to variations in depositional environment. Mineral vein where concentrations of crystallised mineral occur within a rock, they are closely associated with faulting but may occur independently. Landforms define the landscape by its surface form; these include glacial features such as drumlins, eskers and ice margins. Rock identifies key (marker) beds, recognised as showing distinct physical characteristics or fossil content. Examples include coal seams, gypsum beds and marine bands. The data are available in vector format (containing the geometry of each feature linked to a database record describing their attributes) as ESRI shapefiles and are available under BGS data licence.
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MSL enriched sub domains |
- microscopy and tomography
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Source |
http://dx.doi.org/10.5285/5e3438e5-1aae-45f5-a366-36eaf9dda7c1 |
Source publisher |
British Geological Survey - National Geoscience Data Centre (UKRI/NERC) |
DOI |
10.5285/5e3438e5-1aae-45f5-a366-36eaf9dda7c1 |
Authors |
- British Geological Survey
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Citation |
British Geological Survey. (2013). Digital Geological Map Data of Great Britain - 10k (DiGMapGB-10) Linear version 2 [Data set]. British Geological Survey. https://doi.org/10.5285/5E3438E5-1AAE-45F5-A366-36EAF9DDA7C1 |
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