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  • Contains a medium scale vector representation of the topography of Australia. The data include the following themes: Hydrography - drainage networks including watercourses, lakes, wetlands, bores and offshore features; Infrastructure - constructed features to support road, rail and air transportation as well as built-up areas, localities and homesteads. Utilities, pipelines, fences and powerlines are also included; Relief - features depicting the terrain of the earth including 50 metre contours, spot heights, sand dunes, craters and cliffs; Vegetation - depicting forested areas, orchards, mangroves, pine plantations and rainforests; and Reserved Areas - areas reserved for special purposes including nature conservation reserves, aboriginal reserves, prohibited areas and water supply reserves.

  • The Eagles Nest Catchment 1:7,500 vegetation map illustrates the distribution of vegetation with respect to regolith materials and the landforms on which they occur, described using the RTMAP scheme developed by Geoscience Australia

  • Subtidal to intertidal deposits from Kaipara Harbour in Northland preserve a 23,000+ year incomplete sedimentary record of the transition from terrestrial to estuarine conditions in the Wairoa River arm of the harbour. Cores are used to reconstruct the depositional setting for this transition, which we interpret as a succession from dune and freshwater wetland to shallow estuarine environments. The fossil pollen record provides a proxy of Last Glacial Maximum and Late Glacial vegetation for the area. Stability of the palaeo-dune landscape during the postglacial marine transgression is interpreted on the basis of strong dominance of tall forest taxa (Dacrydium) in the pollen record and soil development in dune sands. Reworking of buried dune and wetland sediments has only reached to a depth of 1.5 m below the modern tidal flat. As such, the site provides a rare example of good preservation of Pleistocene deposits at the coast, where extensive reworking and loss of record are more typical.

  • This service has been created specifically for display in the National Map and the chosen symbology may not suit other mapping applications. The Australian Topographic map service is seamless national dataset coverage for the whole of Australia. These data are best suited to graphical applications. These data may vary greatly in quality depending on the method of capture and digitising specifications in place at the time of capture. The web map service portrays detailed graphic representation of features that appear on the Earth's surface. These features include vegetation theme from the Geoscience Australia 250K Topographic Data. The service contains layer scale dependencies.

  • National vegetation cover derived from: - Values 1, 7, and 8 from the 2007 forests dataset (BRS) - Values 2 and 3 from the NVIS 3.1 dataset (ERIN) - Values 1-6 and 9-11 from the catchment scale land use dataset (as at April 2009, BRS) - Any remaining no data areas filled from the Integrated Vegetation 2008 dataset (BRS) The datasets were resampled to 100 metre grids and projected to Albers equal area if required. The integrated vegetation grid was derived using a conditional statement weighing each input grid in the order listed above. Bureau of Rural Sciences, Canberra are custodians of the dataset.

  • Contains a medium scale vector representation of the topography of Australia. The data include the following themes: Hydrography - drainage networks including watercourses, lakes, wetlands, bores and offshore features; Infrastructure - constructed features to support road, rail and air transportation as well as built-up areas, localities and homesteads. Utilities, pipelines, fences and powerlines are also included; Relief - features depicting the terrain of the earth including 50 metre contours, spot heights, sand dunes, craters and cliffs; Vegetation - depicting forested areas, orchards, mangroves, pine plantations and rainforests; and Reserved Areas - areas reserved for special purposes including nature conservation reserves, aboriginal reserves, prohibited areas and water supply reserves.

  • The Sustainable Management of Coastal Groundwater Resources Project was co-funded by the Raising National Water Standards Program, which supports the implementation of the National Water Initiative Program. The project was led by GHD Hassall, in consultation with Kempsey Shire Council, Geoscience Australia, NSW Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water, and Ecoseal Developments Pty. Ltd. The project aimed to improve the management of groundwater in coastal dune aquifers, undertaking a case study of the Hat Head National Park region on the Mid North Coast of New South Wales. Due to increasing pressures on groundwater resources from expanding urbanisation and tourism in this region, the sustainable management of the existing groundwater resources is of vital importance. There are many potential risks associated with extraction of groundwater resources including acidification of soils, seawater intrusion and increased salinity levels, and detrimental impacts on groundwater dependent ecosystems (GDEs). This final report documents all of the work undertaken by Geoscience Australia relating to Groundwater Dependent Ecosystems, or more specifically groundwater dependent terrestrial vegetation. Groundwater dependent ecosystems (GDEs) are naturally occurring ecosystems that require access to groundwater to meet all or some of their water requirements so as to maintain their communities of plants and animals, ecological processes and ecosystems services. Often the natural water regime of GDEs will comprise one or more of groundwater, surface water and soil moisture.

  • Identification of groundwater-dependent (terrestrial) vegetation, and assessment of the relative importance of different water sources to vegetation dynamics commonly involves detailed ecophysiological studies over a number of seasons or years. However, even when groundwater dependence can be quantified, results are often difficult to upscale beyond the plot scale. Consequently, quicker, more regional mapping approaches have been developed. These new approaches utilise advances in computation geoscience, and remote sensing and airborne geophysical technologies. The Darling River Floodplain, western New South Wales, Australia, was selected as the case study area. This semi-arid landscape is subject to long periods of drought followed by extensive flooding. Despite the episodic availability of surface water resources, two native Eucalyptus species, E. camaldulensis (River Red Gum) and E. largiflorens (Black Box) continue to survive in these conditions. Both species have recognised adaptations, include the ability to utilise groundwater resources at depth. A remote sensing methodology was developed to identify those communities potentially dependent on groundwater resources during the recent millennium drought in Australia.

  • Atlas of Regolith Materials of Queensland. Companion to the 1:2,500,00 Queensland Regolith-Landform Map and GIS. Both broad and detailed regolith mapping and characterisation of materials was used to build an understanding of the regolith and its associated landforms. This state-wide overview contributes significantly to understanding the regolith and landform processes and regolith materials of Australian arid and coastal environments. This Queensland study extends seamlessly from the Northern Territory Regolith Landform Map and provides a broad-scale framework fro guiding geochemical prospecting for a wide range of minerals and materials.

  • Floodplain vegetation can be degraded from both too much and too little water due to regulation. Over-regulation and increased use of groundwater in these landscapes can exacerbate the effects related to natural climate variability. Prolonged flooding of woody plants has been found to induce a number of physiological disturbances such as early stomatal closure and inhibition of photosynthesis. However drought conditions can also result in leaf biomass reduction and sapwood area decline. Depending on the species, different inundation and drought tolerances are observed. This paper focuses specifically on differing lake level management practices in order to assess associated environmental impacts. In western NSW, two Eucalyptus species, River Red Gum (E. camaldulensis) and Black Box (E. largiflorens) have well documented tolerances and both are located on the fringes of lakes in the Menindee Lakes Storage Water scheme. Flows to these lakes have been controlled since 1960 and lake levels monitored since 1979. Pre-regulation aerial photos indicate a significant change to the distribution of lake-floor and fringing vegetation in response to increased inundation frequency and duration. In addition, by coupling historic lake water-level data with a Landsat satellite imagery, spatial and temporal vegetation response to different water regimes has been observed. Two flood events specifically investigated are the 2010/11 and 1990 floods. Results from this analysis provide historic examples of vegetation response to lake regulation including whether recorded inundation duration and frequency resulted in positive or negative impacts, the time delay till affects become evident, duration of observed response and general recovery/reversal times. These findings can be used to inform ongoing water management decisions.