OR/14/025 Technical information: Difference between revisions
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Data is provided to indicate the Parent materials and soils across Great Britain (excluding Isle of Man). | Data is provided to indicate the Parent materials and soils across Great Britain (excluding Isle of Man). | ||
[[Image:OR14025_fig1.jpg|center|thumb| | [[Image:OR14025_fig1.jpg|center|thumb|300px| ]] | ||
==Data history== | ==Data history== |
Revision as of 09:59, 10 August 2015
LAWLEY, R. 2014. User Guide: Soil Parent Material 1 km dataset. British Geological Survey Internal Report, OR/14/025. |
Field descriptors
The data fields included in this dataset are as follows:
ESB DESC | CARB CNTNT | PMM GRAIN | SOIL GROUP | SOIL TEX |
SOIL DEPTH | PMM1k UID | VERSION |
Text description | Text description | Text description | Text description | Text description | Text description | Unique Identifier | Data descriptor |
Each field comprises some form of text description or classification which follows a basic definition of its characteristics as described in the following tables:
ESB_DESC
The ESB descriptions are defined in Appendix 1. There are 155 ESB codes defined in the SPM1km dataset.
CARB_CNTNT
The carbonate content descriptions are defined as follows:
Term used | Definition |
High | Parent type has a high CaCO3 content due to its primary mineralogy e.g. Chalk. |
Variable(high) | Parent type has a variable but possibly high CaCO3 content due to lithological variation e.g. Interbedded limestone and calcareous mudstone beds. |
Mod | Parent type has a moderate CaCO[1] content due to its primary mineralogy e.g. dolomite. |
Variable | Parent type has a variable (high to low) CaCO3 content due to heterolithic distribution of carbonate e.g. Till with chalk‐gravel. |
Low | Parent type has a low CaCO3 content due to its primary mineralogy e.g. weakly calcareous‐cemented mudstone. |
Variable(low) | Parent type has a variable but typically low CaCO3 content e.g. mudstone with intermittent, weakly‐calcareous, sandstone beds. |
None | Parent type has a no primary CaCO3 content. |
Unknown | Parent materials whose precise lithology is unclear (generally highly variable at short scales) or from a location that no mineralogical/geochemical data is available to confirm primary mineralogical content. |
Not applicable | No data applicable (typically inland water bodies). |
In the 1:50 000 scale dataset this field is called CaCO3_CNTNT.
PMM_GRAIN
The Parent Material Grain size descriptions are defined as follows:
Term used | Definition | Typical Particle size (mm) |
Grain size class (non‐igneous parent) | ||
Argillaceous (Argillic) | Materials that are dominantly fine grained (clay and silt grade) | < 0.06 |
Arenaceous | Materials that are dominantly medium grained (fine to medium sand grade) | 0.06–2.0 |
Rudaceous | Materials that are dominantly coarse grained (coarse sand to gravel grade) | 2.0 + |
Peat* | Material is Peat | NA |
Grain size class (igneous parent) | ||
Fine | Materials that are dominantly composed of fine crystals. | < 0.25 |
Medium | Materials that are dominantly composed of medium crystals. | 0.25 > 2 |
Coarse | Materials that are dominantly composed of coarse crystals. | 2.0 + |
Not Applicable | No data applicable (typically inland water bodies). |
SOIL_GROUP
The Soil Group descriptions (broad trends in soil texture as commonly used by DEFRA are defined as follows:
Term used | Definition |
Heaviest soils | Soils that are generally clay‐rich. |
Medium and/to Heavy soils | Soils that range from clay‐rich to loamy (generally because of heterolithic parent materials, such as interbedded mudstones and sandstones). |
Medium soils | Soils that are generally loamy. |
Medium and/to Lightest soils | Soils that range from loamy to silt‐rich or sand‐rich (generally because of heterolithic parent materials, such as interbedded sandstones and siltstones). |
Lightest Soils | Soils that are generally sand‐rich or silt‐rich. |
Mixed or Organic soils | Soils that exhibit highly variable soil textures or the presence of Peat (generally due to the heterolithic nature of the parent material or is mode of origin). |
NOT APPLICABLE | No data applicable (typically inland water bodies). |
SOIL_TEX
The Soil textures in the PMM1km dataset are concatenated texture codes that cover the basic Soil texture descriptions are defined as follows:
Definition | |
Clay | Soil is generally dominated by clay grade particles (< 0.002 mm dia) |
Silt | Soil is generally dominated by silt grade particles (0.002 mm < 0.06 mm dia) |
Sand | Soil is generally dominated by sand grade particles ( 0.06 mm <2.0 mm dia) |
Loam | Loam soils are soils with a distributed/even mix of particle sizes |
Peat | Not a texture term, but defines areas dominated by Peat materials |
Moderators | |
Clayey‐ | This terms indicates that the dominant/ typical texture is moderated by a component of clay particles |
Silty‐ | This terms indicates that the dominant/ typical texture is moderated by a component of clay particles |
Sandy‐ | This terms indicates that the dominant/ typical texture is moderated by a component of clay particles |
Peaty‐ | This terms indicates that the dominant/ typical texture includes a component of Peat |
Chalky‐ | This terms indicates that the dominant/ typical texture includes a component of Chalk (as sand grade or gravel‐grade fragments) |
SOIL_DEPTH
The Soil depth descriptions (broad trends in soil thickness) are defined as follows:
Term used | Definition |
Deep | A thick soil profile is likely. Soil (and any underlying parent Material) should be easily dug to a depth of more than 1 m. |
Deep‐ intermediate | The soil profile may vary from thick to intermediate. Soil (and any underlying Parent Material) can be dug to a depth of 1 m and possibly more in some places. |
Intermediate | A ‘typical’ soil profile is likely. Soil (and any underlying Parent Material) can be dug to a depth of 1 m |
Intermediate‐ shallow | The soil profile may vary from thin to intermediate. The underlying Parent Material is potentially difficult to dig at depths greater than 0.5 m |
Shallow | A thin soil profile is likely. Digging the Parent Material beneath the soil will be extremely difficult at a depth of 0.5 m (or possibly less) |
Not applicable | No data applicable (typically inland water bodies) |
PMM1k_UID
This field uniquely identifies each object in the map. It is used for auditing and identification purposes.
VERSION
This field identifies the dataset (it is set to DPPMM_1 km_V1).
Additional information
Map scale
The Soil Parent Material 1 km dataset is produced for use as a 1 kilometre resolution vector grid (1000 m by 1000 m ground resolution).
The data are released in ESRI shapefile formats. Other formats such as MapInfo TAB are available on request. The standard data supplied to customers has polygons in a single layer or theme, with 6 attribute fields.
Coverage
Data is provided to indicate the Parent materials and soils across Great Britain (excluding Isle of Man).

Data history
This is the first version of the Soil Parent Material 1 km dataset. BGS is continually surveying and resurveying, extending, improving and updating the underlying geological maps and databases.
Version 1 (released 2014): Derived from BGS Parent Material Map version 6. More details on this product can be found at this website http://www.bgs.ac.uk/products/onshore/soilPMM.html
Limitations
The PMM 1km datasets has been developed at cell resolution of 1 km x 1 km and must not be used at finer resolution. All spatial searches against the data should consider the limitations of spatial comparison at this kilometre scale.
Local conditions may vary and this dataset should not replace detailed site investigations. Further detail of the geology or parent material may be available on more detailed 1:10 000 scale or 1:50 000 scale geological maps.
The spatial distribution of the data is limited by the spatial accuracy and resolution of the digital geological map data (DiGMapGB-50 V6. Spatial mismatches of parent material related to mismatches in lithology type (i.e. variation in LEX_RCS across map-sheet boundaries) are unavoidable, and require resolution by reference to higher resolution map information. Further detail of the geology or parent material may be available on more detailed 1:10 000 scale or 1:50 000 scale geological maps.
The PMM 1 km data are created as vector polygons and are available in a range of GIS formats, including ArcGIS (.shp), ArcInfo Coverages and MapInfo (.tab). More specialised formats may be available but may incur additional processing costs.
The PMM 1 km dataset is concerned with the properties and potential use of NATURAL geological deposits and conditions only. It does NOT cover any man-made constructions or materials.
The PMM 1 km is based on, and limited to, an interpretation of the records in the possession of The British Geological Survey at the time the dataset was created.
An indication of the typical characteristics of a rock or soil does not necessarily mean that the properties are consistent throughout the outcrop. Such an assessment can only be made by inspection of the area by a qualified professional.
Licensing information
To encourage the use and re-use of this data we have made the data within Parent Materials 1 km available under the Open Government Licence, subject to the following acknowledgement which should be included in any material that reproduces or uses the BGS materials or data: "Contains British Geological Survey materials ©NERC [year]". The terms of use for every product under OpenGeoscience are displayed clearly at the top of every page.
Contact information
For all data and licensing enquiries please contact:
- Enquiries
- British Geological Survey Kingsley Dunham Centre Keyworth
- Nottingham NG12 5GG
- Direct tel: +44(0)115 936 3143
- Fax: +44(0)115 9363150
- Email:enquiries@bgs.ac.uk
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