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- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 25 June 2026
PROJECT DETAILS ONLY - NO DATA. The African continent is slowly splitting apart along the East African rift valley, a 3000 km-long series of deep basins and flanking mountain ranges. This process...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 25 June 2026
PROJECT DETAILS ONLY - NO DATA. The African continent is slowly splitting apart along the East African rift valley, a 3000 km-long series of deep basins and flanking mountain ranges. This process...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 25 June 2026
PROJECT DETAILS ONLY - NO DATA. The African continent is slowly splitting apart along the East African rift valley, a 3000 km-long series of deep basins and flanking mountain ranges. This process...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 25 June 2026
PROJECT DETAILS ONLY - NO DATA. The African continent is slowly splitting apart along the East African rift valley, a 3000 km-long series of deep basins and flanking mountain ranges. This process...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 25 June 2026
PROJECT DETAILS ONLY - NO DATA. The African continent is slowly splitting apart along the East African rift valley, a 3000 km-long series of deep basins and flanking mountain ranges. This process...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 25 June 2026
PROJECT DETAILS ONLY - NO DATA. The African continent is slowly splitting apart along the East African rift valley, a 3000 km-long series of deep basins and flanking mountain ranges. This process...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 25 June 2026
PROJECT DETAILS ONLY - NO DATA. The African continent is slowly splitting apart along the East African rift valley, a 3000 km-long series of deep basins and flanking mountain ranges. This process...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 25 June 2026
PROJECT DETAILS ONLY - NO DATA. The African continent is slowly splitting apart along the East African rift valley, a 3000 km-long series of deep basins and flanking mountain ranges. This process...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 25 June 2026
PROJECT DETAILS ONLY - NO DATA. The African continent is slowly splitting apart along the East African rift valley, a 3000 km-long series of deep basins and flanking mountain ranges. This process...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Loch Fyne, which opens from the north of the Firth of Clyde, is both the longest of the Scottish sea lochs, at approximately 70 km, and the deepest, with a maximum charted depth of 200 m. The large...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Loch Fyne, which opens from the north of the Firth of Clyde, is both the longest of the Scottish sea lochs, at approximately 70 km, and the deepest, with a maximum charted depth of 200 m. The large...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Loch Gairloch and Loch Ewe lie on the north-west Scottish mainland in an area of Torridonian sandstone. They were surveyed during 1990 as part of the survey of Scottish sealochs. Although adjacent,...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
The island of Mull, which is the second largest of the Scottish Inner Hebrides island group, has a deeply indented coastline containing nine sealochs and at least one other large embayment. The...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Six mainland lochs south of Oban were surveyed during 1989 as part of the survey of Scottish sealochs. Loch Feochan, the most northerly, opens into the Firth of Lorne and is protected from the west...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Six mainland lochs south of Oban were surveyed during 1989 as part of the survey of Scottish sealochs. Loch Feochan, the most northerly, opens into the Firth of Lorne and is protected from the west...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Loch Gairloch and Loch Ewe lie on the north-west Scottish mainland in an area of Torridonian sandstone. They were surveyed during 1990 as part of the survey of Scottish sealochs. Although adjacent,...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
The island of Mull, which is the second largest of the Scottish Inner Hebrides island group, has a deeply indented coastline containing nine sealochs and at least one other large embayment. The...
- Published by:
- Environment Agency
- Last updated:
- 25 July 2025
Quantitative indicators for the scale of pressures
For the Water Framework Directive (WFD) River Basin Management Plans data had to be reported to the European Environment Agency. These data are...
- Published by:
- Forestry Commission
- Last updated:
- 25 February 2026
This dataset is the output from the UK canopy cover webmap project, which aimed to assess the percentage tree canopy cover in every ward in the UK. Forest Research delivered the project with...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 25 June 2026
Earth is a dynamic planet, for the simple reason that it is still cooling down from the heat of accretion and subsequent decay of radioactive elements. The main mechanism by which it loses heat is...