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- Published by:
- Environmental Information Data Centre
- Last updated:
- 02 April 2026
This dataset consists of soil data for 64 field sites on paired farm sites, with 29 variables measured for soil texture and structural condition, aggregate stability, organic matter content, soil...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 02 April 2026
BGS GeoScour v2 provides river scour susceptibility information for Great Britain using a three-tiered data provision allowing increasing levels of understanding at different resolutions from...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
The estuaries of the Taf, Tywi and Gwendraeth are known locally as the `Three rivers` as they converge and enter into Camarthen Bay in South West Wales through a common mouth. The rivers drain...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
The estuaries of the Taf, Tywi and Gwendraeth are known locally as the `Three rivers` as they converge and enter into Camarthen Bay in South West Wales through a common mouth. The rivers drain...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 02 April 2026
Processed SAR interferograms for the Wells, Nevada earthquake. Grant abstract: How do earthquakes happen? Understanding the nature of earthquakes is a key fundamental question in Geociences that...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 02 April 2026
Theoretical waveforms computed to study earthquakes in the Azores archipelago. Grant abstract: How do earthquakes happen? Understanding the nature of earthquakes is a key fundamental question in...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 02 April 2026
The co-evolution and geographical spread of trees and deep-rooting systems is widely proposed to represent the 'Devonian engine' of global change that drove the weathering of soil minerals and...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 01 July 2019
Four sealochs, Lochs Laxford, Inchard, Broom and Little Loch Broom were surveyed between the 10th and 22nd May 1991 based on board the 59' charter vessel M.V.`Salutay`. The UMBSM/MNCR survey team...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
The Uist island chain in the Outer Hebrides is formed of Lewisian gneiss and is generaly low-lying with extensive and complex fresh and brackish water systems and a heavily indented eastern...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
The Uist island chain in the Outer Hebrides is formed of Lewisian gneiss and is generaly low-lying with extensive and complex fresh and brackish water systems and a heavily indented eastern...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 01 July 2019
Four sealochs, Lochs Laxford, Inchard, Broom and Little Loch Broom were surveyed between the 10th and 22nd May 1991 based on board the 59' charter vessel M.V.`Salutay`. The UMBSM/MNCR survey team...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 02 April 2026
The global carbon cycle - how much carbon is stored in its interconnected reservoirs (ocean, atmosphere, plants and soils on land, sediments in the deep sea) as well as the fluxes between them, is...
- 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...