GSI Groundwater Vulnerability

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Groundwater Vulnerability is a term used to represent the intrinsic geological and hydrogeological characteristics that determine the ease with which groundwater may be contaminated by human activities. Groundwater vulnerability maps are based on the type and thicknesses of subsoils (sands, gravels, glacial tills (or boulder clays), peat, lake and alluvial silts and clays), and the presence of karst features. Groundwater is most at risk where the subsoils are absent or thin and, in areas of karstic limestone, where surface streams sink underground at swallow holes. All land area is assigned one of the following groundwater vulnerability categories: Rock near surface or karst (X) Extreme (E) High (H) Moderate (M) Low (L). Indicates the likelihood of groundwater contamination. Aids land-use management. Helps in the choice of preventative measures and enables developments, which have a significant potential to contaminate, to be located in areas of lower vulnerability. Helps to ensure that a groundwater protection scheme is not unnecessarily restrictive on human economic activity.

Data Resources (1)

HTML
available as HTML
Theme Science
Date released 2014-01-10
Date updated 2023-09-11
Dataset conforms to these standards The INSPIRE Directive or INSPIRE lays down a general framework for a Spatial Data Infrastructure (SDI) for the purposes of European Community environmental policies and policies or activities which may have an impact on the environment.
Rights notes {https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/,license}
Update frequency Other
Language English
Landing page https://www.gsi.ie/en-ie/data-and-maps/Pages/default.aspx
Geographic coverage in GeoJSON format {"type":"Polygon","coordinates":[[[-10.47472, 51.44555],[-10.47472, 55.37999], [-6.01306, 55.37999], [-6.01306, 51.44555], [-10.47472, 51.44555]]]}
Spatial Reference Systems (SRS) TM65 / Irish Grid (EPSG:29902)
Vertical Extent {"verticalDomainName": "EPSG Projection 5731 - Malin Head height", "minVerticalExtent": "0", "maxVerticalExtent": "1014"}
Provenance information Application of the data: Local details are generalised to fit the original mapping and interpretation scale of 1:50,000. Evaluation of specific sites and circumstances will normally require further and more detailed assessments, and will often require site investigations. ?Sources of Information: GSI 1:10,560 Geology Field Sheets Teagasc/EPA 1:40,000 Subsoil Map GSI 1:50,000 Depth to Bedrock Map from county GWPSs and NDP-funded national mapping programme GSI 1:50,000 Subsoil Permeability Map from county GWPSs and NDP-funded national mapping programme GSI Groundwater Section Well Database GSI Bedrock Section Core Hole database GSI Quaternary/Geotechnical Section Borehole Data GSI groundwater vulnerability drilling programme Data on site investigations procured from consultants ?Vulnerability map creation technique: Created using tools built though ArcGIS model builder. On a county by county basis. Depth to bedrock layer and subsoil permeability layer are combined and the vulnerability category is calculated for each resulting combination using the groundwater vulnerabilty matrix http://www.gsi.ie/Programmes/Groundwater/Projects/Protection+Schemes+Guidelines.htm#categories National Vulnerability map is created by combining all county vulnerability maps.
Period of time covered (begin) 2012-01-12
Period of time covered (end) 2012-01-12