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Mineral resource polygons central belt of Scotland version 1

The British Geological Survey (BGS) was awarded a grant from the Scottish Government Aggregates Levy Fund in 2007 to provide a comprehensive, relevant and accessible information base to enhance the sustainability of mineral resources for 18 local authorities in the central belt of Scotland. BGS co-funded this project through its Sustainable Mineral Solutions project. This work was completed in March 2008. This dataset comprises the digital GIS files which were produced through this project. The major elements of minerals information presented are the geological distribution of all mineral resources in the Central Belt of Scotland. The BGS Mineral Resource data does not determine mineral reserves and therefore does not denote potential areas of extraction. Only onshore, mainland mineral resources are included in the dataset. This dataset has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the British Geological Survey. The mineral resource data presented are based on the best available information, but are not comprehensive and their quality is variable. The dataset should only be used to show a broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. The data should not be used to determine individual planning applications or in taking decisions on the acquisition or use of a particular piece of land, although they may give useful background information which sets a specific proposal in context.
 
Citation proposal
(2008) . Mineral resource polygons central belt of Scotland version 1. https://metadata.bgs.ac.uk/geonetwork/srv/api/records/9df8df52-d6a4-37a8-e044-0003ba9b0d98

Simple

Date ( Publication )
2008
Identifier
http://data.bgs.ac.uk/id/dataHolding/13603179

  Distributor

British Geological Survey - Enquiries  
Environmental Science Centre, Nicker Hill, Keyworth NOTTINGHAM NOTTINGHAMSHIRE NG12 5GG United Kingdom

  0115 936 3143  
  0115 936 3276 

  Point of contact

British Geological Survey - Enquiries  
Environmental Science Centre, Nicker Hill, Keyworth NOTTINGHAM NOTTINGHAMSHIRE NG12 5GG United Kingdom

  0115 936 3143  
  0115 936 3276 
Maintenance and update frequency
irregular Irregular
GEMET - INSPIRE themes
  • Geology
BGS Thesaurus of Geosciences
  • Mineral resource maps , Mineral resources , Planning , Mineral economics , Minerals
Keywords
  • NERC_DDC
Access constraints
otherRestrictions Other restrictions
Use constraints
otherRestrictions Other restrictions
Other constraints
The copyright of materials derived from the British Geological Survey's work is vested in the Natural Environment Research Council [NERC]. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a retrieval system of any nature, without the prior permission of the copyright holder, via the BGS Intellectual Property Rights Manager. Use by customers of information provided by the BGS, is at the customer's own risk. In view of the disparate sources of information at BGS's disposal, including such material donated to BGS, that BGS accepts in good faith as being accurate, the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) gives no warranty, expressed or implied, as to the quality or accuracy of the information supplied, or to the information's suitability for any use. NERC/BGS accepts no liability whatever in respect of loss, damage, injury or other occurence however caused.
Other constraints
The dataset is made available to external clients under BGS Digital Data Licence terms and conditions. Revert to the IPR Section (iprdigital@bgs.ac.uk ) if further advice is required with regard to permitted usage.
Spatial representation type
vector Vector
Denominator
50000
Metadata language
English English
Topic category
  • Geoscientific information
Geographic identifier
City of Edinburgh [id=30505]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
Clackmannanshire [id=30418]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
East Ayrshire [id=43393]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
East Dunbartonshire [id=30501]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
East Lothian [id=30509]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
East Renfrewshire [id=30846]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
Falkirk [id=30504]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
Fife [id=30419]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
Glasgow City [id=30631]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
Inverclyde [id=30629]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
Midlothian [id=30634]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
North Ayrshire [id=30628]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
North Lanarkshire [id=30503]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
Renfrewshire [id=30630]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
South Ayrshire [id=43391]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
South Lanarkshire [id=30847]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
West Dunbartonshire [id=36549]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

Geographic identifier
West Lothian [id=30632]

 

Date ( Revision )
2009

N
S
E
W


Supplemental Information
This dataset has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the British Geological Survey. The mineral resource data presented are based on the best available information, but are not comprehensive and their quality is variable. The inferred boundaries shown are, therefore, approximate. Mineral resources defined in the data delineate areas within which potentially workable minerals may occur. These areas are not of uniform potential and also take no account of planning considerations that may limit their working. The economic potential of specific sites can only be proved by a detailed evaluation programme. Such an investigation is an essential precursor to submitting a planning application for mineral working. The individual merits of the site must then be judged against other land-use planning issues. Extensive areas are shown as having no mineral resource potential, but some isolated mineral workings may occur in these areas. The presence of these operations generally reflects very local or specific situations. The pattern of demand for minerals is continually evolving due to changing economic, technical and environmental factors. The dataset should only be used to show a broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. The data should not be used to determine individual planning applications or in taking decisions on the acquisition or use of a particular piece of land, although they may give useful background information which sets a specific proposal in context. Criteria used to define resources, for example in terms of mineral to waste ratios, also change with location and time. Thus a mineral deposit with a high proportion of waste may be viable if located in close proximity to a major market, but uneconomic if located further away. These criteria vary depending on the quality of the information available. The extents of mineral resources shown in these data are generally the inferred surface expression of the resource. However, users should note that workable minerals may extend beneath overburden which is adjacent to the outcrop area shown. Bedrock resource for the commodity may exist underneath where a superficial deposit for the same commodity is shown. Bedrock deposits are not shown underneath the superficial deposits for the same commodity type to ensure that the commodity layer is topologically correct (i.e. polygons do not overlap) and can be used in a GIS system for analysis. The Mineral Resource dataset has been developed at 1:50 000 scales and must not be used at larger scales. Digital map data should therefore be used at about the same scale as their original compilation; for example 1:50 000 scale data should not normally be blown up and used at 1:10 000 scales. Most geological maps were originally fitted to a particular topographic base and care must be taken in interpretation, for example when the geological data are draped over a more recent topography. All spatial searches against the data should be done with a minimum 50 m buffer. Mineral resources defined in the data delineate areas within which potentially workable minerals may occur.
Reference system identifier
OGP / urn:ogc:def:crs:EPSG::27700

 

Date ( Revision )
2005

Distribution format
  • Paper map ()

  • Digital map ()

  • ESRI shapefiles ()

  Distributor

British Geological Survey - Enquiries  
Environmental Science Centre, Nicker Hill, Keyworth NOTTINGHAM NOTTINGHAMSHIRE NG12 5GG United Kingdom

  0115 936 3143  
  0115 936 3276 
OnLine resource
BGS Mineral Resources - Datasets  
Hierarchy level
dataset Dataset
Other
dataset

Conformance result

Date ( Publication )
2011
Explanation
See the referenced specification
Pass
false

Conformance result

Date ( Publication )
2010-12-08
Explanation
See http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=OJ:L:2010:323:0011:0102:EN:PDF
Pass
false
Statement
[1] BGS DiGMapGB-50 version 5 geology polygons were clipped to the county boundary. [2] A list and map of the geological lithologies for each county were supplied to the Economic Geologist for interpretation of which bedrock and superficial geological formations might now, or in the foreseeable future, be of economic value. [3] Interpretations are then extracted from the derived from DiGMapGB-50 version 5 and given a mineral resource attribute and colour. [4] Maps were re-supplied to the Economic Geologist for correction. Small areas of resources were deleted when considered to be uneconomic/unworkable. [5] Drafts of the finished maps taken to stakeholders for comment. [6] Maps approved and digital data, collated for each map, sent to GIS specialist for dataset preparation and cleaning. [7] Data produced for each map was merged together to produce regional files based on resource commodity. [8] Mineral commodity and name attributes are correctly assigned using the legend supplied by Economic Geologist. [9] Polygons dissolved based on name attribute, removing all county boundaries. [10] Remove sliver polygons (created as a result of geological sheet boundaries) where possible and re-dissolve. [11] Multipart to single part operation conducted on each dataset. [12] Redundant attributes removed. [13] Repair geometry operation to clean the dataset. [14] Economic Geologist approves final resource dataset.

gmd:MD_Metadata

File identifier
9df8df52-d6a4-37a8-e044-0003ba9b0d98   XML
Metadata language
English English
Hierarchy level
dataset Dataset
Date stamp
2021-01-19
Metadata standard name
UK GEMINI
Metadata standard version
2.3

  Point of contact

British Geological Survey  
Environmental Science Centre, Keyworth NOTTINGHAM NOTTINGHAMSHIRE NG12 5GG United Kingdom

  +44 115 936 3100  
Dataset URI
http://data.bgs.ac.uk/id/dataHolding/13603179
 
 

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