Description: This file is a copy of the RBD file submitted as part of WFD reporting 2016. It has been reprojected to Irish Grids and the number of columns reduced.
Description: The Geoheritage Programme is overseeing a project to audit all sites of geological heritage importance in Ireland. Audits take place in partnership with the Local Authority and the Heritage Council of Ireland. Twenty three counties, including the four local authority areas of County Dublin, have been completed. Sites are assessed on their own merits under each thematic network. Sites that are appraised, but which are not selected for NHA designation, are classified as ‘County Geological Sites’ (CGS), as recognised in the National Heritage Plan (2002). This enables their integration into county development plansThis data includes the counties audited to date. Each siteincludesa link to the relevant report.This version of the data was compiled in February 2020.
Description: The Geoheritage Programme is overseeing a project to audit all sites of geological heritage importance in Ireland. Audits take place in partnership with the Local Authority and the Heritage Council of Ireland. Twenty three counties, including the four local authority areas of County Dublin, have been completed. Sites are assessed on their own merits under each thematic network. Sites that are appraised, but which are not selected for NHA designation, are classified as ‘County Geological Sites’ (CGS), as recognised in the National Heritage Plan (2002). This enables their integration into county development plansThis data includes the counties audited to date. Each siteincludesa link to the relevant report.This version of the data was compiled in February 2020.
Description: The Geoheritage Programme is overseeing a project to audit all sites of geological heritage importance in Ireland. Audits take place in partnership with the Local Authority and the Heritage Council of Ireland. Twenty three counties, including the four local authority areas of County Dublin, have been completed. Sites are assessed on their own merits under each thematic network. Sites that are appraised, but which are not selected for NHA designation, are classified as ‘County Geological Sites’ (CGS), as recognised in the National Heritage Plan (2002). This enables their integration into county development plansThis data includes the counties audited to date. Each siteincludesa link to the relevant report.This version of the data was compiled in February 2020.
Description: The Geoheritage Programme is overseeing a project to audit all sites of geological heritage importance in Ireland. Audits take place in partnership with the Local Authority and the Heritage Council of Ireland. Twenty three counties, including the four local authority areas of County Dublin, have been completed. Sites are assessed on their own merits under each thematic network. Sites that are appraised, but which are not selected for NHA designation, are classified as ‘County Geological Sites’ (CGS), as recognised in the National Heritage Plan (2002). This enables their integration into county development plansThis data includes the counties audited to date. Each siteincludesa link to the relevant report.This version of the data was compiled in February 2020.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.
Description: This mineral resource data was produced as part of the Mineral Resource Map of Northern Ireland via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment. This data layer is one of a series of 21 which were used to generate a series of six digitally generated maps. This work was completed in 2012 with one map for each of the six counties (including county boroughs) of Northern Ireland at a scale of 1:100 000. The references for these maps are cites below:
County Antrim and Belfast County Borough. Lusty, P. A. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Pitfield, P. E. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/017.
County Armagh. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/019
County Down and Belfast County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Shaw, R. A., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/018
County Fermanagh. Shaw, R. A., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Cameron, D. G., Lusty, P. A. J., Pitfield, P. E. J., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/015
County Londonderry and Londonderry County Borough. Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Shaw, R. A., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G., and Linley, K. A. OR/12/016
County Tyrone. Shaw, R. A., Pitfield, P. E. J., Mankelow, J. M., Cooper, M. R., Lusty, P. A. J., Cameron, D. G. and Linley, K. A. OR/12/014
A key aspect of sustainable development is the conservation and safeguarding of non-renewable resources, such as minerals. There is a need to ensure that these resources are not needlessly sterilised by other development thus reducing access to supplies for future generations. The purpose of this is data, therefore, is to show the broad distribution of those mineral resources which may be of current or potential economic interest. This data and the accompanying maps are intended to assist strategic decision making in respect of mineral extraction and the protection of important mineral resources against sterilisation. They bring together a wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not always available in a convenient form. The data has been produced by the collation and interpretation of mineral resource data principally held by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland and was funded via a commission from the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment.
These layers display the spatial data of the mineral resources of Northern Ireland. There are a series of layers which consist of:
Bedrock: Clay, Coal & Lignite, Coal – lignite proven, Conglomerate, Dolomite, Igneous and meta-igneous rock, Limestone, a 100m buffer layer on the Ulster White Limestone, Meta-sedimentary rocks, Perlite, Salt, sandstone and Silica Sand.
Superficial (unconsolidated recent sediments) : Sand & gravel and Peat.
The data except for the salt and proven lignite resource layers was derived from the 1:50 00 and 1:250 000 scale DigMap GB dataset.