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Soil and Landscape Grid Digital Soil Property Maps for Western Australia (3" resolution)

These are products of the Soil and Landscape Grid of Australia Facility generated through disaggregation of the Western Australian soil mapping. There are 9 soil attribute products available from the Soil Facility: Available Water Holding Capacity - Volumetric (AWC); Bulk Density - Whole Earth (BDw); Bulk Density - Fine Earth (BDf); Clay (CLY); Course Fragments (CFG); Electrical Conductivity (ECD); pH Water (pHw); Sand (SND); Silt (SLT).


Each soil attribute product is a collection of 6 depth slices. Each depth raster has an upper and lower uncertainty limit raster associated with it. The depths provided are 0-5cm, 5-15cm, 15-30cm, 30-60cm, 60-100cm & 100-200cm, consistent with the Specifications of the GlobalSoilMap.


The DSMART tool (Odgers et al. 2014) tool was used in a downscaling process to translate legacy soil landscape mapping to 3” resolution (approx. 100m cell size) raster predictions of soil classes (Holmes et al. Submitted). The soil class maps were then used to produce corresponding soil property surfaces using the PROPR tool (Odgers et al. 2015; Odgers et al. Submitted). Legacy mapping was compiled for the state of WA from surveys ranging in map scale from 1:20,000 to 1:2,000,000 (Schoknecht et al., 2004). The polygons are attributed with the soils and proportions of soils within polygons however individual soils were not explicitly spatially defined. These new disaggregated map products aim to incorporate expert soil surveyor knowledge embodied in legacy polygon soil maps, while providing re-interpreted soil spatial information at a scale that is more suited to on-ground decision making.


Note: The DSMART-derived dissagregated legacy soil mapping products provide different spatial predictions of soil properties to the national TERN Soil Grid products derived by Cubist (data mining) and kriging based on site data by Viscarra Rossel et al. (Submitted). Where they overlap, the national prediction layers and DSMART products can be considered complementary predictions. They will offer varying spatial reliability (/ uncertainty) depending on the availability of representative site data (for national predictions) and the scale and expertise of legacy mapping. The national predictions and DSMART disaggregated layers have also been merged as a means to present the best available (lowest statistical uncertainty) data from both products (Clifford et al. In Prep).


Previous versions of this collection contained Depths layers. These have been removed as the units do not comply with Global Soil Map specifications.

Simple

Identification info

Date (Publication)
2018-03-19
Date (Revision)
2018-03-19
Edition
v4

Publisher

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
26 Dick Perry Avenue, Kensington, Western Australia, 6151, Australia
Kensington
Western Australia
6151
Australia

Author

Department of Agriculture and Food (2006-2017), Western Australian Government - Holmes, Karen
3 Baron-Hay Court South Perth Western Australia 6151, Australia
South Perth
Western Australia
6151
Australia

Author

University of Sydney - Odgers, Nathan
City Road, Camperdown, New South Wales, 2050, Australia
Camperdown
New South Wales
2050
Australia

Author

State Government of Western Australia - Griffin, Ted
Technology Park, Western Precinct, 17 Dick Perry Avenue, Kensington, Western Australia, 6151, Australia
Kensington
Western Australia
6151
Australia

Identifier

Title
DataCite
Code
10.4225/08/5aaf364c54ccf
Codespace
http://dx.doi.org
Keywords (Discipline)
  • TERN_Soils
  • TERN_Soils_DSM
  • Soil
  • TERN
  • Raster
  • Attributes
  • Western Australia
  • DSM
  • Global Soil Map
  • spatial modelling
  • 3-dimensional soil mapping
  • spatial uncertainty
  • DSMART
  • disaggregated
  • Available Water Capacity
  • Bulk Density
  • Clay
  • Electrical Conductivity
  • Effective Cation Exchange Capacity
  • Coarse Fragments
  • Organic Carbon
  • pH
  • Sand
  • Silt
  • EC
  • ECEC
  • BD
  • pH - Water
  • SLGA
ANZSRC Fields of Research
  • Pedology and pedometrics
  • Soil sciences not elsewhere classified

Extent

N
S
E
W


Resource constraints

Use limitation
The Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license allows others to copy, distribute, display, and create derivative works provided that they credit the original source and any other nominated parties. Details are provided at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
File name
88x31.png
File description
CCBy Logo from creativecommons.org
File type
png
Linkage
https://w3id.org/tern/static/cc-by/88x31.png

Title
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence
Alternate title
CC-BY
Edition
4.0
Website
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Access constraints
License
Use constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints
Data is accessible online and may be reused in accordance with licence conditions

Resource constraints

Classification
Unclassified
Credit
All Rights (including copyright) CSIRO 2014.
Title
File Naming Conventions
Website
File Naming Conventions

File Naming Conventions

Title
Browse all Soil and Landscape Grid of Australia Digital Soil Property Maps
Website
Browse all Soil and Landscape Grid of Australia Digital Soil Property Maps

Browse all Soil and Landscape Grid of Australia Digital Soil Property Maps

Title
Browse all Soil and Landscape Grid of Australia collections
Website
Browse all Soil and Landscape Grid of Australia collections

Browse all Soil and Landscape Grid of Australia collections

Distribution Information

Distributor

Distributor

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
26 Dick Perry Avenue, Kensington, Western Australia, 6151, Australia
Kensington
Western Australia
6151
Australia
Distribution format
OnLine resource
https://doi.org/10.4225/08/5aaf364c54ccf

Resource lineage

Statement
The soil attribute maps are generated using novel spatial modelling and digital soil mapping techniques to disaggregate legacy soil mapping. Legacy soil mapping: Polygon-based soil mapping for Western Australia’s agricultural zone was developed via WA’s Department of Agriculture and Food (Schoknecht et al., 2004). Seventy-three soil classes (termed ‘WA soil groups’ Schoknecht and Pathan, 2013) have been defined to capture the range of variation in soil profiles across this area. While legacy soil mapping does not explicitly map the distribution of these soil classes, estimates of their percentage composition and associated soil properties are available for each soil landscape map unit (polygon). Disaggregation of soil classes: The DSMART algorithm (version 1, described in Odgers et al. 2014) was used to produce fine-resolution raster predictions for the probability of occurrence of each soil class. This uses random virtual sampling within each map unit (with sampling weighted by the expected proportions of each soil class) to build predictions for the distribution of soil classes based on relationships with environmental covariate layers (e.g. elevation, terrain attributes, climate, remote sensing vegetation indices, radiometrics). The algorithm was run 100 times then averaged to create probabilistic estimates for soil class spatial distributions. Soil property predictions: The PROPR algorithm (Odgers et al. 2015) was used to generate soil property maps (and their associated uncertainty) using reference soil property data and the soil class probability maps create through the above DSMART disaggregation step. Western Australia’s expert defined typical range of soil properties by soil class was used to provide reference soil properties to PROPR. These estimates were made separately for each physiographic zone across WA, and are based on available profile data and surveyor experience. Uncertainty bounds were determined by the minimum and maximum soil properties at the ‘qualified soil group’ level, and the property value of the most common soil in the map unit was used to define the typical soil property. This methodology was previously developed to meet the specifications of McKenzie et al. (2012) and provides expert soil surveyor estimates for map unit area composition and representative profile properties. Depth averaging was applied to the regional variant profile data to obtain property values at the specified GlobalSoilMap depth intervals. Then area-weighted soil property averages were calculated for each subgroup soil class. This process is documented further in Odgers et al. (Submitted).
Hierarchy level
Dataset

Reference System Information

Reference system identifier
EPSG/EPSG:4326

Reference system type
Geodetic Geographic 2D

Metadata

Metadata identifier
urn:uuid/7ade6f7c-6115-501a-8582-4e903bc5092a

Title
TERN GeoNetwork UUID - Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

Language
English
Character encoding
UTF8

Point of contact

Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network
Building 1019, 80 Meiers Rd
Indooroopilly
QLD
4068
Australia
+61 7 3365 9097

Type of resource

Resource scope
Dataset
Metadata linkage
https://geonetwork.tern.org.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/7ade6f7c-6115-501a-8582-4e903bc5092a

Point of truth URL of this metadata record

Date info (Creation)
2018-03-19T15:02:45+11:00

Metadata standard

Title
ISO 19115-1:2014/AMD 1:2018 Geographic information - Metadata - Fundamentals
Edition
1

Metadata standard

Title
ISO/TS 19115-3:2016
Edition
1.0

Metadata standard

Title
ISO/TS 19157-2:2016
Edition
1.0
Title
Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network (TERN) Metadata Profile of ISO 19115-3:2016 and ISO 19157-2:2016
Date (published)
2021
Edition
1.0

Identifier

Code
10.5281/zenodo.5652221
Website
https://github.com/ternaustralia/TERN-ISO19115/releases/tag/v1.0

 
 

Overviews

Spatial extent

N
S
E
W


Keywords

ANZSRC Fields of Research
Pedology and pedometrics Soil sciences not elsewhere classified

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