Slope Relief Classification derived from 1" SRTM DEM-S
Slope relief landform pattern classification based on Speight (2009).
The slope relief product was derived from the 300 m focal median percent slope product, and the Smoothed Digital Elevation Model (DEM-S; ANZCW0703014016), which was derived from the 1 arc-second resolution SRTM data acquired by NASA in February 2000.
The slope relief classification dataset is available in 1 arc-second and 3 arc-second resolutions.
The 3 arc-second resolution product was generated from the 1 arc-second slope relief product and masked by the 3” water and ocean mask datasets.
Simple
Identification info
- Date (Creation)
- 2016-08-11
- Date (Publication)
- 2016-08-11
- Date (Revision)
- 2016-08-11
- Edition
- v3
Publisher
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
26 Dick Perry Avenue, Kensington, Western Australia,
6151, Australia
Kensington
Western Australia
6151
Australia
Author
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation - Austin, Jenet
Clunies Ross Street, Black Mountain, 2601, Australian Capital Territory, Australia
Black Mountain
Australian Capital Territory
2601
Australia
Author
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation - Gallant, John
Clunies Ross Street, Black Mountain, 2601, Australian Capital Territory, Australia
Black Mountain
Australian Capital Territory
2601
Australia
Identifier
- Keywords (Discipline)
-
- Slope Relief
- LAND Topography Models
- ECOLOGY Landscape
- TERN_Soils
- Land Surface
- Australia
- ANZSRC Fields of Research
Extent
N
S
E
W
Temporal extent
- Time period
- 2000-02-11 2000-02-22
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
- Title
- Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence
- Alternate title
- CC-BY
- Edition
- 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 2012.
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
- http://hdl.handle.net/102.100.100/9238?index=1
Resource lineage
- Statement
- Source data 1. 1 arc-second SRTM-derived Smoothed Digital Elevation Model (DEM-S; ANZCW0703014016). 2. 1 arc-second 300 m focal median percent slope product 3. 1 arc-second slope relief product 4. 3 arc-second resolution SRTM water body and ocean mask datasets Slope relief calculation The slope relief layer is an implementation of the classification of erosional landform patterns characterised by relief and modal slope as defined in Table 5 of Speight, J.G. (2009) Landform. In 'Australian soil and land survey field handbook (3rd edn)', National Committee on Soil and Terrain. CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne (the Yellow Book; the table is the same in the second edition) Modal slope has been replaced by median slope, since this is considered more amenable to automated processing, and the second highest relief class (90 - 300 m) has been split into two classes, 90 - 150 m and 150 - 300 m; partly due to desire to connect with international work (eg MORAP in USA) where the 150 m relief threshold is used, and partly due to the perceived rarity of relief over 150 m in Australia. The method was developed in May-June 2011 by John Gallant, CSIRO Land and Water and John Wilford, Geoscience Australia The slope relief calculation was performed on 1° x 1° tiles, with overlaps to ensure correct values at tile edges. The 3 arc-second resolution version was generated from the 1 arc-second slope relief product. This was done by aggregating the 1” data over a 3 x 3 grid cell window and taking the majority class of the nine values that contributed to each 3” output grid cell. If there was a tie the result was no data, and in these cases a value was determined using Euclidean allocation. The 3” slope relief data were then masked using the SRTM 3” ocean and water body datasets. Speight, J.G. (2009) Landform. In 'Australian soil and land survey field handbook (3rd edn)', National Committee on Soil and Terrain. CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne
- Hierarchy level
- Dataset
Reference System Information
- Reference system identifier
- EPSG/EPSG:4326
- Reference system type
- Geodetic Geographic 2D
Metadata
- Metadata identifier
-
urn:uuid/aa0b7dd7-a611-5957-a546-0074e3813958
- Title
- TERN GeoNetwork UUID - Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
- Language
- English
- Character encoding
- UTF8
Point of contact
Type of resource
- Resource scope
- Dataset
- Metadata linkage
-
https://geonetwork.tern.org.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/aa0b7dd7-a611-5957-a546-0074e3813958
Point of truth URL of this metadata record
- Date info (Creation)
- 2016-08-11T13:07:41+10:00
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
Overviews
Spatial extent
N
S
E
W
Provided by
Associated resources
Not available
TERN Geospatial Catalogue