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Geohazards/IE_GSI_Landslide_Extents_Locations_5K_IE32_ITM (FeatureServer)

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Service Description:

A landslide is the movement of material down a slope. This includes rock, earth, mud and peat. Landslides in Ireland mainly occur on steep mountain slopes.

Geologists map and record information on where and when landslides happen and on the material that has moved. They also map the area of a landslide in order to see how big the landslide was.

To produce this data landslides were mapped using digital imagery and mapping in the field. The area of the landslide was then drawn on a map.

We collect new landslide event data and update the landslide event dataset every year.

The are to the scale 1:5,000. This means they should be viewed at that scale. When printed at that scale 1cm on the map relates to a distance of 50m.

They are vector datasets. Vector data portray the world using points, lines and polygons (area).

The landslide extent perimeter data is shown as polygons which is the area of the landslide. Each polygon holds information about the landslide event, its date, its location, the type of landslide (topple, bogslide, flow), the type of material (peat, earth, rock) and the cause of the landslide (heavy rainfall).

The landslide location data is shown as points. Each point holds information about the landslide event, its date, its location, the type of landslide (topple, bogslide, flow), the type of material (peat, earth, rock) and the cause of the landslide (heavy rainfall).



All Layers and Tables

Has Versioned Data: false

MaxRecordCount: 3000

Supported Query Formats: JSON

Supports Query Data Elements: true

Layers: Description: A landslide is the movement of material down a slope. This includes rock, earth, mud and peat. Landslides in Ireland mainly occur on steep mountain slopes. Geologists map and record information on where and when landslides happen and on the material that has moved. They also map the area of a landslide in order to see how big the landslide was. To produce this data landslides were mapped using digital imagery and mapping in the field. The area of the landslide was then drawn on a map.We collect new landslide event data and update the landslide event dataset every year. The are to the scale 1:5,000. This means they should be viewed at that scale. When printed at that scale 1cm on the map relates to a distance of 50m.They are vector datasets. Vector data portray the world using points, lines and polygons (area). The landslide extent perimeter data is shown as polygons which is the area of the landslide. Each polygon holds information about the landslide event, its date, its location, the type of landslide (topple, bogslide, flow), the type of material (peat, earth, rock) and the cause of the landslide (heavy rainfall).The landslide location data is shown as points. Each point holds information about the landslide event, its date, its location, the type of landslide (topple, bogslide, flow), the type of material (peat, earth, rock) and the cause of the landslide (heavy rainfall).

Service Item Id: 77e279fadfc24e809a9da9badc487243

Copyright Text: Geological Survey Ireland

Spatial Reference: 2157  (2157)


Initial Extent: Full Extent: Units: esriMeters

Document Info: Enable Z Defaults: false

Supports ApplyEdits With Global Ids: false

Support True Curves : true

Only Allow TrueCurve Updates By TrueCurveClients : true

Supports Return Service Edits Option : true

Supports Dynamic Layers: false

Child Resources:   Info   Query Data Elements   Relationships

Supported Operations:   Query   Query Contingent Values   QueryDomains   Create Replica   Extract Changes