-
Open Data Soil Survey Project Boundaries
Soil Survey Project Boundaries (soil mapping study areas) contains the soil survey project area and attributes describing each project (project level metadata), plus links to the locations of other data associated with the project (e.g., soil survey reports, polygon datasets, plotfiles, scanned...Organization:Government of British ColumbiaIssued by:Government of British ColumbiaResource Formats:- HTML
- KML
- WMS
- XLS
-
Open Data Shorezone Biobanding Lines
The Shorezone Biobanding Lines are a linear representation of the various types of biota (flora and fauna) and their distribution, or lack thereof, found in the shoreunit.Organization:Government of British ColumbiaIssued by:Government of British ColumbiaResource Formats:- HTML
- KML
- WMS
-
Open Data Provincial Fish Ranges - Generalized
This file contains a generalized representation of watersheds developed from the 1:50,000 BC Watershed Atlas with each region coded for occurrence of freshwater fish species (including anadromous salmon in their freshwater stages). The initial fish species codes for presence/absence in each...Organization:Government of British ColumbiaIssued by:Government of British ColumbiaResource Formats:- HTML
- KML
- WMS
-
Open Data Geology Faults
Geology faults are part of the British Columbia Digital Geology, which is the data source used for the seamless province-wide, up-to-date, and detailed bedrock geology. The bedrock geology integrates all details of compilations from 1:50,000 to 1:250,000. The data is maintained by a geospatial...Organization:Government of British ColumbiaIssued by:Government of British ColumbiaResource Formats:- HTML
- KML
- SHP
- WMS
-
Open Data Species and Ecosystems at Risk - (Masked Secured) Publicly Available Occurrences - CDC
The B.C. Conservation Data Centre spatial layer that displays a generalised area that masks the precise locations of secured occurrences of species and ecosystems at risk. These are masked for public viewing and download. The occurrences may be secured due to the species or ecosystems being...Organization:Government of British ColumbiaIssued by:Government of British ColumbiaResource Formats:- HTML
- KML
- WMS
-
Open Data Fire Burn Severity - Same Year
This layer is the current fire year burn severity classification for large fires (greater than 100 ha). Burn severity mapping is conducted using best available pre- and post-fire satellite multispectral imagery acquired by the MultiSpectral Instrument (MSI) aboard the Sentinel-2 satellite or the...Organization:Government of British ColumbiaIssued by:Government of British ColumbiaResource Formats:- FGDB/GDB
- HTML
- KML
- WMS
-
Open Data Terrestrial Protected Areas Representation by Biogeoclimatic Unit
Biogeoclimatic Ecosystem Classification (BEC) subzone\variant\phase boundaries with percent protected, number of overlapping protected areas and other attributes added as a result of geoprocessing in the Protected Area System Overview (PASO) application. Protected area and park representation by...Organization:Government of British ColumbiaIssued by:Government of British ColumbiaResource Formats:- HTML
- KML
- WMS
-
Open Data Terrain Inventory Mapping (TIM) Detailed Polygons with Short Attribute Table Spatial View
Terrain Inventory Mapping (TIM) contains polygons with key and amalgamated (concatenated) attributes derived from the RISC (Resource Inventory Standards Committee) standard attributes. TIM is multi-purpose and divides the landscape into units according to surficial material, surface expression...Organization:Government of British ColumbiaIssued by:Government of British ColumbiaResource Formats:- FGDB/GDB
- HTML
- KML
- WMS
- XLS
-
Open Data Coastal BC Campsites
The locations of coastal British Columbia overnight campsites and campgroundsOrganization:Government of British ColumbiaIssued by:Government of British ColumbiaResource Formats:- HTML
- KML
- WMS
-
Open Data Ecoregions - Ecoregion Ecosystem Classification of British Columbia
An ecoregion is an area with major physiographic and minor macroclimatic or oceanographic variation. There are 43 ecoregion in British Columbia of which 39 are terrestrial. Ecodivsions are meant to be mapped at 1:500,000 for regional strategic planningOrganization:Government of British ColumbiaIssued by:Government of British ColumbiaResource Formats:- HTML
- KML
- WMS