Estuary-drained portions of Victorian coastal catchments
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Estuary-drained portions of Victorian coastal catchments

dataset: EST_CATCH
Areas of catchments that drain directly to Victorian estuaries - i.e. not via major freshwater tributaries. The layer was derived by Deakin University as part of the project: "Linking catchments to the sea: Understanding how human activities impact on Victorian estuaries" funded by the National Heritage Trust and the Department of Sustainability and Environment.
 
Citation proposal Citation proposal

(2021)

Estuary-drained portions of Victorian coastal catchments

Department of Environment, Land, Water & Planning

https://uat-metashare.maps.vic.gov.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/eac59d64-b3ac-58c4-8f82-a584302f89a5
  • Description
  • Temporal
  • Spatial
  • Maintenance
  • Format
  • Contacts
  • Keywords
  • Constraints
  • Lineage
  • Metadata Constraints Metadata Constraints
  • Quality
  • Acquisition Info
  • Raster Data Details
  • Raster Type Details
  • Point Cloud Data Details
  • Contour Data Details
  • Survey Details

Description

Title
Estuary-drained portions of Victorian coastal catchments 
Alternate title
EST_CATCH 
Purpose
Areas of catchments that drain to directly to Victorian estuaries (rather than via main tributaries), excluding the Gippsland Lakes basin. It complements the Fluv_catchments layer that comprises areas of catchments draining to estuaries via fresh water tributaries. The ESTUARIES layer is an updated version of one that included estuaries and their upstream limits for catchment delineation. In this layer, attributes relating to population, outcropping geology, land use, geomorphology and rainfall are associated with each catchment polygon. In order to assess the relationships between catchment-based activities and estuary condition attributes from this layer were analysed as part of the Deakin University project "Linking catchments to the sea: Understanding how human activities impact on Victorian estuaries". Methods and results from this project are reported in Barton, J.L., Pope, A.J., Quinn, G.P. and Sherwood, J.E. (2008) Identifying threats to the ecological condition of Victorian estuaries (Department of Sustainability and Environment Technical Report, ISBN 978-1-74208-745-0 (online)). 
Credit
Adam Pope, Deakin University, adam.pope@deakin.edu.au, (03) 5563 3404 Alistair Becker, Deakin University Claire McClusky, Deakin University Jess McKenzie, Deakin University Jacquomo Monk, Deakin University Alex Rattray, Deakin University 
Supplemental Information
History: Data Collection Method: Catchment polygons were derived primarily from Vicmap DEM (20m resolution) and 1:25,000 Vicmap Hydro watercourse and water area layers. Processing and data limitations required the Little and Werribee catchments to be derived from resampled DEM information at 100m resolution and 1:250,000 scale watercourse data (see HYDRO250 metadata). The South Australian portion of the Glenelg catchment was derived using 9 second resolution data. The Snowy catchment was derived using a 40m pixel size. For derived attributes refer to metadata for relevant source below. Current Design Issues: Polygons showing boundaries of catchments are based on data at a range of scales that were appropriate for their original uses but should be taken into consideration if using the data for other purposes. Similarly, attributes associated with the polygons were derived from data at a range of scales from sources that were appropriate for the original project but may not be so for other uses. Upstream limits of some estuary channels are based on derived locations and estimates. Such limits are indicative only (refer to ESTUARIES metadata and layer). Use of this layer is currently limited to display, query and some spatial analysis work since the data does not have a persistent unique identifier. This is due to the likelihood of revision of the set of estuaries in the future. Future Design Issues: Inclusion of Gippsland Lake tributary estuaries. Improve estimates of upstream limits of estuaries to 1:25,000, especially W Gippsland. Changed locations of estuary heads will allow fluvial and estuarine catchment areas to be revised to reflect new boundary positions. Revise estimates of derived attributes when consistency, currency or resolution of other sources is improved. Investigate the feasibility of a persistent unique ID is flagged for future development considerations. Related Documents: None Refer to metadata for sources and Barton et al. (2008). 
Status
Completed 
 
 

Spatial

Code
4283 
 
 

Maintenance

Maintenance and update frequency
Not planned 
 
 

Contacts

  Point of contact

Department of Environment, Land, Water & Planning - Biodiversity Info   (Biodiversity Info)

PO Box 500

East Melbourne

Vic

3002

Australia

Cited responsible party

No information provided.

Cited responsible party

No information provided.
 
 

Keywords

Topic category
  • Inland waters
 
 

Constraints

Use limitation
Project IP resulting from the project "Linking catchments to the sea: Understanding how human activities impact on Victorian estuaries" is jointly owned by DSE and Deakin University and is licensed to the Commonwealth of Australia. 
Classification
Unclassified 
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC-BY)
  • License Text
 
 

Lineage

Statement
Dataset Source: Data Set Source: Mean population density estimated from census collection districts (Australian Bureau of Statistics digital boundaries and data) for 2001 and 2006 censuses. Total catchment population derived from mean density and total area. Geological classes were derived from GEOL250 for Victoria and the 'Surface geology of Australia 1:1,000,000 scale, New South Wales' layer from Geosciences Australia Landuse was derived from several regional layers with currencies between 1997 and 2003: Gippsland Land Use 1:25000; Land Use Classification of North Central CMA; Land use of South-West Victoria - Port Phillip Region (Zone 55); Land use of South-West Victoria - Glenelg-Hopkins & Corangamite Region (Zone 54); Land use of Mid-Goulburn-Broken Catchment; 2003 South Australia State Land Use; and, for areas not covered by the above: 2001/02 Land Use of Australia, Version 3. Physical aspects of catchments were derived from Vicmap 20m resolution DEM. Annual rainfall derived from 0.025 degree grid of Mean Annual rainfall Data (Base Climatological Data Sets) from the Bureau of Meteorology (1961-1990). Dataset Originality: Primary & Derived 
Description
Collection Method: Modelling 
Description
Source description not available 
Description
Catchment polygons were derived using the CatchmentSIM flow modelling package. Flow routing used a vector method and was augmented by addition of some drains where they occurred in areas of low relief. Polygons were created in Vicgrid66 projection and converted to GDA94 using ESRI transformation 'AGD_1966_To_GDA_1994_NTv2_Victoria.' 
 
 

Metadata Constraints Metadata Constraints

Classification
Unclassified 
 
 

Quality

Attribute Quality
Comments
Attributes for catchment polygons have been derived from a range of sources with differing collection dates and scales. While valid for broad scale comparisons across multiple systems, the accuracy of attributes may not be suitable for other applications. Refer to metadata of source layers for further details. 
 
Positional Accuracy
Comments
Polygons were created based on modelling of data from multiple sources as described above. The majority of catchment boundaries follow Vicmap 20m DEM cell boundaries. Metadata for the DEM states that it is suitable for use at a 1:25,000 scale. Where coarser DEMs and watercourse were used, there is less positional accuracy of boundaries. 
 
Conceptual Consistency
Missing Data
Comments
Statewide, excluding catchments of riverine estuaries running to Gippsland Lakes. Completeness Verification: Not Known 
 
Excess Data
Comments
Not Known 
 
 
 

Overviews

Graphic Overview of Data Footprint


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