Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 New Zealand
You may use this work for commercial purposes.
You must attribute the creator in your own works.
You must provide modified versions of this work under the same license.
This dataset was first added to Otago Geology on 24 Oct 2013.
Alpine Fault Traces compiled from various mapping projects conducted by Staff and Students at the Department of Geology, University of Otago.
Please acknowledge contributor (attribute field: contributor)
see www.otago.ac.nz/geology/research/structural-geolog...
First version
-First version digitised and compiled by M Walrond.
Revision January 2012
-Edited and compiled by Luke Easterbrook.
-Whataroa area updated
Revision July 2013
-Added area in south west with data provided by NC Barth (PhD student completed in 2012).
-NC Barth used name field. This has been added to the data.
Revision October 2013
-Removed western fault strand south and west of Lake Nisson which was based off 1980s mapping by Berryman and Norris. Nic Barth can confirm that there is no fault trace south of the Arawhata Bridge and that Lake Nisson is the last possible evidence for this fault strand.
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 New Zealand
You may use this work for commercial purposes.
You must attribute the creator in your own works.
You must provide modified versions of this work under the same license.
Information | |
---|---|
Tags | fault trace, geology, mapping, West Coast, fault zone, Southern Alps, structural geology, Alpine Fault |
Regions | Westland District |
Metadata | ISO 19115/19139, Dublin Core |
Technical Details | |
---|---|
Layer ID | 6553 |
Data type | Vector multilinestring | Feature count | 457 (incl. 1 with empty or null geometries) |
Attributes | NAME, ACCURACY, Contrib, FAULTTYPE |
Services | Vector Query API, Web Feature Service (WFS) |
History | |
---|---|
Added | 24 Oct 2013 |
Revisions | 2 - Browse all revisions |
Current revision | Imported on Oct. 24, 2013 from Shapefile in NZGD2000 / New Zealand Transverse Mercator 2000. |
Copy and paste the following code to embed this layer as a single map in your blog or website: