Data

Australian Soil Classification (ASC) soil type map of NSW

data.nsw.gov.au
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=http://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/australian-soil-classification-asc-soil-type-map-of-nsweaa10&rft.title=Australian Soil Classification (ASC) soil type map of NSW&rft.identifier=http://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/australian-soil-classification-asc-soil-type-map-of-nsweaa10&rft.publisher=data.nsw.gov.au&rft.description=Show on SEED Web MapData quality statementShow on eSPADE Web MapASC data packageASC metadata table and figureArcGIS REST Map ServicesLand and soil information web pageDPIE's Land and soil websiteWeb Map Service (WMS)KML ServiceWeb Map Tile Service (WMTS)This map identifies the dominant soil types across NSW using the Australian Soils Classification (ASC) at Order level. It uses the best available soil resource mapping coverage incorporating over 55 different datasets of multiple scales across NSW. \r\n\r\nThe formal ASC classification has been slightly modified in this map to further identify 2 extra sub-classes - soils with alluvial origins in the Rudosol order and soils with sodium-rich subsoils in the Kurosol order category. \r\n\r\nSoil types are representative of the dominant facet (sub-landscape) of each map unit and allocated using a lookup table system, linking a Great Soil Group classification soil type to the most appropriate Australian Soil Classification (ASC) class (see LUT table in data package). In some areas (north coast region and Cobargo area), an ASC classification has been assigned to map units directly without using a lookup system. These areas are identified in the ASC confidence map found within in the data package. While the ASC classification commonly equates to a particular GSG soil type classification, this is is not always the case and therefore ASC classifications allocated manually, will have a higher accuracy. \r\n\r\n__Online Maps:__ This dataset can be viewed using eSPADE (NSW’s soil spatial viewer), which contains a suite of soil and landscape information including soil profile data. Many of these datasets have hot-linked soil reports. An alternative viewer is the SEED Map ; an ideal way to see what other natural resources datasets (e.g. vegetation) are available for this map area.\r\n\r\n__Reference:__ Department of Planning, Industry and Environment, 2021, _Australian Soil Classification (ASC) Soil Type map of NSW_, Version 4.5, Department of Planning, Industry and Environment, Parramatta.&rft.creator=Anonymous&rft.date=2025&rft.coverage=154.0,-38.0 154.0,-28.0 141.0,-28.0 141.0,-38.0 154.0,-38.0&rft_rights=Creative Commons Attribution http://www.opendefinition.org/licenses/cc-by&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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Open Licence view details
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Creative Commons Attribution
http://www.opendefinition.org/licenses/cc-by

Access:

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Contact Information



Brief description

This map identifies the dominant soil types across NSW using the Australian Soils Classification (ASC) at Order level. It uses the best available soil resource mapping coverage incorporating over 55 different datasets of multiple scales across NSW. \r\n\r\nThe formal ASC classification has been slightly modified in this map to further identify 2 extra sub-classes - soils with alluvial origins in the Rudosol order and soils with sodium-rich subsoils in the Kurosol order category. \r\n\r\nSoil types are representative of the dominant facet (sub-landscape) of each map unit and allocated using a lookup table system, linking a Great Soil Group classification soil type to the most appropriate Australian Soil Classification (ASC) class (see LUT table in data package). In some areas (north coast region and Cobargo area), an ASC classification has been assigned to map units directly without using a lookup system. These areas are identified in the ASC confidence map found within in the data package. While the ASC classification commonly equates to a particular GSG soil type classification, this is is not always the case and therefore ASC classifications allocated manually, will have a higher accuracy. \r\n\r\n__Online Maps:__ This dataset can be viewed using eSPADE (NSW’s soil spatial viewer), which contains a suite of soil and landscape information including soil profile data. Many of these datasets have hot-linked soil reports. An alternative viewer is the SEED Map ; an ideal way to see what other natural resources datasets (e.g. vegetation) are available for this map area.\r\n\r\n__Reference:__ Department of Planning, Industry and Environment, 2021, _Australian Soil Classification (ASC) Soil Type map of NSW_, Version 4.5, Department of Planning, Industry and Environment, Parramatta.

Full description

Show on SEED Web Map
Data quality statement
Show on eSPADE Web Map
ASC data package
ASC metadata table and figure
ArcGIS REST Map Services
Land and soil information web page
DPIE's Land and soil website
Web Map Service (WMS)
KML Service
Web Map Tile Service (WMTS)

154,-38 154,-28 141,-28 141,-38 154,-38

147.5,-33

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