10.14466/CEFASDATAHUB.49
Williams, Oliver
Oliver
Williams
Oliver Williams
Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science
UK shelf and North Sea quantitative sediment composition predictions
Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science, Lowestoft, UK
2018
Dataset
Desk Study
Model
Sediment
Sediment grain size parameters
Diesing, Markus
Markus
Diesing
Markus Diesing
Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science
Stephens, David
David
Stephens
David Stephens
2015-03-31
2018
en
SHAPEFILE , TIFF
1
UK Open Government Licence
Spatial predictions of substrate composition for the UK shelf and North Sea. Compositional fractions of mud, sand and gravel were modelled for an area of the UK and North Sea using a statistical regression model. This dataset consists of percentage composition predictions for the mud, sand and gravel components as raster tifs. In addition the proportion of each of these sediment components were combined to predict the likely sediment classification as both a EUNIS habitat class and Folk class. These are also available as raster tif files with an associated ArcGIS layer file indicating the appropriate class for each raster value. A shape file of the Folk classification is also available. For a full description of the methodology used to generate these data see: http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0142502 In short, the analysis combined outputs from hydrodynamic models as well as optical remote sensing data from satellite platforms and bathymetric variables, which were mainly derived from acoustic remote sensing. A statistical regression model was built to make quantitative predictions of sediment composition (fractions of mud, sand and gravel) using the random forest algorithm. The compositional data was analysed on the additive log-ratio scale and then transformed back into percentages of the individual sediment components. From these percentage components a EUNIS substrate model was also generated.