© OpenStreetMap contributors
- Add External Layer
- Upload Shapefile
- Close
Use the checkbox () to show or hide a layer.
Use the radio buttons () to select a layer to use with the identify function.
- Layers
- Opacity
Available layers
Search for marine data across UK organisations
- How-To
- About
- Contact MEDIN
- Share
Metadata: Marine Scotland Reports - Marine Environment - Scotland's Marine Atlas
Abstract:
Scotland’s vision is for ‘clean, healthy, safe, productive, biologically diverse marine and coastal environments, managed to meet the long term needs of nature and people’. This assessment of the condition of Scotland’s seas has been based on scientific evidence from data and analysis, supported by expert judgement. Climate Change and Ocean Acidification The climate shows considerable variation over short and long timescales. However, in recent years there has been a marked increase in the concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere of the Earth and, at the same time, sea surface temperature has risen as have sea levels. Changes in the biological components of the seas have been observed including earlier plankton blooms, a northward movement of some species and a reduction in seabird populations, all of which have been linked to climate change. At the same time, the seas are becoming more acidic, the consequences of which, especially for calcareous organisms, could be significant. Reductions in the emissions of greenhouse gases are required and Scotland has set ambitious targets. However, even with such reductions, it is highly likely that further impacts of climate change on the marine environment will be observed. Clean and Safe Scotland’s seas are mainly clean and safe, although there are some localised areas where there is contamination or hazards to human health. For example, sediments in several harbours and estuaries remain contaminated with hazardous substances, a legacy of past industrial discharges. Water quality in the Forth and Clyde estuaries is compromised by discharges of industrial effluent and treated sewage although effluent treatment has improved resulting in returning populations of residential and migratory fish. The use of historical contaminants such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and tributyl tin (TBT) has been banned, and monitoring continues to assess their continued environmental decline. Information is being gathered on a range of other contaminants, including endocrine disrupters and brominated flame retardants, to assess their environmental impacts. Diffuse inputs of nutrients and bacteria have given rise, respectively, to some localised issues in small east coast estuaries and at bathing beaches. Action plans have been put in place to tackle these issues. Concerns such as marine litter and underwater noise have become more broadly recognised and will be addressed through the operational response to the Marine Strategy Framework Directive. Generally the effects of noise remain unquantified and unknown. Healthy and Biologically Diverse Scotland’s seas support a diverse array of habitats and species and contain nationally and internationally important populations of certain species such as the northern feather star, the burrowing sea anemone, the northern sea fan and cold water corals. There is evidence that certain habitats have been impacted, for example shallow and shelf subtidal sediments (including burrowed mud habitats). This stems largely from the effects of fishing over large areas of the seabed and more localised impacts from activities such as aquaculture. The low abundance of some demersal commercial fish species across the west coast of Scotland is a major concern and is being addressed through various initiatives. Improved knowledge of fishing activity and its impact on the marine environment would be beneficial. Establishment of new fisheries should only be undertaken following careful assessment of the viability and future sustainability of the fishery, especially given the sensitivity of some, particularly deep water, species to fishing and against a background of historic over-exploitation. Sharks, skates and rays face further declines and are severely depleted all around the coast, although the number of sightings of basking sharks has increased in recent years especially in the Minches and Malin Sea. These declines are largely the consequence of historically unsustainable catches in both target and non-target fisheries and their long-lived, very low fecundity life cycle. Many of these, for example, porbeagle and common skate, can no longer be targeted commercially. Populations of some seabirds, harbour seals and some fish species have declined. Possible reasons include climate change, a number of different human activities and competition from other species. These declines may be associated with broader changes in the food web. For example, the decline in availability of sandeels has had a major influence on recent changes in seabird numbers on the east coast and in the Northern Isles. Although, in general, the current assessment for cetaceans suggests there are no specific concerns, this has been made against a background of a very high level of uncertainty and little power to detect concerns if they currently exist. Productive Scotland’s seas are economically productive. Official figures show that the core marine sector, less the extraction of oil and gas, contributed £3.6 billion of Gross Value Added (GVA) in 2008 (at 2009 prices), about 3.5% of overall Scottish GVA. About 39,800 people were employed, 1.6% of Scottish employment. The extraction of oil and gas had a GVA of £13.3 billion in 2007 (at 2009 prices). Fishing takes place in all Scottish sea areas but some, such as Hebrides, North Scotland Coast and East and West Shetland, are far more economically productive than others. Aquaculture, both finfish and shellfish, predominates on the west coast and the islands. Sixteen major ports handle about 98% of all port traffic with liquid bulk, mainly oil and gas, accounting for 69%. There is significant commercial shipping both to ports and for transit through Scottish waters, as well as domestic and international ferry activity. The seas are also used extensively by the Royal Navy and other armed forces, for exercises and operations, sometimes including international partners. Other activities include cooling water abstraction for power stations and the disposal of treated urban waste water, industrial effluent and dredge spoil. Seabed telecommunications cables carry millions of internet and phone call connections, thereby providing a major communications network. The seas are also used for leisure and recreation, particularly sailing, angling and other sporting activities. Scotland’s historic environment and natural and cultural heritage attract many tourists. The enormous potential of marine renewable energy generation from offshore wind, waves and tides has started to be harnessed. There is also potential for storage of carbon dioxide under the seabed, in ‘carbon capture and storage’ schemes. Also see http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Resource/Doc/345830/0115128.pdf for maps and further details.
Data holder:
Marine Scotland
Marine Scotland
Marine Scotland
Marine Scotland
Marine Scotland
Other details | ||
Internal code | Internally assigned metadata identifier | 6314 |
Title | The title is used to provide a brief and precise description of the dataset such as 'Date', 'Originating organisation/programme', 'Location' and 'Type of survey'. All acronyms and abbreviations should be reproduced in full. | Marine Scotland Reports - Marine Environment - Scotland's Marine Atlas |
Alternative title | The purpose of alternative title is to record any additional names by which the dataset may be known. | Scotland's Marine Atlas: Information for the national marine plan. Marine Scotland |
File Identifier | The File Identifier is a code, preferably a GUID, that is globally unique and remains with the same metadata record even if the record is edited or transferred between portals or tools. | Marine_Scotland_FishDAC_856 |
Resource Identifier | This is the code assigned by the data owner. | Marine_Scotland_FishDAC_856 |
Resource type | The resource type will likely be a dataset but could also be a series (collection of datasets with a common specification) or a service. | dataset |
Start date | This describes the date the resource starts. This may only be the year if month and day are not known | 2010-01-01 |
End date | This describes the date the resource ends. This may only be the year if month and day are not known | 2011-03-16 |
Spatial resolution | This describes the spatial resolution of the dataset or the spatial limitations of the service. | 55000.00 |
Spatial resolution unit | This describes the unit of spatial resolution which for distance must be metres. | http://standards.iso.org/ittf/PubliclyAvailableStandards/ISO_19139_Schemas/resources/uom/gmxUom.xml#m |
Frequency of updates | This describes the frequency with which the resource is modified or updated i.e. a monitoring programme that samples once per year has a frequency that is described as 'annually'. | not planned |
Abstract | The abstract provides a clear and brief statement of the content of the resource. | Scotland’s vision is for ‘clean, healthy, safe, productive, biologically diverse marine and coastal environments, managed to meet the long term needs of nature and people’. This assessment of the condition of Scotland’s seas has been based on scientific evidence from data and analysis, supported by expert judgement. Climate Change and Ocean Acidification The climate shows considerable variation over short and long timescales. However, in recent years there has been a marked increase in the concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere of the Earth and, at the same time, sea surface temperature has risen as have sea levels. Changes in the biological components of the seas have been observed including earlier plankton blooms, a northward movement of some species and a reduction in seabird populations, all of which have been linked to climate change. At the same time, the seas are becoming more acidic, the consequences of which, especially for calcareous organisms, could be significant. Reductions in the emissions of greenhouse gases are required and Scotland has set ambitious targets. However, even with such reductions, it is highly likely that further impacts of climate change on the marine environment will be observed. Clean and Safe Scotland’s seas are mainly clean and safe, although there are some localised areas where there is contamination or hazards to human health. For example, sediments in several harbours and estuaries remain contaminated with hazardous substances, a legacy of past industrial discharges. Water quality in the Forth and Clyde estuaries is compromised by discharges of industrial effluent and treated sewage although effluent treatment has improved resulting in returning populations of residential and migratory fish. The use of historical contaminants such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and tributyl tin (TBT) has been banned, and monitoring continues to assess their continued environmental decline. Information is being gathered on a range of other contaminants, including endocrine disrupters and brominated flame retardants, to assess their environmental impacts. Diffuse inputs of nutrients and bacteria have given rise, respectively, to some localised issues in small east coast estuaries and at bathing beaches. Action plans have been put in place to tackle these issues. Concerns such as marine litter and underwater noise have become more broadly recognised and will be addressed through the operational response to the Marine Strategy Framework Directive. Generally the effects of noise remain unquantified and unknown. Healthy and Biologically Diverse Scotland’s seas support a diverse array of habitats and species and contain nationally and internationally important populations of certain species such as the northern feather star, the burrowing sea anemone, the northern sea fan and cold water corals. There is evidence that certain habitats have been impacted, for example shallow and shelf subtidal sediments (including burrowed mud habitats). This stems largely from the effects of fishing over large areas of the seabed and more localised impacts from activities such as aquaculture. The low abundance of some demersal commercial fish species across the west coast of Scotland is a major concern and is being addressed through various initiatives. Improved knowledge of fishing activity and its impact on the marine environment would be beneficial. Establishment of new fisheries should only be undertaken following careful assessment of the viability and future sustainability of the fishery, especially given the sensitivity of some, particularly deep water, species to fishing and against a background of historic over-exploitation. Sharks, skates and rays face further declines and are severely depleted all around the coast, although the number of sightings of basking sharks has increased in recent years especially in the Minches and Malin Sea. These declines are largely the consequence of historically unsustainable catches in both target and non-target fisheries and their long-lived, very low fecundity life cycle. Many of these, for example, porbeagle and common skate, can no longer be targeted commercially. Populations of some seabirds, harbour seals and some fish species have declined. Possible reasons include climate change, a number of different human activities and competition from other species. These declines may be associated with broader changes in the food web. For example, the decline in availability of sandeels has had a major influence on recent changes in seabird numbers on the east coast and in the Northern Isles. Although, in general, the current assessment for cetaceans suggests there are no specific concerns, this has been made against a background of a very high level of uncertainty and little power to detect concerns if they currently exist. Productive Scotland’s seas are economically productive. Official figures show that the core marine sector, less the extraction of oil and gas, contributed £3.6 billion of Gross Value Added (GVA) in 2008 (at 2009 prices), about 3.5% of overall Scottish GVA. About 39,800 people were employed, 1.6% of Scottish employment. The extraction of oil and gas had a GVA of £13.3 billion in 2007 (at 2009 prices). Fishing takes place in all Scottish sea areas but some, such as Hebrides, North Scotland Coast and East and West Shetland, are far more economically productive than others. Aquaculture, both finfish and shellfish, predominates on the west coast and the islands. Sixteen major ports handle about 98% of all port traffic with liquid bulk, mainly oil and gas, accounting for 69%. There is significant commercial shipping both to ports and for transit through Scottish waters, as well as domestic and international ferry activity. The seas are also used extensively by the Royal Navy and other armed forces, for exercises and operations, sometimes including international partners. Other activities include cooling water abstraction for power stations and the disposal of treated urban waste water, industrial effluent and dredge spoil. Seabed telecommunications cables carry millions of internet and phone call connections, thereby providing a major communications network. The seas are also used for leisure and recreation, particularly sailing, angling and other sporting activities. Scotland’s historic environment and natural and cultural heritage attract many tourists. The enormous potential of marine renewable energy generation from offshore wind, waves and tides has started to be harnessed. There is also potential for storage of carbon dioxide under the seabed, in ‘carbon capture and storage’ schemes. Also see http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Resource/Doc/345830/0115128.pdf for maps and further details. |
Lineage | Lineage includes the background information, history of the sources of data, data quality statements and methods. | Aim of Scotland’s Marine Atlas The first ‘Marine Atlas’ presents data spatially to assist with the introduction of marine planning. It does so based around the elements of the government’s vision for the sea: clean and safe, healthy and biologically diverse and productive. The Atlas presents the assessment of condition and summary of significant pressures and the impacts of human activity required for the national marine plan. It also represents a contribution to the initial assessment required for the Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD)(1) by July 2012. Area covered and scale of data The Marine (Scotland) Act 2010(2) and the Marine and Coastal Access Act 2 009(3) provide for marine planning of Scottish waters out to 200 nautical miles and give new marine conservation responsibilities. So this Atlas presents data over this whole area, including for policy areas which are reserved to Westminster, to ensure that policies developed in the national marine plan are informed by the fullest data possible. The Atlas refers to a variety of boundaries and spatial scales: • 200 nautical miles – the maximum limit for fisheries and renewable energy powers. Marine planning and nature conservation powers can extend further. • 12 nautical mile territorial sea – limit of Scotland as defined in the Scotland Act. • 3 nautical miles - the limit to which Water Framework Directive measures have been implemented in Scotland. Data can be aggregated to different scales for different purposes, so its presentation has to consider the purpose. This Atlas presents data at the most relevant scale available to illustrate the main issues for national marine planning. There is provision for future marine plans to be developed for Scottish marine regions. These regions have yet to be decided. However, the 15 sea areas used in this Atlas, based on areas previously adopted for certain environmental monitoring programmes, are likely to be of a similar scale as marine regions. The data from these 15 areas can be presented regionally and also reasonably aggregated to form a national picture and to develop information for the two main areas required for the MSFD initial assessment: the Greater North Sea (Area II) and the Celtic Seas (Area III) which are existing sea areas used by OSPAR (the Oslo Paris Convention for the Protection of the North East Atlantic)(4). How this Atlas has been compiled The Atlas has taken Scotland’s Seas: Towards Understanding their State, published in 2008(5), and developed its contents to provide a spatial assessment where possible. Much effort has been taken to map data sets and present graphs around them. It is recognised that there are some areas where this is not yet possible so the provision of spatial data suitable for marine planning will be an evolutionary process. A data annex available online, lists the various data sources used for this Atlas. The preparation of the Atlas has been a collaborative effort. Marine Scotland led the work on chapters 2, 5 and 6, with SEPA in the lead for chapter 3 and SNH, with assistance from JNCC, leading chapter 4. Each contributor also developed the appropriate part of the overall assessment. A valuable contribution was also provided by the Marine Alliance for Science and Technology Scotland (MASTS)(6) to all work. The Agri-Food & Biosciences Institute; Centre for Environment, Fisheries & Aquaculture Science; Countryside Council for Wales; Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs; Environment Agency; National Oceanography Centre; Natural England and Northern Ireland Environment Agency all reviewed Atlas material. A variety of data sources have been used. The key data sets are from the range of established monitoring programmes undertaken by the various contributing organisations for their main responsibilities, for example, to meet legal obligations. For much of the productive seas data, existing data from regularly published government statistics have been used. Most data have required some re-working to be presented at the level of the sea areas used. Data used for Charting Progress 2 (CP2)(7), published in July 2010, have also been heavily relied on here. CP2 was the second assessment of the UK seas and involved the same contributing Scottish scientists as this Atlas. This Atlas draws on the four CP2 Feeder Reports adding more detail where necessary and appropriate to map Scottish seas. To make the Atlas easily accessible and to focus on portraying information spatially, the material has been restricted to summaries and short text, complimented by images and graphs. For many topics, further information is available from a variety of sources and these are referenced. Full references are available in an online annex. Also see http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Resource/Doc/345830/0115121.pdf for more detail. |
Additional information | This describes relevant references to the data e.g. reports, articles, websites plus other useful information not captured elsewhere. | See http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Resource/Doc/295194/0114629.pdf for full list of references, Baxter, J.M., Boyd, I.L., Cox, M., Donald, A.E., Malcolm, S.J., Miles, H., Miller, B., Moffat, C.F., (Editors), 2011. Scotland's Marine Atlas: Information for the national marine plan. Marine Scotland, Edinburgh. pp. 191, ISBN 987 0 7559 8254 7 |
Related keywords | ||
Keyword | General subject area(s) associated with the resource, uses multiple controlled vocabularies | Marine Environmental Data and Information Network |
General subject area(s) associated with the resource, uses multiple controlled vocabularies | Fisheries and aquaculture | |
General subject area(s) associated with the resource, uses multiple controlled vocabularies | Biota composition | |
General subject area(s) associated with the resource, uses multiple controlled vocabularies | Fish | |
General subject area(s) associated with the resource, uses multiple controlled vocabularies | Fishery characterisation | |
Geographical coverage | ||
North | The northern-most limit of the data resource in decimal degrees | 63.5 |
East | The eastern-most limit of the data resource in decimal degrees | 3 |
South | The southern-most limit of the data resource in decimal degrees | 54.5 |
West | The western-most limit of the data resource in decimal degrees | -13 |
Regional sea | 40D7 | |
41D7 | ||
42D7 | ||
43D7 | ||
44D7 | ||
45D7 | ||
46D7 | ||
47D7 | ||
48D7 | ||
49D7 | ||
40D8 | ||
41D8 | ||
42D8 | ||
43D8 | ||
44D8 | ||
45D8 | ||
46D8 | ||
47D8 | ||
48D8 | ||
49D8 | ||
40D9 | ||
41D9 | ||
42D9 | ||
43D9 | ||
44D9 | ||
45D9 | ||
46D9 | ||
47D9 | ||
48D9 | ||
49D9 | ||
40E0 | ||
41E0 | ||
42E0 | ||
43E0 | ||
44E0 | ||
45E0 | ||
46E0 | ||
47E0 | ||
48E0 | ||
49E0 | ||
40E1 | ||
41E1 | ||
42E1 | ||
43E1 | ||
44E1 | ||
45E1 | ||
46E1 | ||
47E1 | ||
48E1 | ||
49E1 | ||
40E2 | ||
41E2 | ||
42E2 | ||
43E2 | ||
44E2 | ||
45E2 | ||
46E2 | ||
47E2 | ||
48E2 | ||
49E2 | ||
40E3 | ||
41E3 | ||
42E3 | ||
43E3 | ||
44E3 | ||
45E3 | ||
46E3 | ||
47E3 | ||
48E3 | ||
49E3 | ||
38E4 | ||
39E4 | ||
40E4 | ||
41E4 | ||
42E4 | ||
43E4 | ||
44E4 | ||
45E4 | ||
46E4 | ||
47E4 | ||
48E4 | ||
49E4 | ||
38E5 | ||
39E5 | ||
40E5 | ||
46E5 | ||
47E5 | ||
48E5 | ||
49E5 | ||
50E5 | ||
38E6 | ||
41E6 | ||
44E6 | ||
45E6 | ||
46E6 | ||
47E6 | ||
48E6 | ||
49E6 | ||
50E6 | ||
51E6 | ||
40E7 | ||
41E7 | ||
42E7 | ||
43E7 | ||
44E7 | ||
45E7 | ||
46E7 | ||
47E7 | ||
48E7 | ||
49E7 | ||
50E7 | ||
51E7 | ||
52E7 | ||
40E8 | ||
41E8 | ||
42E8 | ||
43E8 | ||
44E8 | ||
45E8 | ||
46E8 | ||
47E8 | ||
48E8 | ||
49E8 | ||
50E8 | ||
51E8 | ||
52E8 | ||
53E8 | ||
40E9 | ||
41E9 | ||
42E9 | ||
43E9 | ||
44E9 | ||
45E9 | ||
46E9 | ||
47E9 | ||
48E9 | ||
49E9 | ||
50E9 | ||
51E9 | ||
52E9 | ||
53E9 | ||
54E9 | ||
55E9 | ||
41F0 | ||
42F0 | ||
43F0 | ||
44F0 | ||
45F0 | ||
46F0 | ||
47F0 | ||
48F0 | ||
49F0 | ||
50F0 | ||
51F0 | ||
52F0 | ||
53F0 | ||
41F1 | ||
42F1 | ||
43F1 | ||
44F1 | ||
45F1 | ||
46F1 | ||
47F1 | ||
48F1 | ||
49F1 | ||
50F1 | ||
51F1 | ||
46F2 | ||
47F2 | ||
48F2 | ||
49F2 | ||
50F2 | ||
Responsible organisations | ||
Role | The point of contact is person or organisation with responsibility for the creation and maintenance of the metadata for the resource. | pointOfContact |
Organisation name | Marine Scotland | |
Phone | +44 (0)1224 876 544 | |
Role | The point of contact is person or organisation with responsibility for the creation and maintenance of the metadata for the resource. | pointOfContact |
Organisation name | Marine Scotland | |
Phone | +44 (0)1224 876 544 | |
Delivery point | Marine Scotland Science, Marine Laboratory, 375 Vcitoria Road | |
Postal code | AB11 9DB | |
City | Aberdeen | |
Country | United Kingdom | |
Role | The originator is the person or organisation who created, collected or produced the resource. | originator |
Organisation name | Marine Scotland | |
Phone | +44 (0)1224 876 544 | |
Delivery point | Marine Scotland Science, Marine Laboratory, 375 Vcitoria Road | |
Postal code | AB11 9DB | |
City | Aberdeen | |
Country | United Kingdom | |
Role | The custodian is the person or organisation that accepts responsibility for the resource and ensures appropriate care and maintenance. If a dataset has been lodged with a Data Archive Centre for maintenance then this organisation is be entered here. | custodian |
Organisation name | Marine Scotland | |
Individual name | Cox, Martyn | |
Phone | +44 (0)1224 876 544 | |
Delivery point | Marine Scotland Science, Marine Laboratory, 375 Vcitoria Road | |
Postal code | AB11 9DB | |
City | Aberdeen | |
Country | United Kingdom | |
Role | The custodian is the person or organisation that accepts responsibility for the resource and ensures appropriate care and maintenance. If a dataset has been lodged with a Data Archive Centre for maintenance then this organisation is be entered here. | custodian |
Organisation name | Marine Scotland | |
Individual name | Mason, Liam | |
Phone | +44 (0)1224 876 544 | |
Delivery point | Marine Scotland Science, Marine Laboratory, 375 Vcitoria Road | |
Postal code | AB11 9DB | |
City | Aberdeen | |
Country | United Kingdom | |
Role | The custodian is the person or organisation that accepts responsibility for the resource and ensures appropriate care and maintenance. If a dataset has been lodged with a Data Archive Centre for maintenance then this organisation is be entered here. | custodian |
Organisation name | Marine Scotland | |
Individual name | Anderson, Hilary | |
Phone | +44 (0)1224 876 544 | |
Delivery point | Marine Scotland Science, Marine Laboratory, 375 Vcitoria Road | |
Postal code | AB11 9DB | |
City | Aberdeen | |
Country | United Kingdom | |
Role | The custodian is the person or organisation that accepts responsibility for the resource and ensures appropriate care and maintenance. If a dataset has been lodged with a Data Archive Centre for maintenance then this organisation is be entered here. | custodian |
Organisation name | Marine Scotland | |
Individual name | Rasmussen, Jens | |
Phone | +44 (0)1224 876 544 | |
Delivery point | Marine Scotland Science, Marine Laboratory, 375 Vcitoria Road | |
Postal code | AB11 9DB | |
City | Aberdeen | |
Country | United Kingdom | |
Role | The custodian is the person or organisation that accepts responsibility for the resource and ensures appropriate care and maintenance. If a dataset has been lodged with a Data Archive Centre for maintenance then this organisation is be entered here. | custodian |
Organisation name | Marine Scotland | |
Individual name | Tulett, David | |
Phone | +44 (0)1224 876 544 | |
Delivery point | Marine Scotland Science, Marine Laboratory, 375 Vcitoria Road | |
Postal code | AB11 9DB | |
City | Aberdeen | |
Country | United Kingdom | |
Resource locators | ||
Locator URL | Web address (URL) that links to the resource | http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Resource/Doc/345830/0115118.pdf |
Locator name | Name of the web resource | Electronic - Overall assessment key - 1 page - PDF |
Locator function | Code that describes the function of the resource. ISO function code chosen from ISO 19115-1 Codelist | download |
Dataset constraints | ||
20 Limitations on Public Access - Access constraints | license | |
21 Conditions for Access and Use - Use limitation | This states any constraints on use of the data. Multiple conditions can be recorded for different parts of the data resource. If no conditions apply, then `No condtions apply` is recorded. This uses free text. | Open Government License (http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/) |
Version info | ||
Date of publication | The publication date of the resource or if previously unpublished the date that the resource was made publicly available via the MEDIN network. | 2011-03-16 |
Harvest date | The date which this record has been (re)harvested from the provider. | 2024-04-14 |
Metadata date | The date when the content of this metadata record was last updated. | 2013-10-03 |
Metadata standard name | The name of the metadata standard used to create this metadata | MEDIN Discovery Metadata |
Metadata standard version | The version of the MEDIN Discovery Metadata Standard used to create the metadata record | Version 2.3.7 |