Hydrogeological Landscapes for the Eastern Murray Catchment: October 2011 (First Edition)

Office of Environment and Heritage (OEH)

The Hydrogeological Landscape (HGL) concept provides a structure for the understanding of how salinity manifests itself in the landscape and how differences in salinity are expressed across the landscape. A HGL spatially defines areas of similar salt stores and pathways for salt mobilisation. The process of HGL determination relies on the integration of a number of factors: geology, soils, slope, regolith depth, and climate; an understanding of the differences in salinity development; and the impacts (land salinity/salt load/water electrical conductivity) in landscapes. Information sources such as soils maps, site characterisation, salinity site mapping, hydrogeological conditions and surface and groundwater data are combined to develop standard templates for each HGL. The focus of this dataset is the Eastern Murray study area upstream of Corowa. It comprises introductory information on HGLs; HGL templates; and maps and digital spatial data developed for the project, including derivative maps to assist in land management decision making in the Eastern Murray study area. This includes information on salinity management from the perspectives of land use design, scales and types of management, landscape function, management strategies, actions and outcomes, as well as land use to be avoided.

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Additional Information
Field Value
Title Hydrogeological Landscapes for the Eastern Murray Catchment: October 2011 (First Edition)
Date Published 05/02/2024
Last Updated 16/05/2025
Publisher/Agency Office of Environment and Heritage (OEH)
Licence Creative Commons Attribution
Update Frequency unknown
Temporal Coverage 07/01/2008 - 06/01/2011
Geospatial Coverage
Data Portal SEED