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  • Samba contains information on drilling and geophysical surveys on Danish territory, carried out according to license under the Danish underground law. That is: seismic surveys as well as boreholes for exploration, delimitation and production wells concerning oil/gas, geothermal energy, gas storage and salt as well as scientific drilling. The data sets contain technical, administrative and geological information from drillings and geophysical measurements undertaken in boreholes (boreholelogs and reports) as well as metadata (location, recording and processing parameters, etc.) for seismic studies. Data are reported by the companies who carries out the drillings and surveys. The database is updated on an ongoing basis.

  • Soil-type map of Denmark 1:200.000 version 2. An interpreted overview map of surface geology in Denmark. The map shows a countrywide classification and distribution of soil types (mostly glacial and postglacial sediments) at the surface of Denmark. The soil types are divided into 12 different legend items. The map has a scale of 1:200.000, and is suited for educational use and as a background layer for other mapped themes. The map is published in GEUS report 2011/19.

  • Jupiter is GEUS ' nationwide database for groundwater, drinking water, raw materials, environmental and geotechnical data. The database is the single public data base in the field and is included in the National Environmental Portal. The database is publicly available.

  • The EGDI3d database is a storage for geologic 3D models. Geometries from a variety of modelling tools are imported and stored in a common format, together with model metadata and geological descriptions in a GeoSciML inspired relational database.

  • Geothermal plants are often exposed to problems that affect the performance of the plant. Typical problems are mineral scaling, particles clogging, corrosion and temperature/stress related effects of geothermal flow and injectivity. In the PERFORM project contains data about the properties and geology of the reservoirs, the chemistry of the water and precipitates and the construction of the plants. The goal is to give recommendations that can help the operators to avoid or mitigate the problems The PERFORM project especially focuses on the deep reservoirs (> 1 km deep). The plants are represented as points.

  • This digital soil map shows the geology 1 meter below surface, just beneath ploughing- and culture layers. The map is digitized from redrafted maps originating from fieldwork, where soil samples are collected using a charting spear in a 100 m grid throughout the country. This map is a result of systematic geological mapping, and is an ongoing effort. This version 4.0 from 2015 classifies 88 % of Denmark's area. The legend shows 82 different soil types. The map is used for research, in relation to environmental analysis and planning of construction works, and as a basis for soil quality maps. The map is published in GEUS report 2015/30, where further information can be found.

  • Soil-type map of Denmark 1:1 million. The map is an automatic generalization of Soilmap of Denmark 1:200.000 and a contribution to the worldwide OneGeology project. Please note that this map is fit for use as a large-scale illustration only, due to the automatic procedure used for generalization.

  • The service presents a map overview of models in EGDI3D Geological Model Database. From each mapped area, a link is provided to a preview of the model.

  • Assessments of climate change impacts on groundwater and associated surface water conditions at the pilot scale.