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Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science

Hutchins, Ryan; Young, Chloe: Bathymetric features of Ontario lakes from historical maps [dataset]. PANGAEA, https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.974485 (dataset in review)

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Abstract:
Lake depth plays a crucial role in understanding large-scale biogeochemical processes. The thickness of the hypolimnion, influenced by lake depth, is a key factor in oxygen dynamics and carbon processing within lakes. Furthermore, lake depth impacts seasonal ice-off dates and CO2 emissions. Bathymetry shapes lake mixing dynamics, which in turn regulate methane (CH4) emissions and phosphorus release from sediments. Consequently, landscape-scale biogeochemical studies of lake-dominated regions require extensive and accurate bathymetric data.
In Canada, more than a million lakes remain without detailed bathymetric data. However, between the 1940s and 1990s, the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry produced bathymetric maps for 11,291 lakes across Ontario. These maps have been scanned and are publicly accessible via Ontario's Open Data Portal (https://data.ontario.ca/dataset/historic-bathymetry-maps). From these historical maps, maximum depths were manually extracted and compiled into this dataset.
In addition to maximum depths, lake geometry has been derived using lake polygons provided by the National Hydro Network (NHN) from Natural Resources Canada https://open.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/a4b190fe-e090-4e6d-881e-b87956c07977). Morphometric metrics such as circularity, shoreline complexity, and relative depth were calculated from these polygons and the bathymetric data. This dataset offers a critical resource for understanding the geomorphological and biogeochemical dynamics of lakes across Ontario, Canada.
Keyword(s):
Bathymetry; lake depth
Coverage:
Median Latitude: 47.622569 * Median Longitude: -83.690176 * South-bound Latitude: 42.127326 * West-bound Longitude: -95.142479 * North-bound Latitude: 55.253356 * East-bound Longitude: -74.709667
Minimum ELEVATION: 39 m a.s.l. * Maximum ELEVATION: 577 m a.s.l.
Parameter(s):
#NameShort NameUnitPrincipal InvestigatorMethod/DeviceComment
1LakeLakeHutchins, RyanFrom Ontario Open Data Portal Historic Bathymetry Maps (https:
2CommentCommentHutchins, RyanFrom Ontario Open Data Portal Historic Bathymetry Maps (https:
3LATITUDELatitudeHutchins, RyanGeocode – From Ontario Open Data Portal Historic Bathymetry Maps (https:
4LONGITUDELongitudeHutchins, RyanGeocode – From Ontario Open Data Portal Historic Bathymetry Maps (https:
5Lake, water depth, maximumLake water d maxmHutchins, RyanManually picked from scanned maps
6Lake surface areaLake aream2Hutchins, RyanCalculated from National Hydro Network (NHN) lake polygons with ArcGIS 10.8
7PerimeterPerimetermHutchins, RyanCalculated from National Hydro Network (NHN) lake polygons with ArcGIS 10.8
8CircularityCircularityHutchins, RyanCircularity compares the area of the lake (m2) with the area of the minimum boundary circle around it. It differentiates between circular (value approaches 1) and elongated lakes (value approaches 0).
9ComplexityComplexityHutchins, RyanShoreline complexity is a perimeter (m) to square root area (m2) ratio. Increasing values express increasing complexity. Area is square-rooted to account for size dependency.
10CommentCommentHutchins, RyanCalculated from National Hydro Network (NHN) lake polygons with ArcGIS 10.8 and maxminum depths from historical maps
11ELEVATIONElevationm a.s.l.Hutchins, RyanGeocode – Lake elvations from Canadian Digital Elevation Model
License:
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC-BY-4.0) (License comes into effect after moratorium ends)
Size:
89872 data points

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