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This collection comprises authoritative geospatial datasets detailing Australia's maritime jurisdiction, including territorial seas, exclusive economic zones, and continental shelf limits. It features treaty-defined boundaries with neighboring nations and standardized regional maps for specific areas like the Timor Sea and Torres Strait. The data supports the precise delineation of legal maritime zones and the analysis of spatial extents for compliance and policy research.
One map in a series of 27 depicting Australia's maritime jurisdiction. The map shows the continental shelf as proclaimed in 2012 and was updated by Geoscience Australia in June 2014 to conform with Australian Maritime Boundaries data. Background imagery combines bathymetric data from 2009 and 1997 with NASA's Blue Marble land imagery.
Geoscience Australia developed the AMB2014a dataset as a digital representation of Australia's maritime zones under the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006. The data covers Australia's marine jurisdiction from approximately 8°S to 70°S latitude and 39°E to 174°E longitude, including external territories. This version, published in May 2014, incorporates technical amendments based on user feedback.
Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction around Macquarie Island is depicted in this A0-sized map. The Australian Ocean Data Network produced it as part of a 27-map series, with the underlying bathymetric data sourced from 2009 and 1997 surveys. The map reflects the extended continental shelf boundaries approved in April 2008.
A geospatial map depicting maritime boundaries and jurisdictional zones in the Torres Strait region. The data includes Australia's jurisdictional boundaries, a seabed and fisheries jurisdiction line, and a protected zone established under the 1985 treaty with Papua New Guinea. The map is sourced from the Australian Marine Spatial Information System (AMSIS) maintained by Geoscience Australia, with a currency of 2002 and a scale of 1:300,000.
A map depicting Australia's maritime jurisdiction around Heard Island and McDonald Islands, including a portion of the Australian Antarctic Territory. It is one of 27 constituent maps in the 'Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series' (GeoCat 71789). The map shows the extended continental shelf approved by the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf in April 2008, treaties, and various maritime zones.
One of 27 constituent maps in the official 'Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series' (GeoCat 71789). This map depicts Australia's extended continental shelf as approved by the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf in April 2008, along with treaties and various maritime zones around Heard Island and McDonald Islands. Background imagery combines bathymetric data from Smith and Sandwell (1997) and land imagery from NASA's Blue Marble.
September 2019 data provides a digital representation of the maritime boundary treaty between Australia and Timor-Leste, ratified on 30 August 2019. The dataset is part of the Australian Maritime Boundaries (AMB) database, published by Geoscience Australia in consultation with other government agencies. It covers a geographical extent approximately between 9.5°S to 11.5°S latitude and 126°E to 128.5°E longitude, supplied in the GDA94 datum as ESRI Geodatabase and Shapefile formats.
Geoscience Australia's AMB2020 dataset is a digital representation of Australia's maritime zones as defined under the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006. It covers the Australian marine jurisdiction, including waters adjacent to the mainland, offshore islands, and External Territories, with geographical extents from 8°S to 70°S latitude and 39°E to 174°E longitude. The data was updated in August 2019 to reflect the 2018 Timor Sea Treaty and was published in consultation with other Commonwealth agencies.
One of 27 maps in the 'Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series' (GeoCat 71789). The map depicts Australia's extended continental shelf approved by the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf in April 2008 and various maritime zones off the western Australian Antarctic Territory. Background imagery includes bathymetric data from Smith and Sandwell (1997) and land imagery from NASA's Blue Marble.
Geoscience Australia provides a thematic map depicting Australia's maritime jurisdiction off the Northwest Shelf. It is one of 27 constituent maps in the national Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series, showing the extended continental shelf approved in 2008, treaties, and maritime zones.
One of 27 constituent maps in the 'Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series' (GeoCat 71789). The map depicts Australia's extended continental shelf approved by the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf in April 2008, along with treaties and various maritime zones. It is produced by Geoscience Australia and uses a background bathymetric image derived from a 2009 9 arc second grid and a 1997 grid by Smith and Sandwell.
One of 27 constituent maps in the 'Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series' (GeoCat 71789). The map depicts Australia's extended continental shelf approved by the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf in April 2008, along with treaties and various maritime zones. It was created by Geoscience Australia using a Mercator projection and includes background bathymetry from Smith and Sandwell (1997) and land imagery from NASA's Blue Marble.
One constituent map from the 27-map 'Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series'. It depicts the extended continental shelf approved in 2008, treaties, and maritime zones over a bathymetric background. The map is sized for a 42-inch plotter as a 3400mm x 1050mm PDF.
Geoscience Australia developed the Australian Maritime Boundaries 2020 (AMB2020) GIS data product, which digitally represents the scheduled and offshore areas defined under the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006. The dataset covers Australia's entire marine jurisdiction, including waters adjacent to the mainland, offshore islands, and External Territories, with coordinates in the GDA94 datum. It was updated in August 2019 to incorporate changes from the 2018 Timor Sea Treaty.
A geospatial map depicting Australia's maritime jurisdiction around Tasmania, including the South Tasman Rise and Victoria. It is one of 27 constituent maps in the 'Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series' (GeoCat 71789) and shows the extended continental shelf approved in April 2008. The background combines bathymetric data from Geoscience Australia (2009) and Smith and Sandwell (1997) with land imagery from NASA's Blue Marble.
One of 27 maps in the 'Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series' (GeoCat 71789). The map depicts Australia's extended continental shelf, approved by the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf in April 2008, and various maritime zones around Tasmania. Background bathymetric imagery combines the 2009 9 arc second grid by Geoscience Australia with a 1997 grid by Smith and Sandwell.
One of 27 constituent maps in Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series, depicting the extended continental shelf approved in April 2008 and various maritime zones. The A0-sized PDF combines bathymetric data from 2009 and 1997 sources with NASA Blue Marble land imagery.
Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction around Heard Island and McDonald Islands is a constituent map of the national Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series. It depicts Australia's extended continental shelf approved in April 2008, treaties, and various maritime zones. The background bathymetric image is derived from a grid by Smith and Sandwell, 1997, and land imagery from NASA's Blue Marble.
Geoscience Australia's map depicts Australia's maritime jurisdiction off the Northwest Shelf, updated in June 2014. It is one of 27 constituent maps in the 'Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series' and illustrates the continental shelf as proclaimed in the 2012 proclamation. The background combines bathymetric data from 2009 and 1997 with land imagery from NASA's Blue Marble.
Geoscience Australia developed the 2019 epoch of the Australian Maritime Boundaries database, which includes the treaty ratified with Timor-Leste on 30 August 2019. The data product is a digital representation of the maritime boundary treaty between the two nations, covering an area approximately between 9.5°S to 11.5°S latitude and 126°E to 128.5°E longitude. Data coordinates are supplied in the GDA94 datum and are published in ESRI Geodatabase and Shapefile formats.