The dataset covers cultural environments protected according to the Cultural heritage act § 20, areas included in UNESCO’s World Heritage list, and urban cultural environments of national importance. The cultural environments that are protected according to the Cultural heritage act § 20 have the same protection as any protected cultural heritage site or monument. Candidates to the UNESCO World Heritage list are proposed by the Directorate for Cultural Heritage based on cultural environments that are considered to have international cultural heritage value. Urban cultural environments of national importance include towns and villages in Norway that contain cultural environments of national cultural heritage value. These cultural environments are not subject to formal protection, but it cannot be ruled out that some of these environments, or objects within them, should in the future become protected according to the Cultural heritage act.
Five different classification; Each classification has unique restrictions
Five different classification; Each classification has unique restrictions
NATO unclassified - Free for all.
NATO Restricted - Lowest security rating of information. There is no need for clearance at this level, but you must authorize and sign a Declaration of Confidentiality to access the LIMITED / NATO RESTRICTED.
NATO Confidential - The lowest level of security clearance in NATO.
NATO Secret - The second highest level of security clearance in NATO.
Cosmic Top Secret -The highest level of security clearance in NATO.
The different categories of cultural heritage.
Main category to which a cultural heritage site/artifact belongs Note: Category primarily reflects an administrative categorization of cultural heritage sites/artifacts, as opposed to main group and function, which reflects connections to sectors of society.
The different categories of cultural heritage.
Main category to which a cultural heritage site/artifact belongs Note: Category primarily reflects an administrative categorization of cultural heritage sites/artifacts, as opposed to main group and function, which reflects connections to sectors of society.
M-FRE: Cultural heritage sites protected by the Cultural heritage act § 20.
M-NIB: City areas of national interest. These areas are not formally protected but the designation gives a basis for the drawing of zones of consideration according to the plan and building law. These areas can also provide a foundation for opposition to new land use plans.
M-WHS: Cultural heritage sites on UNESCO's world heritage site list.
M-BRA: Areas where there is a particularily great risk of fire contagion as defined by the Norwegian Directorate for Civil Protection in cooperation with the Directorate for Cultural Heritage. Listed wooden buildings environments where there is a risk that fire in one building spreads to the other buildings.
M-KULA: Kulturhistoriske landskap av nasjonal interesse
CulturalEnvironment: Areas where cultural heritage sites/artifacts constitute a part of a greater totality or context.
Note: These areas can be a collection of buildings or other structures of cultural significance which are physically or functionally tied to each other.
extent: Area over which an object extends.
name: Name of cultural heritage area.
Category of cultural heritage site.
The administrative preservation status of an area.
Description of cultural heritage.
Abstract object used as a container for properties originating from SOSI-chapter 1.
Unique identifier of an object that can be used by external applications as a reference to the object. The identifier is managed by the responsible producer/administrator of the data-set.
Origin of the data-set.
Reference to copyright material, source material, organization/publishing source.
date of extraction from a database Note: Different from Copy Date in that you do not distinguish whether it is extraction from an original database or a copy database.
Date when the object was registered/observed/measured in the terrain/environment.
Date for the production of the actual data files.
Description of the object's spatial position, according to the geographic coordinate latitude.
Description of the object's spatial position, according to the geographic coordinate longitude.
MGRS (Military grid reference system), is a global system used by NATO to specify a map reference. Showing a area, not a point.
Classification degree of information that has been given a security level. Defines distribution of the dataset.
Identification: Unique identifier of an object that can be used by external applications as a reference to the object. The identifier is managed by the responsible producer/administrator of the data-set.
localId: Local identifier, unique within it's namespace - no other objects share the same identifier.
namespace: Namespace uniquely identifying the data source of the object.
versionId: Identification of a certain version of a geographically referenced object.
Maximum length is 25 characters. This is in line with ISO 8601. Example: 2007-02-12T12:12:12+05:30.