Mapping Sevenoaks' Historic Tree Cover

Editorial Type: News Date: 2021-08-09 Views: 264 Tags:
A new map detailing the location, height and canopy for trees over 3 metres in height is helping Sevenoaks District Council manage its iconic ancient trees and natural woodland.

Derived from Bluesky's National Tree Map, which provides geospatial intelligence for more than 300 million trees across the UK, the data has already been used to create a district wide map of tree cover, to create 3D visualisations to inform development decisions and to support planning enforcement investigations.

Sevenoaks District Council originally purchased National Tree Map data from Bluesky in November 2019 and the data is widely used across the Council with specific applications in planning. Updated this year, the original and new tree map layers are stored in the Council's GIS alongside multiple years of aerial photography, Ordnance Survey maps, data such as Ancient Woodland and Biodiversity Opportunities, and council data including Tree Preservation Orders and Planning Applications. The tree data is accessible to all staff via the Council's intranet mapping system GISMO (GIS Online).

The name Sevenoaks dates to circa 800 AD and is thought to be derived from 'Seouenaca' the name given to a small chapel near seven oaks. Records of these trees through the ages are sparse and it is not until the nineteenth century when a group of seven trees appears on an Ordnance Survey map.

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