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    __The link: *Access the data directory* is available in the section*Dataset Description Sheets; Additional Information*__. Forest infrastructure mapping corresponds to the forest territory from which trees have been subtracted for infrastructure purposes, for example to install energy transmission lines, agricultural areas or hydroelectric reservoirs, or for purposes other than forest harvesting. The areas contained in this map date back to 2003. This map covers almost all of the territory south of the 52nd parallel of Quebec's public and private forest. The information constituting it comes from various sources. For example, the Quebec Topographic Database is used to map the discharge of hydroelectric reservoirs. The minimum mapping area is 0.1 ha.**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**

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    The geographic data from the land accounts of southern Quebec correspond to a set of matrix files with a spatial resolution of 50 meters, qualifying at three distinct times the type of land cover of Quebec territory located south of the 51st parallel. These geospatial data are those used in the [Southern Quebec Land Accounts, 2024 edition] project (https://statistique.quebec.ca/fr/document/comptes-des-terres-du-quebec-meridional-regions-administratives-et-provinces-naturelles), developed by the Institut de la Statistique du Québec (ISQ). These data are structured around nine land cover classes based on the standardization of the System of Economic and Environmental Accounting (SCEE): artificial surfaces, agricultural lands, forest wetlands, herbaceous or shrubby wetlands, inland waterways and bodies, inland waterways and bodies, inland waterways, coniferous forests with closed canopies, coniferous forests with closed canopies, coniferous forests with closed canopies, and forests with open canopies. The three maps of Quebec land cover are developed for three distinct periods of time: a first corresponding to the 1990s, a second to the 2000s and a third to the 2010s. Comparing these three land cover maps makes it possible to obtain a new product, i.e. two maps qualifying land cover changes (transition from one land cover class to another), one during the 1990s and the second during the 2000s. Land Accounts data are compiled using the [Vector grid system for a Quebec spatial data infrastructure] (https://www.donneesquebec.ca/recherche/fr/dataset/systeme-de-grilles-vectorielles-pour-une-infrastructure-quebecoise-de-donnees-spatiales).**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**