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    WMS

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    WFS service for vannkraft

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    OGC Web Map Service developed by Cadcorp

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    This service shows the proportion of average total income of households which is spent on shelter costs by census division. The data is from the Census Profile, Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 98-316-X2016001. Shelter-cost-to-income ratio is calculated for private households living in owned or rented dwellings who reported a total household income greater than zero. Private households living in band housing, located on an agricultural operation that is operated by a member of the household, and households who reported a zero or negative total household income are excluded. The relatively high shelter-costs-to-household income ratios for some households may have resulted from the difference in the reference period for shelter costs and household total income data. The reference period for shelter cost data is 2016, while household total income is reported for the year 2015. As well, for some households, the 2015 household total income may represent income for only part of a year.

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    This service shows the median total income of households in 2015 for Canada by 2016 census division.The data is from the Census Profile, Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 98-316-X2016001. Total income refers to the sum of certain incomes (in cash and, in some circumstances, in kind) of the statistical unit during a specified reference period. The median income of a specified group is the amount that divides the income distribution of that group into two halves.

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    Le régime des feux désigne les patrons de saisonnalité, de fréquence, d’étendue, de continuité spatiale, d’intensité, de type (p. ex., feu de cime ou de surface) et de gravité des feux dans une région ou un écosystème donné. Le nombre de grands feux est la somme annuelle du nombre de feux de plus de 200 hectares (ha) survenant par unité de 100 000 ha. Celui-ci a été calculé à l’aide de zones homogènes de régime (ZHR) des feux. Ces zones ZHR représentent des régions où le régime de feux est similaire sur une vaste échelle spatiale (Boulanger et al. 2014). Cette zonation permet de reconnaître les régions où les régimes des feux ont été inhabituels. Ces régimes inhabituels passent souvent inaperçus lorsque les feux sont regroupés en fonction de classifications administratives ou écologiques. Les données sur les feux proviennent de la Base nationale de données sur les feux de forêt du Canada couvrant 1959-1999 (pour l’établissement des ZHR) et 1959-1995 (pour l’établissement du modèle). La modélisation Régression multivariée par spline adaptative (en anglais MARS pour « Multivariate adaptive regression splines ») a été utilisée pour relier les attributs mensuels du régime des feux avec les variables mensuelles climatiques/feu-météo pour chaque ZHR. Les données projetées ont été simulées au moyen du modèle canadien du système terrestre, version 2 (Canadian Earth System Model version 2 [CanESM2]), et leur échelle a été réduite au moyen d’ANUSPLIN pour deux profils représentatifs d’évolution de concentration (“Representative Concentration Pathways” ou RCP). Ces RCP découlent de quatre scénarios relatifs à l’évolution de la concentration en gaz à effet de serre établis par le Groupe d’experts intergouvernemental sur l’évolution du climat (GIEC) dans son cinquième rapport d'évaluation. Le RCP 2.6 (appelé réduction rapide des émissions) suppose que les gaz à effet de serre atteindront leur concentration maximale au cours de la période 2010-2020 avant d’entamer leur déclin. Selon le scénario RCP 8.5 (appelé augmentation continue des émissions), la concentration en gaz à effet de serre continuera de croître tout au long du 21e siècle. Couche de données fournie : le nombre de grands feux (>200 ha) projeté à court terme (2011-2040) selon le RCP 8.5 (augmentation continue des émissions) au Canada.

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    Ce service présente le revenu total médian des ménages en 2015 au Canada par division de recensement, 2016. Les données proviennent du Profil du recensement, produit numéro 98-316-X2016001 au catalogue de Statistique Canada. Le revenu total désigne la somme de certains revenus (en espèces et, dans certains cas, en nature) de l’unité statistique durant une période de référence donnée. Le revenu médian d’un groupe donné est le montant qui divise en deux la répartition du revenu de ce groupe.

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    This service shows the ratio of immigrants who arrived between 2001 and 2016 to immigrants who arrived before 2001, by 2016 census division. The data is a custom extraction from the 2016 Census - 25% sample data. This data pertains to persons in private households who are immigrants by their period of immigration. 'Immigrant' includes persons who are, or who have ever been, landed immigrants or permanent residents. Such persons have been granted the right to live in Canada permanently by immigration authorities. Immigrants who have obtained Canadian citizenship by naturalization are included in this category. In the 2016 Census of Population, 'Immigrant' includes immigrants who landed in Canada on or prior to May 10, 2016. 'Period of immigration' refers to the period in which the immigrant first obtained landed immigrant or permanent resident status.

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    On this map, the median of monthly maximum turbidity values (in nephelometric turbidity units) are shown for drinking water facilities of each drainage region. Turbidity refers to the relative cloudiness of water, caused by suspended particles in water. The Survey of Drinking Water Plants collected this monthly maximum turbidity data for surface water sources from facilities reporting turbidity data for at least 10 months in 2013. These facilities served 24 million people and produced 4,091 million cubic metres of potable water from surface water sources in 2013. Source water turbidity was monitored continuously at 42% of these drinking water plants in 2013, daily at 34% of plants and less frequently at the remaining.

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    "The Canadian Disaster Database (CDD) contains detailed disaster information on more than 1000 natural, technological and conflict events (excluding war) that have happened since 1900 at home or abroad and that have directly affected Canadians. The CDD tracks ""significant disaster events"" which conform to the Emergency Management Framework for Canada definition of a ""disaster"" and meet one or more of the following criteria: •10 or more people killed •100 or more people affected/injured/infected/evacuated or homeless •an appeal for national/international assistance •historical significance •significant damage/interruption of normal processes such that the community affected cannot recover on its own The database describes where and when a disaster occurred, the number of injuries, evacuations, and fatalities, as well as a rough estimate of the costs. As much as possible, the CDD contains primary data that is valid, current and supported by reliable and traceable sources, including federal institutions, provincial/territorial governments, non-governmental organizations and media sources. Data is updated and reviewed on a semi-annual basis"