Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P STYLE="margin:0 0 0 0;"><SPAN>Two global GIS-covers in ESRI shape format were produced: one contains polylines representing the maritime boundaries;the second holds polygons representing the EEZs. When all the boundary lines were constructed, the lines could be aggregated and an EEZ-polygon per country was derived. For the land-side border, the boundaries of the world countries were used, on the sea-side the boundaries were aggregated for each country. Separate polygons were created for islands (ex.: Azores) and dependencies (ex.: Réunion) but those polygons are linked with their corresponding sovereign nation (in the attribute table).</SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: 027b93c5a25e44d185f4de4b3d21357e
Copyright Text: Flanders Marine Institute (2014). Marineregions.org. Accessed at http://www.marineregions.org on yyyy-mm-dd.
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P STYLE="margin:0 0 0 0;"><SPAN>Two global GIS-covers in ESRI shape format were produced: one contains polylines representing the maritime boundaries;the second holds polygons representing the EEZs. When all the boundary lines were constructed, the lines could be aggregated and an EEZ-polygon per country was derived. For the land-side border, the boundaries of the world countries were used, on the sea-side the boundaries were aggregated for each country. Separate polygons were created for islands (ex.: Azores) and dependencies (ex.: Réunion) but those polygons are linked with their corresponding sovereign nation (in the attribute table).</SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: 027b93c5a25e44d185f4de4b3d21357e
Copyright Text: Flanders Marine Institute (2014). Marineregions.org. Accessed at http://www.marineregions.org on yyyy-mm-dd.
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P STYLE="margin:0 0 0 0;"><SPAN>Two global GIS-covers in ESRI shape format were produced: one contains polylines representing the maritime boundaries;the second holds polygons representing the EEZs. When all the boundary lines were constructed, the lines could be aggregated and an EEZ-polygon per country was derived. For the land-side border, the boundaries of the world countries were used, on the sea-side the boundaries were aggregated for each country. Separate polygons were created for islands (ex.: Azores) and dependencies (ex.: Réunion) but those polygons are linked with their corresponding sovereign nation (in the attribute table).</SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: 027b93c5a25e44d185f4de4b3d21357e
Copyright Text: Flanders Marine Institute (2014). Marineregions.org. Accessed at http://www.marineregions.org on yyyy-mm-dd.