Table 6.47 -- EDCS Attribute enumerant codes for attributes whose label begins with P
| Attribute label | Enumerant label | Definition | Related concepts | Code |
| PARTICLE_ENERGY_RANGE | A range indicating the energy of a charged particle. | |||
| gt0r6_AND_le4r2_MEV | > 0,6 and <= 4,2 megaelectronvolts. |   | 11 | |
| gt1r0_MEV | > 1,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 12 | |
| gt2r0_MEV | > 2,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 13 | |
| gt3r8_AND_le9r9r0_MEV | > 3,8 and <= 9,9 megaelectronvolts. |   | 14 | |
| gt4r2_AND_le8r7_MEV | > 4,2 and <= 8,7 megaelectronvolts. |   | 15 | |
| gt5r0_MEV | > 5,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 16 | |
| gt8r7_AND_le14r5_MEV | > 8,7 and <= 14,5 megaelectronvolts. |   | 17 | |
| gt9r9_AND_le21r3_MEV | > 9,9 and <= 21,3 megaelectronvolts. |   | 18 | |
| gt10r0_MEV | > 10,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 19 | |
| gt15r0_AND_le44r0_MEV | > 15,0 and <= 44,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 20 | |
| gt21r3_AND_le60r0_MEV | > 21,3 and <= 60,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 21 | |
| gt30r0_MEV | > 30,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 22 | |
| gt39r0_AND_le82r0_MEV | > 39,0 and <= 82,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 23 | |
| gt50r0_MEV | > 50,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 24 | |
| gt60r0_AND_le180r0_MEV | > 60,0 and <= 180,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 25 | |
| gt60r0_MEV | > 60,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 26 | |
| gt84r0_AND_le200r0_MEV | > 84,0 and <= 200,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 27 | |
| gt100r0_MEV | > 100,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 28 | |
| gt110r0_AND_le500r0_MEV | > 110,0 and <= 500,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 29 | |
| gt160r0_AND_le260r0_MEV | > 160,0 and <= 260,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 30 | |
| gt330r0_AND_le500r0_MEV | > 330,0 and <= 500,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 31 | |
| gt355r0_AND_le430r0_MEV | > 355,0 and <= 430,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 32 | |
| gt430r0_AND_le505r0_MEV | > 430,0 and <= 505,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 33 | |
| gt505r0_AND_le685r0_MEV | > 505,0 and <= 685,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 34 | |
| gt500r0_AND_le700r0_MEV | > 600,0 and <= 700,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 35 | |
| gt685r0_MEV | > 685,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 36 | |
| gt700r0_MEV | > 700,0 megaelectronvolts. |   | 37 | |
| PARTITIONED_POND_TYPE | The kind of pond that the partitions separate. | |||
| FISH | Any of numerous cold-blooded aquatic vertebrates of the superclass Pisces, characteristically having fins, gills, and a streamlined body. |   | 11 | |
| RESERVOIR |   | 12 | ||
| WASTE |   | 13 | ||
| PASQUILL_ATM_STABILITY_NDX | The atmospheric stability, based on the standard deviation of horizontal wind direction fluctuations and temperature change with height. | |||
| CAT_A | Category A: Extremely unstable. |   | 11 | |
| CAT_B | Category B: Moderately unstable. |   | 12 | |
| CAT_C | Category C: Slightly unstable. |   | 13 | |
| CAT_D | Category D: Neutral. |   | 14 | |
| CAT_E | Category E: Slightly stable. |   | 15 | |
| CAT_F | Category F: Moderately stable. |   | 16 | |
| CAT_G | Category G: Extremely stable. |   | 17 | |
| PERIODIC_RESTRICTION_CODED | The type of restriction due to climate or other limitations. | |||
| CLOSED |   | 11 | ||
| PERMANENT_ICE |   | 12 | ||
| SUBJECT_TO_ICE |   | 13 | ||
| PERENNIALLY_OPEN | Perennially open, not subject to ice. |   | 14 | |
| TEMPORARY |   | 15 | ||
| JAN_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, January. |   | 16 | |
| FEB_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, February. |   | 17 | |
| MAR_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, March. |   | 18 | |
| APR_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, April. |   | 19 | |
| MAY_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, May. |   | 20 | |
| JUN_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, June. |   | 21 | |
| JUL_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, July. |   | 22 | |
| AUG_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, August. |   | 23 | |
| SEP_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, September. |   | 24 | |
| OCT_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, October. |   | 25 | |
| NOV_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, November. |   | 26 | |
| DEC_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, December. |   | 27 | |
| PERIODIC_RESTRICTION_END | The end month for restrictions due to climate or other limitations. | |||
| JAN_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, January. |   | 11 | |
| FEB_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, February. |   | 12 | |
| MAR_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, March. |   | 13 | |
| APR_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, April. |   | 14 | |
| MAY_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, May. |   | 15 | |
| JUN_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, June. |   | 16 | |
| JUL_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, July. |   | 17 | |
| AUG_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, August. |   | 18 | |
| SEP_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, September. |   | 19 | |
| OCT_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, October. |   | 20 | |
| NOV_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, November. |   | 21 | |
| DEC_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, December. |   | 22 | |
| PERIODIC_RESTRICTION_START | The start month for restrictions due to climate or other limitations. | |||
| JAN_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, January. |   | 11 | |
| FEB_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, February. |   | 12 | |
| MAR_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, March. |   | 13 | |
| APR_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, April. |   | 14 | |
| MAY_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, May. |   | 15 | |
| JUN_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, June. |   | 16 | |
| JUL_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, July. |   | 17 | |
| AUG_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, August. |   | 18 | |
| SEP_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, September. |   | 19 | |
| OCT_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, October. |   | 20 | |
| NOV_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, November. |   | 21 | |
| DEC_SEASON_LIMIT | Seasonal Limit, December. |   | 22 | |
| PHYSICAL_STATE | The physical state of an object. | |||
| LIQUID |   | 11 | ||
| SOLID | Composed of frozen components. |   | 12 | |
| PHYSICAL_SURFACE_TYPE | The principal characteristic of a surface. | |||
| BARE | Bare or cleared. |   | 11 | |
| BROKEN |   | 12 | ||
| CALCAREOUS | Composed of, containing, or resembling calcium carbonate, calcium, or limestone; chalky. |   | 13 | |
| COARSE | Consisting of relatively large particles or elements. |   | 14 | |
| DECAYED |   | 15 | ||
| FINE_MINUTE_PARTICLES | Fine, minute particles. |   | 16 | |
| FLINTY |   | 17 | ||
| GLACIAL | Describing the action, features, movements, and materials produced by or derived from glaciers or ice, or a region covered by glaciers or ice. |   | 18 | |
| GRITTY | Like, containing, or consisting of grit. |   | 19 | |
| GROUND | The top layer of the surface of the planet Earth. |   | 20 | |
| HARD | Resistant to penetration or wear. |   | 21 | |
| KARST | A landscape characterized by numerous sinkholes, caves, and extensive underground drainage that is produced on limestone, gypsum, or dolomite formations by solution or dissolution. |   | 22 | |
| LARGE | Bigger or greater than is usual, typical or average. |   | 23 | |
| MEDIUM |   | 24 | ||
| MEMBRANE | Fibre material, coated by plastic or other water-repellent substance; membrane. |   | 25 | |
| MOBILE_BOTTOM |   | 26 | ||
| ROCKY | Like, containing, or consisting of rocks. |   | 27 | |
| ROTTEN |   | 28 | ||
| SMALL |   | 29 | ||
| SOFT | Easily penetrated or divided. |   | 30 | |
| SPECKLED |   | 31 | ||
| SPRINGS_IN_SEABED |   | 32 | ||
| STICKY | Being, made of, or covered with a substance that stays fixed to any surface it touches. |   | 33 | |
| STIFF | Firm or hard, not easily bent or moved. |   | 34 | |
| STREAKY | Having streaks, long thin marks which are easily noticed because they are very different from the material surrounding it. |   | 35 | |
| TENACIOUS |   | 36 | ||
| UNEVEN |   | 37 | ||
| UNSURFACED |   | 38 | ||
| VARIED | Containing many different types or changing often. |   | 39 | |
| VOLCANIC | Relating to, or produced by, a volcano. |   | 40 | |
| PILE_TYPE | The type of a piling. | |||
| POST |   | 11 | ||
| SNAG |   | 12 | ||
| STAKE |   | 13 | ||
| TRIPODAL |   | 14 | ||
| PILOT_BOARDING_METHOD | The type of pilot boarding place. | |||
| COMES_FROM_SHORE | Pilot comes out from shore. |   | 11 | |
| HELICOPTER | Boarding by helicopter. |   | 12 | |
| PILOT_CRUISING_VESSEL | Boarding by pilot-cruising vessel. |   | 13 | |
| PILOT_BOARDING_VEHICLE | The method by which pilots are transferred to and from ships using pilot services. | |||
| BOAT |   | 14 | ||
| HELICOPTER |   | 15 | ||
| PIPELINE_TYPE | The function of pipeline. | |||
| BUBBLER_SYSTEM | Pipelines including small nozzles that allow the upward movement of liquid. |   | 11 | |
| GENERIC | A pipeline whose characteristics have not been determined. |   | 12 | |
| INTAKE | An opening on a pipeline for the ingress or egress of air, water, fuel, or other fluid. |   | 13 | |
| OUTFALL | The point along a pipeline at which water is discharged from a conduit to a stream, lake, or ocean. |   | 14 | |
| SEWER | A pipeline system, either above or underground used as a conduit to convey refuse matter to a place of disposal. |   | 15 | |
| SUPPLY | Supply pipe. |   | 16 | |
| TRANSPORT | Pipe equipment used for transporting or conveying something, usually liquid, gas, or slurries, from one place to another. |   | 17 | |
| VALVE | Pipeline including any of a number of devices that allow, halt, or regulate the passage of a fluid through a pipe or tube, either manually or automatically. |   | 18 | |
| POINT_OBJECT_TYPE | The general type of a point object. | |||
| AGGREGATE | The object is represented by a collection of other objects, e.g., a basis set model. |   | 11 | |
| DESTROYED_STRUCTURE | Structure has been destroyed by either man-made or natural disaster. |   | 12 | |
| HORIZ_STRUCTURE | A structure which has minimal height (<= 1 metre) or whose height is significantly smaller than its horizontal dimensions. |   | 13 | |
| MULT_ELEV_STRUCT | The structure has internal sub-structure, e.g., floors, walls, rooms, or corridors. |   | 14 | |
| SPATIAL_LOCATION | Identifies a conceptual location that may have no associated structure, e.g., a hide site. |   | 15 | |
| TERRAIN_CONFORMAL | The elevations of some vertices in the object are determined by the local configuration of the terrain surface, e.g., they are adjusted to conform to the terrain surface. |   | 16 | |
| VERT_STRUCTURE | A structure which has significant height (> 1 metre) or whose height is significantly larger than its horizontal dimensions. |   | 17 | |
| POPULATED_PLACE_TYPE | The type of a populated place. | |||
| INLAND_VILLAGE |   | 11 | ||
| NATIVE_SETTLEMENT |   | 12 | ||
| SHANTY_TOWN |   | 13 | ||
| TENT_DWELLINGS |   | 14 | ||
| POPULATION_RANGE | A range indicating the number of people within an object, e.g., a built up region. | |||
| lt25000 | < 25 000 persons. |   | 11 | |
| ge25000_AND_lt150000 | >= 25 000 and < 150 000 persons. |   | 12 | |
| ge150000_AND_lt500000 | >= 150 000 and < 500 000 persons. |   | 13 | |
| ge500000_AND_lt1000000 | >= 500 000 and < 1 000 000 persons. |   | 14 | |
| ge1000000_AND_lt2000000 | >= 1 000 000 and < 2 000 000 persons. |   | 15 | |
| ge2000000_AND_lt4000000 | >= 2 000 000 and < 4 000 000 persons. |   | 16 | |
| ge4000000 | >= 4 000 000 persons. |   | 17 | |
| POSITION_QUALITY | The quality of a position. | |||
| APPROXIMATED | A value or result that is not exactly correct, but is close enough for some predetermined purpose. |   | 11 | |
| CALCULATED | Derived by using known values and applying a mathematical formula. |   | 12 | |
| DOUBTFUL | There is uncertainty about the quality of the value. |   | 13 | |
| ESTIMATED | A rough calculation based on an estimated value, or an approximate measurement of a value. |   | 14 | |
| INADEQUATELY_SURVEYED | A measurement that is low in quality. |   | 15 | |
| PRECISELY_KNOWN | Precisely known, not surveyed. |   | 16 | |
| REPORTED_NOT_CONFIRMED | A value that is obtained from an external source but not verified. |   | 17 | |
| REPORTED_NOT_SURVEYED | A value from an external source that was not obtained by surveying. |   | 18 | |
| SURVEYED | Accurately measured or delineated. |   | 19 | |
| UNRELIABLE | Not worthy of confidence |   | 20 | |
| UNSURVEYED | Has not been surveyed. |   | 21 | |
| POWER_PLANT_TYPE | The energy source used to generate power. | |||
| HYDRO_ELECTRIC |   | 11 | ||
| INTERNAL_COMBUSTION |   | 12 | ||
| NUCLEAR |   | 13 | ||
| SOLAR |   | 14 | ||
| THERMAL |   | 15 | ||
| TIDAL |   | 16 | ||
| WIND |   | 17 | ||
| PRECIPITATION_INTENSITY | The intensity of precipitation. | |||
| NO_PRECIP_PRESENT | No precipitation present. |   | 11 | |
| LIGHT | Up to 2,54 millimetres (0,10 inches) per hour; maximum 0,254 millimetres (0,01 inches) in 6 minutes. |   | 12 | |
| MODERATE | More than 2,54 millimetres (0,10 inches) up to 7,62 millimetres (0,30 inches) per hour; more than 0,254 millimetres (0,01 inches) up to 0,762 millimetres (0,03 inches) in 6 minutes. |   | 13 | |
| HEAVY | More than 7,62 millimetres (0,30 inches) per hour; more than 0,762 millimetres (0,03 inches) in 6 minutes. |   | 14 | |
| PRECIPITATION_PHASE | The liquid/solid disposition of precipitable water. | |||
| LIQUID | Composed of only liquid components. |   | 11 | |
| MIXED | Composed of both liquid and frozen components. |   | 12 | |
| SOLID | Composed of frozen components. |   | 13 | |
| PRECIPITATION_TYPE | The type of precipitation. | |||
| DRIZZLE | Fine uniform drops of water whose diameters are smaller than 0,5 millimetre. |   | 11 | |
| DRIZZLE_AND_RAIN_NOT_SL | Mixture of drizzle and rain with moderate or heavy intensity with rate greater than 2,54 millimetres (0,10 inches) per hour. |   | 12 | |
| DRIZZLE_AND_RAIN_SL | Mixture of drizzle and rain with slight intensity with rate less than 2,54 millimetres (0,10 inches) per hour. |   | 13 | |
| DRIZZLE_FREEZING_HVY | Drizzle that is freezing of heavy intensity with visibility less than 500 metres. |   | 14 | |
| DRIZZLE_FREEZING_MOD | Drizzle that is freezing of moderate intensity with visibility between 500 and 1000 metres. |   | 15 | |
| DRIZZLE_FREEZING_SL | Drizzle that is freezing of slight intensity with visibility equal to or greater than 1000 metres. |   | 16 | |
| DRIZZLE_NOT_FREEZE_HVY | Drizzle that is not freezing of heavy intensity with visibility less than 500 metres. |   | 17 | |
| DRIZZLE_NOT_FREEZE_MOD | Drizzle that is not freezing of moderate intensity with visibility between 500 and 1000 metres. |   | 18 | |
| DRIZZLE_NOT_FREEZE_SL | Drizzle that is not freezing of slight intensity with visibility equal to or greater than 1000 metres. |   | 19 | |
| FREEZING_RAIN | Precipitation occurring at the freezing point of water, but not containing frozen or partially frozen raindrops. |   | 20 | |
| GRAUPEL | A small white ice particle that falls as precipitation and breaks apart easily when it lands on a surface, i.e., ice pellet or soft hail. |   | 21 | |
| HAIL | Precipitation of small balls of ice or pieces of ice with a diameter ranging from 5 to 50 millimetres, or sometimes more. |   | 22 | |
| ICE_PELLETS_HVY | Precipitation composed of transparent or translucent pellets of ice where there is rapid accumulation on ground. Visibility reduced by ice pellets to less than 4,83 kilometres (approximately 3 statute miles). |   | 23 | |
| ICE_PELLETS_MOD | Precipitation composed of transparent or translucent pellets of ice, which have a diameter less than 5 millimetres where there is slow accumulation on ground. Visibility reduced by ice pellets to less than 11,27 kilometres (approximately 7 statute miles). |   | 24 | |
| ICE_PELLETS_SL | Precipitation composed of transparent or translucent pellets of ice, which have a diameter less than 5 millimetres where scattered pellets do not completely cover an exposed surface regardless of duration. Visibility is not affected. |   | 25 | |
| NO_PRECIPITATION | No precipitation was observed. |   | 26 | |
| PRECIP_FREEZE_HVY | Precipitation that freezes upon contact with the ground, objects at the planetary surface, or aircraft, of heavy intensity. |   | 27 | |
| PRECIP_FREEZE_NOT_HEAVY | Precipitation that freezes upon contact with the ground, objects at the planetary surface, or aircraft, of slight or moderate intensity. |   | 28 | |
| PRECIP_LIQUID_HVY | Non frozen precipitation of heavy intensity. |   | 29 | |
| PRECIP_LIQUID_NOT_HEAVY | Non-frozen precipitation of slight or moderate intensity, less than 7,62 millimetres (0,30 inches) per hour. |   | 30 | |
| PRECIP_NOT_HVY | Unspecified precipitation type of slight or moderate intensity, less than 7,62 millimetres (0,30 inches) per hour. |   | 31 | |
| PRECIP_SOLID_HVY | Frozen precipitation of heavy intensity. |   | 32 | |
| PRECIP_SOLID_NOT_HEAVY | Frozen precipitation of slight or moderate intensity, greater than 7,62 millimetres (0,30 inches) per hour. |   | 33 | |
| PRECIPITATION | Unspecified precipitation type. |   | 34 | |
| PRECIPITATION_HVY | Unspecified precipitation type of heavy intensity, greater than 7,62 millimetres (0,30 inches) per hour. |   | 35 | |
| RAIN | Precipitation of liquid water particles, either in the form of drops of more than 0,5 millimetres in diameter or in the form of widely scattered drops. |   | 36 | |
| RAIN_FREEZING_HVY | Rain that is freezing of heavy intensity with rate greater than 7,62 millimetres (0,30 inches) per hour. |   | 37 | |
| RAIN_FREEZING_MOD | Rain that is freezing of moderate intensity with rate between 0,254 and 7,62 millimetres (0,01 and 0,30 inches) per hour. |   | 38 | |
| RAIN_FREEZING_SL | Rain that is freezing of slight intensity with rate less than 2,54 millimetres (0,10 inches)�per hour. |   | 39 | |
| RAIN_NOT_FREEZE_HVY | Rain that is not freezing of heavy intensity with rate greater than 7,62 millimetres (0,30 inches) per hour. |   | 40 | |
| RAIN_NOT_FREEZE_MOD | Rain that is not freezing of moderate intensity with rate between 0,254 and 7,62 millimetres (0,01 and 0,30 inches) per hour. |   | 41 | |
| RAIN_NOT_FREEZE_SL | Rain that is not freezing of slight intensity with rate� less than 2,54 millimetres (0,10 inches) per hour. |   | 42 | |
| SLEET | Precipitation consisting of generally transparent frozen or partially frozen raindrops, i.e., a mixture of rain and snow or hail. |   | 43 | |
| SNOW | Frozen precipitation in the form of white or translucent hexagonal ice crystals that fall in soft, white flakes. |   | 44 | |
| SNOW_HVY | Snow where visibility is less than 500 metres. |   | 45 | |
| SNOW_MOD | Snow where visibility is between 500 and 1000 metres. |   | 46 | |
| SNOW_SL | Snow where visibility is equal to or greater than 1000 metres. |   | 47 | |
| PREDOMINANT_COLOUR | The predominant colour of an object. If an object has multiple colours, this colour produces the largest single contribution to the object's total colour. | |||
| AMBER |   | 11 | ||
| BLACK | Black. |   | 12 | |
| BLACK_AND_GREEN | Black and Green. |   | 13 | |
| BLACK_AND_RED | Black and Red. |   | 14 | |
| BLACK_AND_WHITE | Black and White. |   | 15 | |
| BLACK_AND_YELLOW | Black and Yellow. |   | 16 | |
| BLACK_BROWN_GREY | Black, Brown, Grey. |   | 17 | |
| BLACK_RED_BLACK | Black-Red-Black. |   | 18 | |
| BLACK_WHITE_GREY | Black, White, Grey. |   | 19 | |
| BLACK_YELLOW_BLACK | Black-Yellow-Black. |   | 20 | |
| BLUE |   | 21 | ||
| BLUE_AND_GREEN | Blue and Green. |   | 22 | |
| BROWN | Brown. |   | 23 | |
| BUFF |   | 24 | ||
| CHOCOLATE |   | 25 | ||
| DARK_COLOURED |   | 26 | ||
| GREEN | Green. |   | 27 | |
| GREEN_AND_BLACK | Green and Black. |   | 28 | |
| GREEN_AND_BROWN | Green and Brown. |   | 29 | |
| GREEN_AND_RED | Green and Red. |   | 30 | |
| GREEN_AND_WHITE | Green and White. |   | 31 | |
| GREEN_RED_GREEN | Green-Red-Green. |   | 32 | |
| GREEN_YELLOW_BLACK | Green-Yellow-Black. |   | 33 | |
| GREY | Grey. |   | 34 | |
| GREY_AND_BLACK | Grey and Black. |   | 35 | |
| GREY_AND_GOLD | Grey and Gold. |   | 36 | |
| GREY_AND_GREEN | Grey and Green. |   | 37 | |
| GREY_AND_WHITE | Grey and White. |   | 38 | |
| GREY_BLUE_BLACK | Grey, Blue, Black. |   | 39 | |
| LAVENDER_AND_RED_BRICK | Lavender and Red Brick. |   | 40 | |
| LAVENDER_YELLOW_BROWN | Lavender, Yellow, Brown. |   | 41 | |
| LIGHT_BLUE | Light Blue. |   | 42 | |
| LIGHT_BROWN | Light Brown. |   | 43 | |
| LIGHT_COLOURED |   | 44 | ||
| LIGHT_GREEN | Light Green. |   | 45 | |
| MAGENTA | Magenta. |   | 46 | |
| NAUTICAL_PURPLE |   | 47 | ||
| NO_COLOUR |   | 48 | ||
| OATMEAL_BLACK_GREY | Oatmeal, Black, Grey. |   | 49 | |
| OATMEAL_TAN_GREY | Oatmeal, Tan, Grey. |   | 50 | |
| OATMEAL_WHITE_BLACK | Oatmeal, White, Black. |   | 51 | |
| OATMEAL_WHITE_BLUE | Oatmeal, White, Blue. |   | 52 | |
| OLIVE | Olive. |   | 53 | |
| ORANGE |   | 54 | ||
| PEACH | Peach. |   | 55 | |
| PINK |   | 56 | ||
| RED | Red. |   | 57 | |
| RED_AND_BLACK | Red and Black. |   | 58 | |
| RED_AND_GREEN | Red and Green. |   | 59 | |
| RED_AND_GREY | Red and Grey. |   | 60 | |
| RED_AND_WHITE | Red and White. |   | 61 | |
| RED_BRICK | Red Brick. |   | 62 | |
| RED_GREEN_RED | Red-Green-Red. |   | 63 | |
| RED_WHITE_BLACK | Red, White, Black. |   | 64 | |
| RED_WHITE_TAN | Red, White, Tan. |   | 65 | |
| RUST | Rust. |   | 66 | |
| TAN | Tan. |   | 67 | |
| TAN_AND_BLACK | Tan and Black. |   | 68 | |
| TAN_AND_BLUE | Tan and Blue. |   | 69 | |
| TAN_AND_BROWN | Tan and Brown. |   | 70 | |
| TAN_AND_DARK_YELLOW | Tan and Dark Yellow. |   | 71 | |
| TAN_AND_GREEN | Tan and Green. |   | 72 | |
| TAN_AND_GREY | Tan and Grey. |   | 73 | |
| TAN_BLACK_SEAGREEN | Tan, Black, Sea green. |   | 74 | |
| TAN_BLACK_WHITE | Tan, Black, White. |   | 75 | |
| TAN_GREY_BLACK | Tan, Grey, Black. |   | 76 | |
| VIOLET |   | 77 | ||
| WHITE | White. |   | 78 | |
| WHITE_AND_BLACK | White and Black. |   | 79 | |
| WHITE_AND_BLUE | White and Blue. |   | 80 | |
| WHITE_AND_GREEN | White and Green. |   | 81 | |
| WHITE_AND_ORANGE | White and Orange. |   | 82 | |
| WHITE_AND_RED | White and Red. |   | 83 | |
| WHITE_AND_YELLOW | White and Yellow. |   | 84 | |
| WHITE_GREEN_WHITE | White-Green-White. |   | 85 | |
| WHITE_PURPLE_RED_BRICK | White, Purple, Red Brick. |   | 86 | |
| WHITE_RED_GREEN | White-Red-Green. |   | 87 | |
| YELLOW | Yellow. |   | 88 | |
| YELLOW_AND_BLACK | Yellow and Black. |   | 89 | |
| YELLOW_AND_BLUE | Yellow and Blue. |   | 90 | |
| YELLOW_AND_GREEN | Yellow and Green. |   | 91 | |
| YELLOW_AND_RED | Yellow and Red. |   | 92 | |
| YELLOW_BLACK_YELLOW | Yellow-Black-Yellow. |   | 93 | |
| YELLOW_RED_WHITE | Yellow-Red-White. |   | 94 | |
| PREDOMINANT_HEIGHT_RANGE | A range indicating the height of 51% or more of an object. | |||
| le10_M | <= 10 metres. |   | 11 | |
| gt10_AND_le20_M | > 10 metres and <= 20 metres. |   | 12 | |
| gt20_AND_le30_M | > 20 metres and <= 30 metres. |   | 13 | |
| gt30_AND_le40_M | > 30 metres and <= 40 metres. |   | 14 | |
| gt40_AND_le50_M | > 40 metres and <= 50 metres. |   | 15 | |
| gt50_AND_le60_M | > 50 metres and <= 60 metres. |   | 16 | |
| gt60_AND_le70_M | > 60 metres and <= 70 metres. |   | 17 | |
| gt70_AND_le80_M | > 70 metres and <= 80 metres. |   | 18 | |
| gt80_AND_le90_M | > 80 metres and <= 90 metres. |   | 19 | |
| gt90_AND_le100_M | > 90 metres and <= 100 metres. |   | 20 | |
| gt100_M | > 100 metres. |   | 21 | |
| PREDOMINANT_SURROUND_TYPE | The predominant type of other objects that surround an object of interest, within a radius of 457 metres (1 500 feet). | |||
| OPEN_TERRAIN | Absence of objects causing significant impediment to visibility from, or movement of, vehicles. |   | 11 | |
| STRUCTURES |   | 12 | ||
| TREES | Woody perennial plants, having a self-supporting main stem or trunk. |   | 13 | |
| PREDOMINANT_VEG_HGT_RANGE | The predominant height of vegetation range within delineated region of an object. | |||
| le2_M | <= 2 metres. |   | 11 | |
| gt2_AND_le5_M | > 2 metres and <= 5 metres. |   | 12 | |
| le5_M | <= 5 metres. |   | 13 | |
| gt5_AND_le10_M | > 5 metres and <= 10 metres. |   | 14 | |
| gt10_AND_le15_M | > 10 metres and <= 15 metres. |   | 16 | |
| gt15_AND_le20_M | > 15 metres and <= 20 metres. |   | 17 | |
| gt5_AND_le20_M | > 5 metres and <= 20 metres. |   | 18 | |
| gt10_AND_le20_M | > 10 metres and <= 20 metres. |   | 19 | |
| gt20_M | > 20 metres. |   | 20 | |
| gt20_AND_le25_M | > 20 metres and <= 25 metres. |   | 21 | |
| gt25_AND_le30_M | > 25 metres and <= 30 metres. |   | 22 | |
| gt20_AND_le30_M | > 20 metres and <= 30 metres. |   | 23 | |
| gt30_AND_le35_M | > 30 metres and <= 35 metres. |   | 24 | |
| gt35_M | > 35 metres. |   | 25 | |
| gt20_AND_le40_M | > 20 metres and <= 40 metres. |   | 26 | |
| gt30_AND_le40_M | > 30 metres and <= 40 metres. |   | 27 | |
| gt40_M | > 40 metres. |   | 28 | |
| PREDOMINANT_WALL_PATTERN | The predominant visual pattern of the exterior walls of a structure, e.g., stucco, clapboard, or mosaic. | |||
| BRICK | Consist of moulded rectangular blocks of clay baked by the sun or in a kiln until hard and used as a building and paving material. |   | 11 | |
| CLAPBOARD | Horizontal and appears to be constructed using long thin boards with one edge thicker than the other, where a board is lapped over the board below. |   | 12 | |
| CORRUGATED | Alternating ridges and grooves in a parallel pattern, often of metal. |   | 13 | |
| LOG | Horizontal and comprised of heavy timbers that may retain their rounded shape. |   | 14 | |
| MOSAIC | Consists of small coloured pieces, as of stone or tile in a decorative pattern. |   | 15 | |
| MULTIPLE_PATTERNS_PRESENT | Walls have more then one pattern, or an aggregate object has multiple single-pattern walls. |   | 16 | |
| NO_PATTERN_PRESENT | No pattern present. |   | 17 | |
| RECTANGULAR | Predominant pattern composed primarily of rectangles. |   | 18 | |
| RUBBLE | Consists of irregularly shaped and sized fragments consistent with the destruction of a previously intact surface. |   | 19 | |
| SMOOTH | Surface is uniform and appears to have no texture. |   | 20 | |
| STUCCO | A wall finish of a rough pattern, usually composed of cement, sand, and lime. |   | 21 | |
| TIMBER_FRAME | Consists of a pattern of timbers, supporting a secondary material such as stucco. |   | 22 | |
| WINDOW_WITH_GLASS | Predominantly smooth and transparent or reflective, composed principally of windows or glass. |   | 23 | |
| PREDOMINANT_WALL_SRF_MTRL | The predominant outermost wall covering material. | |||
| ALUMINUM | A highly ductile, malleable and conductive element, atomic number 13, that is resistant to corrosion and wear, and is widely used in alloys for beverage cans, household utensils, aircraft and automobile parts, electrical equipment, and many other products. |   | 11 | |
| CEMENT | A material created by grinding calcined limestone and clay to a fine powder, which can be mixed with water and poured to set as a solid mass or used as an ingredient in making mortar or concrete. |   | 12 | |
| COBBLE | Rectangular stone with curved top; once used to make roads. |   | 13 | |
| CONCRETE | A hard, strong construction material consisting of sand, conglomerate gravel, pebbles, broken stone, or slag in a mortar or cement matrix. |   | 14 | |
| CONGLOMERATE | Loosely cemented heterogeneous material. |   | 15 | |
| EARTHEN | Made from the loose, fragmented material that composes part of the surface of the planet Earth. |   | 16 | |
| GLASS | A brittle, noncrystalline, usually transparent or translucent material that is generally formed by the fusion of dissolved silica and silicates with soda and lime. |   | 17 | |
| MARBLE | Resembling or suggesting metamorphic rock, as in being very hard, smooth, or cold; mottled in appearance. |   | 18 | |
| MASONRY | Constructed of stone, brick, tiles, or the like. |   | 19 | |
| METAL | Any of a class of elements (or alloy thereof) that generally are solid at ordinary temperatures, have a greyish colour and a shiny surface, and will conduct heat and electricity well. |   | 20 | |
| MUD | Any very wet, soft soil. |   | 21 | |
| PLASTIC | Any of various synthetic or organic materials that can be moulded or shaped, generally when heated, and then hardened into a desired form; for example, polymers, resins, and cellulose derivatives. |   | 22 | |
| REINFORCED_CONCRETE | Concrete in which steel bars or wires (at least 0,6% by volume) are embedded to increase tensile load-bearing capacity. |   | 23 | |
| SHINGLE | A thin piece of wood, slate, or other material, usually rectangular and 20-25 centimetres across; laid in overlapping rows to cover the roof or walls of a building. |   | 24 | |
| STEEL | Any of various alloys of the elements iron and carbon containing less than 2,5% carbon, usually also with lesser amounts of other elements, having substantial qualities of strength, hardness, and malleability. |   | 25 | |
| STONE | Aggregation of solid mineral matter, also known as rock. Stone is commonly classified, according to its origin, into one of 3 major categories: igneous rock (formed by the cooling of magma), sedimentary rock (formed by the consolidation of sediments), and metamorphic rock (formed by extreme heat and pressure from other types of rock, including older metamorphic rock). |   | 26 | |
| VINYL_SIDING | A facing manufactured from vinyl used to protect wood frame buildings from the elements. |   | 27 | |
| WOOD | The hard ligneous substance, composed primarily of xylem, that is found under the bark of the trunks and branches of trees and shrubs. |   | 28 | |
| PRESSURE_ALTIMETER_QUALITY | The quality status of a pressure altimeter setting. | |||
| GOOD | The quality of the observation was acceptable. |   | 11 | |
| NO_CHECK |   | 12 | ||
| SUSPECT | The original observation may be in error. |   | 13 | |
| VALUE_ERR_REPLACE_GOOD | Original value erroneous, replacement good. |   | 14 | |
| VALUE_ERR_REPLACE_SUSPECT | Original value erroneous, replacement questionable. |   | 15 | |
| VALUE_ERROR | Original value erroneous. |   | 16 | |
| VALUE_MISS_PROB_CORRUPT | Original value missing, probably corrupted. |   | 17 | |
| VALUE_MISS_REPLACE_SUSPECT | Original value missing, recomputed value suspect. |   | 18 | |
| VALUE_MISSING | Original value missing. |   | 19 | |
| PRI_DISPLAY_MODE | The normal display status of an object. | |||
| NORMAL | Display fully on (normal status). |   | 11 | |
| PARTIAL_SUPPRESS | Display partially suppressed. |   | 12 | |
| FULL_SUPPRESS | Display fully suppressed. |   | 13 | |
| PRI_ENTRANCE_LOCATION | The location of the primary (general) entrance to an object, when observed from outside an object looking towards its front. | |||
| BACK_CENTRE_ABOVE_GRADE | Located in the centre of the rear face of the structure, above ground level. |   | 11 | |
| BACK_CENTRE_BELOW_GRADE | Located in the centre of the rear face of the structure, below ground level. |   | 12 | |
| BACK_CENTRE_ON_GRADE | Located in the centre of the rear face of the structure, at ground level. |   | 13 | |
| BACK_LEFT_ABOVE_GRADE | Located on the left side of the rear face of the structure, above ground level. |   | 14 | |
| BACK_LEFT_BELOW_GRADE | Located on the left side of the rear face of the structure, below ground level. |   | 15 | |
| BACK_LEFT_ON_GRADE | Located on the left side of the rear face of the structure, at ground level. |   | 16 | |
| BACK_RIGHT_ABOVE_GRADE | Located on the right side of the rear face of the structure, above ground level. |   | 17 | |
| BACK_RIGHT_BELOW_GRADE | Located on the right side of the rear face of the structure, below ground level. |   | 18 | |
| BACK_RIGHT_ON_GRADE | Located on the right side of the rear face of the structure, at ground level. |   | 19 | |
| FRONT_CENTRE_ABOVE_GRADE | Located in the centre of the front face of the structure, above ground level. |   | 20 | |
| FRONT_CENTRE_BELOW_GRADE | Located in the centre of the front face of the structure, below ground level. |   | 21 | |
| FRONT_CENTRE_ON_GRADE | Located in the centre of the front face of the structure, at ground level. |   | 22 | |
| FRONT_LEFT_ABOVE_GRADE | Located on the left side of the front face of the structure, above ground level. |   | 23 | |
| FRONT_LEFT_BELOW_GRADE | Located on the left side of the front face of the structure, below ground level. |   | 24 | |
| FRONT_LEFT_ON_GRADE | Located on the left side of the front face of the structure, at ground level. |   | 25 | |
| FRONT_RIGHT_ABOVE_GRADE | Located on the right side of the front face of the structure, above ground level. |   | 26 | |
| FRONT_RIGHT_BELOW_GRADE | Located on the right side of the front face of the structure, below ground level. |   | 27 | |
| FRONT_RIGHT_ON_GRADE | Located on the right side of the front face of the structure, at ground level. |   | 28 | |
| LEFT_SIDE_ABOVE_GRADE | Located on the left face of the structure, above ground level. |   | 29 | |
| LEFT_SIDE_BELOW_GRADE | Located on the left face of the structure, below ground level. |   | 30 | |
| LEFT_SIDE_ON_GRADE | Located on the left face of the structure, at ground level. |   | 31 | |
| RIGHT_SIDE_ABOVE_GRADE | Located on the right face of the structure, above ground level. |   | 32 | |
| RIGHT_SIDE_BELOW_GRADE | Located on the right face of the structure, below ground level. |   | 33 | |
| RIGHT_SIDE_ON_GRADE | Located on the right face of the structure, at ground level. |   | 34 | |
| UNKNOWN_LOCATION | Location is unknown. |   | 35 | |
| PRI_MATERIAL_TYPE | The type of primary material composition of an object. | |||
| AIRCRAFT | The exterior skin of a vehicle that travels within an atmosphere; generally aluminum. |   | 11 | |
| ALUMINUM | A highly ductile, malleable and conductive element, atomic number 13, that is resistant to corrosion and wear, and is widely used in alloys for beverage cans, household utensils, aircraft and automobile parts, electrical equipment, and many other products. |   | 12 | |
| AMMUNITION | Any object or material designed to be fired, exploded, or otherwise released by a weapon, especially bullets, shot, shells, and other such projectiles. |   | 13 | |
| ASH | The residual inorganic matter left after an organic substance has been completely burned. |   | 14 | |
| ASPHALT | A dark, tarry, bituminous material found naturally or distilled from petroleum, mixed with crushed stone gravel or sand. |   | 15 | |
| BASALT | A dark, fine-grained igneous rock originating from a lava flow or minor intrusion, composed mainly of plagioclase clinopyroxene and sometimes olivine, and often displaying a columnar structure. |   | 16 | |
| BEDROCK | The solid, undisturbed rock underlying the soil or other unconsolidated surface material. |   | 17 | |
| BLACKBODY | Represents the perfect absorber; reflects no electromagnetic energy. |   | 18 | |
| BOULDERS | A detached rock mass having a diameter greater than 25,6 centimetres that has been rounded or otherwise shaped by chemical weathering, mechanical weathering, or abrasion in the course of transport. |   | 19 | |
| BRICK | A building or paving material composed of clay that has been hardened by heat, either in the sun or in a kiln |   | 20 | |
| BROADLEAF_TREES_SUMMER | Any tree having broad, flat leaves rather than needle like leaves, including all deciduous trees and certain evergreens. These trees will typically have their leaves during the summer. |   | 21 | |
| BROADLEAF_TREES_WINTER | Any tree having broad, flat leaves rather than needle like leaves, including all deciduous trees and certain evergreens. These trees will typically lose their leaves during the winter. |   | 22 | |
| CALCAREOUS | Composed of, containing, or resembling calcium carbonate, calcium, or limestone; chalky. |   | 23 | |
| CEMENT | A material created by grinding calcined limestone and clay to a fine powder, which can be mixed with water and poured to set as a solid mass or used as an ingredient in making mortar or concrete. |   | 24 | |
| CHALK | A fine-grained limestone or a soft form of calcium carbonate composed of finely divided marine shells. |   | 25 | |
| CHEMICAL | Any substance formed by or used in a chemical reaction. |   | 26 | |
| CINDERS | A partly burned and extinguished piece of combustible material or particles of such a material |   | 27 | |
| CIRRIPEDIA | Made from the calcareous shell of the cirripedia which is an order of Crustacea including the barnacles. |   | 28 | |
| CLAY | A soft, very fine-grained natural sediment or aggregate that is composed mainly of particles of size less than 0,0039 millimetre, made up of hydrous silicates of aluminum mixed with various impurities. |   | 29 | |
| CLAY_TILE | A tile whose primary material is clay. |   | 30 | |
| COAL | A brown to black combustible, carbonaceous sedimentary rock formed by the compaction of partially decomposed plant material. |   | 31 | |
| COBBLE | Any rock fragment larger than a pebble and smaller than a boulder, ranging between 6,4 and 25,6 centimetres in diameter, and formed by abrasion in the course of transport. |   | 32 | |
| COKE | A residue of fixed carbon and ash left after heating bituminous coal in the absence of air. |   | 33 | |
| COMPOSITION | A mixture of man-made and natural components. |   | 34 | |
| CONCRETE | A hard, strong substance that is composed of cement and an aggregate such as sand and gravel which has been mixed with water and allowed to dry and harden. |   | 35 | |
| CONGLOMERATE | Sedimentary rock composed of rounded fragments of rocks or minerals embedded in a fine-grained matrix of sand, silt, or cementing material. |   | 36 | |
| COPPER | A soft, reddish, ductile metal that is an excellent conductor of electricity, atomic number 29, that has a low reactivity and resists atmospheric corrosion. |   | 37 | |
| CORAL | The calcium carbonate skeleton of certain colonial anthozoan coelenterates. |   | 38 | |
| CORAL_HEAD | A large, knobbly or dome-shaped coral growth. |   | 39 | |
| DESALINATED_WATER | Water that has undergone the process of desalinization. |   | 40 | |
| DIAMONDS | A form of carbon, a colourless, white, or occasionally tinted cubic mineral commonly occurring in octahedral crystals with a brilliant to greasy lustre and a highly perfect cleavage, having a specific gravity of 3,51 and a hardness of 10 on the Mohs scale. |   | 41 | |
| DIATOMS | A soft, fine, porous, yellow, light grey, or white siliceous sedimentary deposit; composed mainly of the microscopic skeletons of diatoms. |   | 42 | |
| DOLOMITE | A white to reddish to greenish trigonal mineral with a vitreous lustre and a perfect cleavage, occurring as rhombohedral crystals or in massive form, having a specific gravity of 2,85 and a hardness of 3,5 to 4 on the Mohs scale; |   | 43 | |
| DRY_SNOW | Dry, powdery snow. |   | 44 | |
| EARTHEN | Made from the loose, fragmented material that composes part of the surface of the planet Earth. |   | 45 | |
| ELECTRIC | Carrying electricity, or designed to carry electricity. |   | 46 | |
| ERODED_LANDS | Land that has been worn away, as by the action of wind, water, or glaciers. |   | 47 | |
| EVAPORITES | A nonclastic, sedimentary rock consisting of deposits of mineral salts produced by the evaporation of salt water. |   | 48 | |
| EXPLOSIVES | Any material that has a tendency to explode, such as gunpowder, nitro-glycerine, or dynamite. |   | 49 | |
| FABRIC | A flexible cloth that consists of woven, knitted, or felted fibres. |   | 50 | |
| FIBERGLASS | A glass in the form of fine, flexible fibres, widely used in the manufacturing of many industrial products such as textiles, filters, and insulators, and also used to reinforce or strengthen plastics for boat hulls, automobile bodies, aircraft parts, building panels, and other materials. |   | 51 | |
| FIRST_YEAR_ICE | Sea ice that is less than one year old. |   | 52 | |
| FLYSCH | A marine sedimentary facies characterized by a thick sequence of poorly fossiliferous, thinly bedded, graded deposits composed chiefly of marls, sandy and calcareous shales, and muds, rhythmically interbedded with conglomerates, coarse sandstones, and greywackes. May be loosely applied to any sediment with most of the lithologic and stratigraphic characteristics of a flysch, such as almost any turbidite. |   | 53 | |
| FOOD | Any nutrient that is taken in or ingested by an organism and used by it to produce energy, build and repair tissue, and regulate body processes. |   | 54 | |
| FORAMINIFERA | Made from an order of chiefly marine protozoa in the phylum Sarcodina, whose shells are the main ingredient of chalk. |   | 55 | |
| FRESH_WATER | Water with no significant amount of dissolved salts or minerals, as is normally found in streams and lakes; in general, water containing less than 1000 milligrams per litre of dissolved solids. |   | 56 | |
| FUCUS | Any of various brown algae. |   | 57 | |
| GAS | One of the three fundamental forms of matter, along with liquids and solids. Unlike a solid (and like a liquid), a gas has no fixed shape and will conform in shape to the space available. Unlike a liquid, it has no fixed volume and will conform in volume to the space available. In comparison with solids and liquids, gases have widely separated molecules, are light in weight, and are easily compressed. |   | 58 | |
| GASOLINE | A volatile, liquid mixture of hydrocarbons that is obtained by refining petroleum and is used as a fuel in most internal-combustion engines. |   | 59 | |
| GLASS | A brittle, noncrystalline, usually transparent or translucent material that is generally formed by the fusion of dissolved silica and silicates with soda and lime. |   | 60 | |
| GLASS_REINFORCED_PLASTIC | Plastic that has been strengthened by the addition of glass fibres. |   | 61 | |
| GLOBIGERINA | Made from the calcareous remains of a small genus of foraminiferids. |   | 62 | |
| GOLD | A very ductile, malleable, yellow metallic element, atomic number 79, that is an excellent conductor of heat and electricity, and chemically nonreactive. |   | 63 | |
| GRANITE | A coarse-grained plutonic rock composed chiefly of quartz and feldspar with lesser quantities of mica or other coloured minerals, such as hornblende, biotite, or muscovite. |   | 64 | |
| GRASS | Any plant of the large family Gramineae, having jointed stems, long, narrow leaves, and usually a distichously arranged flower on the axis of a spikelet; includes wheat, corn, rye, and bamboo. |   | 65 | |
| GRASS_OR_THATCH | May be further delineated specifically as EE GRASS and EE THATCH. |   | 66 | |
| GRAVEL | Rounded pebbles between 6,35 millimetres and 76,2 millimetres in diameter. |   | 67 | |
| GREEN_ROCKS | Any basic igneous rock that has been metamorphosed or otherwise altered so as to take on a greenish colour due to the presence of chlorite, actinolite, or epidote. |   | 68 | |
| GROUND | The top layer of the surface of the planet Earth. |   | 69 | |
| GROUND_SHELLS | The calcareous, horny, or chitinous covering or encasement of certain animals such as molluscs. The calcareous, horny, or chitinous covering or encasement of certain animals such as molluscs that has been reduced to a fine powder or dust by grinding. |   | 70 | |
| HEAT | The energy associated with the random motions of the molecules, atoms, or smaller structural units of which matter is composed. |   | 71 | |
| ICE |   | 72 | ||
| IRON | Malleable, ductile, hard metallic element having the symbol Fe, atomic number 26, that is magnetic or magnetizable. |   | 73 | |
| LAVA | A previously molten mass of rock material that is extruded by a volcano or through a fissure in the terrain surface. |   | 74 | |
| LEAD | A soft, malleable, ductile, bluish-white, dense metallic element having the symbol Pb, atomic number 82. |   | 75 | |
| LIMESTONE_ROCK | A sedimentary rock composed primarily of calcium carbonate, formed from the skeletons of marine micro organisms and coral. |   | 76 | |
| LOESS | An extremely fertile, fine-grained loam composed of quartz, feldspar, hornblende, mica, and clay. |   | 77 | |
| LUMBER | A collective term for wood that has been sawed into appropriate sizes for building and other uses. |   | 78 | |
| MACADAM | Road-making material utilizing uniformly sized stones rollered into layers and finished with asphalt. |   | 79 | |
| MADREPORES | Any of various stony reef-building corals (order Madreporaria) of tropical seas that assume a variety of branching, encrusting, or massive forms. |   | 80 | |
| MANGANESE | A pinkish-grey, chemically active metallic element that has the symbol Mn, atomic number 25, which resembles iron but is harder and more brittle. |   | 81 | |
| MARBLE | A metamorphic rock that consists of calcite or dolomite, typically with a granoblastic saccharoidal texture. |   | 82 | |
| MARL | A calcerous clay, or a mixture of clay and particles of calcite and dolomite, usually derived from shell fragments. |   | 83 | |
| MASONRY | Stonework or brickwork of any type. |   | 84 | |
| MATTES |   | 85 | ||
| METAL | Any of a class of elements (or alloy thereof) that generally are solid at ordinary temperatures, have a greyish colour and a shiny surface, and will conduct heat and electricity well. |   | 86 | |
| METAL_BUILDING_ROOF | A roof constructed from metal. |   | 87 | |
| MUD | Any very wet, soft soil. |   | 88 | |
| MULTI_YEAR_ICE | Sea ice that has not melted in more than two years. |   | 89 | |
| MULTIPLE_MATERIALS | Constructed out of many types of materials. While these materials may individually be well-delineated, there may not be sufficient detail to identify each. |   | 90 | |
| MUSSELS | Any bivalve mollusc, especially an edible marine bivalve of the family Mytilidae living attached to wharf pilings, sea walls, and rocks in coastal seas, or a freshwater bivalve of the family Unionidae whose shell provides mother-of-pearl. |   | 91 | |
| OIL | A general term for any of a wide variety of greasy, viscous, combustible substances that are liquid at room temperature or when slightly warmed and insoluble in water; such substances may be derived from animal, vegetable, or mineral sources. |   | 92 | |
| OIL_BLISTER |   | 93 | ||
| OOZE | A soft, soupy mud or slime that typically overlies the bottom of a lake, river, or estuary. |   | 94 | |
| OYSTERS | The common name for sessile marine bivalve molluscs of the genera Ostrea and Crassostrea, family Ostreidae; adults have a rough, asymmetrical shell and a single adductor muscle. |   | 95 | |
| PACKED_DIRT | Surface soil that has been compacted |   | 96 | |
| PAPER | A common material made of fibres such as wood pulp or rags that have been laid on a fine screen in liquid suspension. |   | 97 | |
| PART_METAL | An object comprised partially of metal. |   | 98 | |
| PEBBLES | A small, roundish, water worn or wind worn rock fragment, larger than a granule and smaller than a cobble, generally ranging from 0,4 to 6,4 centimetres in diameter. |   | 99 | |
| PINE_TREES | A tree of the genus Pinus in the family Pinaceae, including various coniferous, evergreen trees with elongated needles in fascicles on spur shoots; growing naturally only in the Northern Hemisphere; includes many species native to North America. |   | 100 | |
| PLASTIC | Any of various synthetic or organic materials that can be moulded or shaped, generally when heated, and then hardened into a desired form; for example, polymers, resins, and cellulose derivatives. |   | 101 | |
| POLYZOA | The moss animals, a phylum of minute, moss like marine and freshwater creatures, with distinct alimentary canals, that form permanent colonies and reproduce by budding. |   | 102 | |
| PORPHYRY | Any igneous rock with numerous large phenocrysts embedded in a fine-grained groundmass. |   | 103 | |
| PRESTRESSED_CONCRETE | A concrete to which an internal compressive stress has been applied by means of wires or rods, so that a tensile stress equal to the compressive one can be applied in service; the net stress is then zero. |   | 104 | |
| PTEROPODS | A calcareous deep-sea deposit consisting of at least 45% skeletal remains of marine organisms, especially pteropods. |   | 105 | |
| PUMICE | A highly vesicular, glassy, volcanic rock, compositionally similar to rhyolite and often light enough to float on water. |   | 106 | |
| QUARTZ | A transparent to translucent trigonal mineral with a vitreous lustre, commonly white or colourless but also occurring in a variety of colours, massive in habit or as hexagonal prismatic crystals, and having a specific gravity of 2,65 and a hardness of 7 on the Mohs scale; the most abundant and widely distributed of all minerals. |   | 107 | |
| RADIOACTIVE_MATERIAL | Any substance that spontaneously emits ionizing radiation. |   | 108 | |
| RADIOLARIA | A soft, fine-grained, deep-sea siliceous sediment composed of at least 30% skeletal remains of Radiolaria. |   | 109 | |
| REINFORCED_CONCRETE | Concrete in which steel bars or wires (at least 0,6% by volume) are embedded to increase tensile load-bearing capacity. |   | 110 | |
| ROCK | Any naturally formed aggregate of one or more minerals, consolidated or not, with some degree of mineralogic and chemical constancy. |   | 111 | |
| RUBBER | Any of various natural or synthetic high polymers characterized by their elasticity. |   | 112 | |
| RUBBLE | Any accumulation or layer of loose, unconsolidated, irregular fragments of rock. |   | 113 | |
| SALT | A crystalline compound NaCl that consists of sodium chloride, is abundant in nature, and is used especially to season or preserve food or in industry. |   | 114 | |
| SAND | A small, somewhat rounded fragment or particle of rock ranging from 0,05 to 2 millimetres in diameter, and commonly composed of quartz. |   | 115 | |
| SANDSTONE | A cemented or otherwise compacted detrital sedimentary rock consisting primarily of quartz and featuring sand-size grains between 0,06 and 2 millimetres in diameter; the consolidated equivalent of sand. |   | 116 | |
| SCHIST | A strongly foliated, crystalline, coarse-grained metamorphic rock with lamellar mineral constituents that allow it to split easily into thin flakes or slabs. |   | 117 | |
| SCORIA | A cindery, vesicular crust formed on the surface of basaltic or andesitic lava as a result of the escape and expansion of gases before solidification. |   | 118 | |
| SCRUB | A general term for any type of vegetation, such as evergreen shrubs or dwarfed trees, growing in regions with poor soil or low rainfall. |   | 119 | |
| SEA_TANGLE | Any of various brown algae, especially of the genus Laminaria. |   | 120 | |
| SEA_WATER | Ocean water, characterized by high salinity. |   | 121 | |
| SEAWEED | A general term applied to a plant or plants growing in a saltwater environment, especially marine algae. |   | 122 | |
| SEWAGE | Any liquid-born waste that contains animal or plant matter in suspension or solution, chemicals in solution, or soils and storm water. |   | 123 | |
| SHELLS | The calcareous, horny, or chitinous covering or encasement of certain animals such as molluscs. |   | 124 | |
| SHINGLE | A thin piece of wood, slate, or other material, usually rectangular and 20-25 centimetres across; laid in overlapping rows to cover the roof or walls of a building. |   | 125 | |
| SILT | A very small rock fragment or mineral particle, smaller than a very fine grain of sand and larger than coarse clay; usually described as having a diameter from 0,002 millimetre to 0,06 millimetre; the smallest soil material that can be seen with the naked eye. |   | 126 | |
| SILVER | A very ductile, malleable, chemically inactive, lustrous, and nearly white metallic element, atomic number 47, that is an excellent conductor of heat and electricity. |   | 127 | |
| SLAG | A synonym for scoria; also, the vitreous mass left as a residue by the smelting of metallic ore. |   | 128 | |
| SLUDGE | A soft, soupy or muddy stream-bottom deposit, especially a black ooze formed on the bottom of a lake. |   | 129 | |
| SNOW |   | 130 | ||
| SNOW_OR_ICE | Frozen water. May be further delineated specifically as EE SNOW and EE ICE. |   | 131 | |
| SOIL | All loose, unconsolidated, weathered, or otherwise altered rock material above bedrock. |   | 132 | |
| SPICULES | A minute, sharp, needle like body or part. |   | 133 | |
| SPOIL | The overburden or debris removed from a mine. |   | 134 | |
| SPOIL_OR_TAILINGS | May be further delineated specifically as EE SPOIL and EE TAILINGS. |   | 135 | |
| SPONGE | The soft, porous, fibrous framework of certain animals or colonies of the group Porifera, especially of the genera Spongia and Hippospongia, from which the living matter has been removed; it readily absorbs water and remains soft when wet; |   | 136 | |
| STEEL | Any of various alloys of the elements iron and carbon containing less than 2,5% carbon, usually also with lesser amounts of other elements, having substantial qualities of strength, hardness, and malleability. |   | 137 | |
| STONE | Aggregation of solid mineral matter, also known as rock. Stone is commonly classified, according to its origin, into one of 3 major categories: igneous rock (formed by the cooling of magma), sedimentary rock (formed by the consolidation of sediments), and metamorphic rock (formed by extreme heat and pressure from other types of rock, including older metamorphic rock). |   | 138 | |
| SUGAR | Any of various carbohydrates of animal or vegetable origin that are aldehyde or ketone derivatives of polyhydric alcohols, and that are widely used to sweeten candy, ice cream and other desserts, soft drinks, and many other types of food. |   | 139 | |
| TAILINGS | Refuse material from processed ore. |   | 140 | |
| THATCH |   | 141 | ||
| TRAVERTINE | A hard, compact limestone with a white, tan, or cream colour, deposited by solution from surface or ground waters. |   | 142 | |
| TUFA | A soft, porous limestone rock or deposit that is formed from solution by springs or percolations. |   | 143 | |
| URANIUM | A silver-white, hard, dense, malleable, ductile, and radioactive metallic element having the symbol U, atomic number 92. |   | 144 | |
| VEGETATION_PRODUCTS | Produced by the plant life growing in a given region. |   | 145 | |
| VINYL_SIDING | A facing manufactured from vinyl used to protect wood frame buildings from the elements. |   | 146 | |
| VOLCANIC | Relating to, or produced by, a volcano. |   | 147 | |
| VOLCANIC_ASH | Fine or very fine pyroclastic particles, less than 4 millimetres in diameter, that are blown out from a volcanic explosion. |   | 148 | |
| WATER | Water. |   | 149 | |
| WET_SNOW | Snow that has fallen to the ground and is largely composed of liquid water. |   | 150 | |
| WHITEBODY | Represents the perfect reflector; reflects all electromagnetic energy. |   | 151 | |
| WOOD | The hard ligneous substance, composed primarily of xylem, that is found under the bark of the trunks and branches of trees and shrubs. |   | 152 | |
| ZINC | A metallic element having the symbol Zn, atomic number 30. |   | 153 | |
| PRI_NAVIGATION_SYSTEM_TYPE | The secondary technology (e.g., equipment or system) used in electronic navigation. | |||
| AERONAUTICAL_RADIO |   | 11 | ||
| AERONAUTICAL_RADIO_RANGE |   | 12 | ||
| AIR_ROUTE_SURV_RADAR | Air route surveillance radar. |   | 13 | |
| BONE_MARKER | Bone marker beacon: An electronic navigation facility (a marker beacon) transmitting a 75 megahertz bone-shaped radiation pattern. Marker beacons are identified by their modulation frequency and keying code, and when received by compatible airborne equipment, indicate to the pilot, both aurally and visually, that he is passing over the facility. |   | 14 | |
| CHAIKA_CHAYKA |   | 15 | ||
| CIRCULAR_RADIO_BEACON |   | 16 | ||
| CONSOL |   | 17 | ||
| CONSOL_RADIO_BEACON |   | 18 | ||
| DECCA |   | 19 | ||
| DIFFERENTIAL_GPS | Differential GPS improves on GPS by removing common-mode errors, those errors common to both the reference and remote receivers (not multi-path or receiver noise; differential position accuracy of 1 to 10 metres is possible with DGPS based on C/A code SPS signals). | EE GPS | 20 | |
| DIRECTIONAL_RADIO_BEACON |   | 21 | ||
| DISTANCE_FINDING |   | 22 | ||
| DME | Distance measuring equipment: Equipment (airborne and ground) used to measure, in nautical miles, the slant range distance of an aircraft from the DME navigational aid. |   | 23 | |
| FAN_MARKER | Fan marker beacon: An electronic navigation facility (a marker beacon) transmitting a 75 megahertz vertical fan radiation pattern. Marker beacons are identified by their modulation frequency and keying code, and when received by compatible airborne equipment, indicate to the pilot, both aurally and visually, that he is passing over the facility. |   | 24 | |
| GLIDE_SLOPE | Glide slope. |   | 25 | |
| GPS | Global positioning system: a space-based radio positioning, navigation, and time-transfer system which provides highly accurate position and velocity information, and precise time, on a continuous global basis, to an unlimited number of properly equipped users. |   | 26 | |
| GROUND_CONTROL_APPROACH | Ground control approach: A radar approach system operated from the ground by air traffic control personnel transmitting instructions to the air pilot by radio. The approach may be conducted with air surveillance radar only, or with both surveillance and precision approach radar. |   | 27 | |
| GROUND_CONTROL_INTERCEPT | Ground control intercept: A guidance technique that permits control of friendly aircraft or guided missiles for the purpose of effecting interception. |   | 28 | |
| HIFIX |   | 29 | ||
| HYPERFIX |   | 30 | ||
| ILS | Instrument landing system: A precision instrument approach system which normally consists of the following electronic components and visual aids: localizer, glide slope, outer marker, middle marker, and approach lights. |   | 31 | |
| ILS_AND_DME | Instrument landing system or distance measuring equipment. |   | 32 | |
| LANDING_DISTANCE_AVAILABLE | The length of runway that is declared available and suitable for the ground run of an airplane landing. |   | 33 | |
| LLZ_LOCALIZER |   | 34 | ||
| LO_LOCATOR | An LM/MF non-directional beacon used as an aid to final runway approach of aircraft. |   | 35 | |
| LOC_AND_DME | Localizer with distance measuring equipment. |   | 36 | |
| LOCALIZER | The component of an instrument landing system that provides course guidance to the runway. |   | 37 | |
| LORAN | LORAN: An electronic navigational system by which hyperbolic lines of position are determined by measuring the difference in the time of reception of synchronized pulse signals from two fixed transmitters. Loran A operates in the 1 750 to 1 950 kilohertz frequency band. Loran C and D operate in the 100 to 110 kilohertz frequency band. |   | 38 | |
| MICROWAVE | A precision instrument approach system operating in the microwave spectrum. |   | 39 | |
| MICROWAVE_LANDING_SYSTEM | MLS: A precision instrument approach system operating in the microwave spectrum that normally consists of three components: azimuth station. elevation station. precision distance measuring equipment. |   | 40 | |
| MLS_AZIMUTH_GUIDE | Microwave landing system azimuth guidance. |   | 41 | |
| MLS_ELEV_GUIDE | Microwave landing system elevation guidance. |   | 42 | |
| NDB_AND_DME | NDB or distance measuring equipment. |   | 43 | |
| NON_DIRECTIONAL_RADIO | An L/MF or UHF radio beacon transmitting nondirectional (omni directional) signals whereby the pilot of an aircraft equipped with direction finding equipment can determine his bearing to or from the radio beacon and "home" on, or track to or from, the station. |   | 44 | |
| NONE_PRESENT |   | 45 | ||
| OMEGA | A RNAV system designed for long-range navigation based upon ground-based electronic navigational aid signals. |   | 46 | |
| PRECISION_APP_PATH_IND | Precision approach path indicator. |   | 47 | |
| PRECISION_APPROACH_RADAR | Radar equipment in some air traffic control facilities operated by governments and/or the military services at joint-use civil/military locations and separate military installations to detect and display azimuth, elevation, and range of aircraft on the final approach course to a runway. |   | 48 | |
| PVASI_PULSATING | Pulsating visual approach slope indicator. |   | 49 | |
| QTG_STATION | Navigation radar station located on or near a major coastline which responds to QTG interrogation. |   | 50 | |
| RACON | Radar transponder beacon with Morse identification. |   | 51 | |
| RADAR | A device which, by measuring the time interval between transmission and reception of radio pulses and correlating the angular orientation of the radiated antenna beam or beams in azimuth and/or elevation, provides information on range, azimuth, and/or elevation of objects in the path of the transmitted pulses |   | 52 | |
| RADAR_ANTENNA |   | 53 | ||
| RADAR_REFLECTOR |   | 54 | ||
| RADAR_STATION |   | 55 | ||
| RADIO |   | 56 | ||
| RADIO_BEACON | An L/MF or UHF radio beacon transmitting non-directional signals whereby the pilot of an aircraft equipped with direction finding equipment can determine his bearing to or from the radio beacon and "home" on, or track to or from, the station. When the radio beacon is installed in conjunction with the Instrument Landing System marker, it is normally called a Compass Locator. |   | 57 | |
| RADIO_DIRECTION_FINDING | A radio receiver equipped with a directional sensing antenna used to take bearings on a radio transmitter. Specialized radio direction finders are used in aircraft as air navigation aids. Others are ground-based, primarily to obtain a "fix" on a pilot requesting orientation assistance or to locate downed aircraft. |   | 58 | |
| RADIO_RANGE |   | 59 | ||
| RADIO_STATION |   | 60 | ||
| RADIO_TELEGRAPH |   | 61 | ||
| RADIO_TELEPHONE |   | 62 | ||
| RADIOBEACON_TYPE_UNKNOWN | Radio beacon, type unknown. |   | 63 | |
| RAMARK | Radar beacon transmitting continuously. |   | 64 | |
| ROTATING_LOOP_RADIOBEACON |   | 65 | ||
| SIMPLIFIED_DIRECTIONAL | Simplified directional facility. |   | 66 | |
| SYLEDIS |   | 67 | ||
| TACTICAL_AIR | Tactical air navigation equipment. |   | 68 | |
| TEE_VASI | "T"-visual approach slope indicator. |   | 69 | |
| TORAN |   | 70 | ||
| TRICOLOUR_PANEL |   | 71 | ||
| TRICOLOUR_VASI | Tri-colour visual approach slope indicator. |   | 72 | |
| TV | Television. |   | 73 | |
| VFR_TEST_SIGNAL_MAKER | Visual flight rules test signal maker. |   | 74 | |
| VISUAL_APP_SLOPE_IND | Visual approach slope indicator. |   | 75 | |
| VOR | VHF omni directional radio range. |   | 76 | |
| VOR_AND_DME | VHF omni directional radio range with distance measuring equipment. |   | 77 | |
| VOR_OR_VORTAC_OR_TACAN |   | 78 | ||
| VORTAC | VHF omni directional radio range and TACAN. |   | 79 | |
| PRI_SRF_THERMAL_CONDITION | The physical boundary condition at the primary surface, generally the top, front, or outer side of a material layer or object, accounting for an object's interface with the environment at that surface. | |||
| AERODYNAMICALLY_HEATED | Heated by motion relative to surrounding air. |   | 11 | |
| AMB_AIR_TEMP_AND_SPEED_INF | Significantly influenced by ambient air temperature and speed. |   | 12 | |
| AMB_AIR_TEMP_FIXED | Fixed to ambient air temperature. |   | 13 | |
| AMB_AIR_TEMP_INFL | Significantly influenced by ambient air temperature. |   | 14 | |
| AMB_TEMP_AND_LOCAL_AIR_INF | Significantly influenced by ambient temperature and local air speed. |   | 15 | |
| ARTIFICIAL_STEADY_STATE | Artificially heated or cooled to a steady state temperature. |   | 16 | |
| ENGINE_INFLUENCED | Significantly influenced by heat-generating engines. |   | 17 | |
| EXTREMELY_HOT_FORCED | Forced to extremely hot temperature. |   | 18 | |
| GROUND_TEMP_INFL | Significantly influenced by ground temperature. |   | 19 | |
| LOCAL_AIR_TEMP_AND_SPEED_INF | Significantly influenced by local air temperature and speed. |   | 20 | |
| ROOM_TEMPERATURE_FORCED | Artificially heated or cooled to room temperature. |   | 21 | |
| SURFACE_TEMPERATURE_FIXED | Surface temperature fixed. |   | 22 | |
| WARMED_PASSIVELY | Warmed by trapping heat or being near hot heat sources. |   | 23 | |
| PRI_WEAPON_POSITION_CODED | The categorical position of the primary weapon system. | |||
| NO_WEAPON_PRESENT | There is no weapon present. |   | 11 | |
| WEAPON_DEPLOYED | The weapon is in position ready for use. |   | 12 | |
| WEAPON_IN_FIRING_POSITION | The weapon is in the required position for firing. |   | 13 | |
| WEAPON_STOWED | The weapon is in its stored position. |   | 14 | |
| PRIMARY_PRODUCT | The principal material involved, or product resulting from, activity at a site. | |||
| AIRCRAFT | Vehicle that travels within an atmosphere. |   | 11 | |
| ALUMINUM | A highly ductile, malleable and conductive element, atomic number 13, that is resistant to corrosion and wear, and is widely used in alloys for beverage cans, household utensils, aircraft and automobile parts, electrical equipment, and many other products. |   | 12 | |
| AMMUNITION | Any object or material designed to be fired, exploded, or otherwise released by a weapon, especially bullets, shot, shells, and other such projectiles. |   | 13 | |
| ASH |   | 14 | ||
| ASPHALT | A dark, tarry, bituminous material found naturally or distilled from petroleum, mixed with crushed stone gravel or sand. |   | 15 | |
| AUTOMOBILES_AND_TRUCKS | Automotive vehicles designed for passenger or commodities transportation. |   | 16 | |
| BAMBOO | A woody grass widely distributed in the tropics and subtropics with a height range of 3 to 30 metres and usually extremely dense. |   | 17 | |
| BANANAS | The elongated, edible fruit of the genus Musa, especially M. acuminata, having a thick yellowish to reddish skin and white, aromatic, seedless pulp. |   | 18 | |
| BASALT | A dark, fine-grained igneous rock originating from a lava flow or minor intrusion, composed mainly of plagioclase clinopyroxene and sometimes olivine, and often displaying a columnar structure. |   | 19 | |
| BAUXITE | A clay-like mineral; the chief ore of aluminum; composed of aluminum oxides and aluminum hydroxides; used as an abrasive and catalyst. |   | 20 | |
| BEDROCK | The solid, undisturbed rock underlying the soil or other unconsolidated surface material. |   | 21 | |
| BOULDERS | A detached rock mass having a diameter greater than 25,6 decimetres that has been rounded or otherwise shaped by chemical weathering, mechanical weathering, or abrasion in the course of transport. |   | 22 | |
| BRICK | A melded rectangular block of clay baked by the sun or in a kiln until hard and used as a building and paving material. |   | 23 | |
| CALCAREOUS | Composed of, containing, or resembling calcium carbonate, calcium, or limestone; chalky. |   | 24 | |
| CEMENT | A material created by grinding calcined limestone and clay to a fine powder, which can be mixed with water and poured to set as a solid mass or used as an ingredient in making mortar or concrete. |   | 25 | |
| CHALK | A fine-grained limestone or a soft form of calcium carbonate composed of finely divided marine shells. |   | 26 | |
| CHEMICAL | Any substance formed by or used in a chemical reaction. |   | 27 | |
| CINDERS | A partly burned and extinguished piece of combustible material or particles of such a material |   | 28 | |
| CIRRIPEDIA | Made from the calcareous shell of the cirripedia which is an order of Crustacea including the barnacles. |   | 29 | |
| CLAY | A soft, very fine-grained natural sediment or aggregate that is composed mainly of particles of size less than 0,0039 millimetre, made up of hydrous silicates of aluminum mixed with various impurities. |   | 30 | |
| COAL | A brown to black combustible, carbonaceous sedimentary rock formed by the compaction of partially decomposed plant material. |   | 31 | |
| COBBLE | Rectangular stone with curved top; once used to make roads. |   | 32 | |
| COFFEE | Seeds of tropical plants (genus Coffea and especially C. arabica and C. canephora) of the madder family especially roasted and often ground. |   | 33 | |
| COKE | A residue of fixed carbon and ash left after heating bituminous coal in the absence of air. |   | 34 | |
| COMPOSITION | A mixture of man-made and natural components. |   | 35 | |
| CONCRETE | A hard, strong construction material consisting of sand, conglomerate gravel, pebbles, broken stone, or slag in a mortar or cement matrix. |   | 36 | |
| CONGLOMERATE | Loosely cemented heterogeneous material. |   | 37 | |
| CONSUMER_PRODUCTS | General consumer products such as foodstuffs, and household supplies. |   | 38 | |
| COPPER | A soft, reddish, ductile metal that is an excellent conductor of electricity, atomic number 29, that has a low reactivity and resists atmospheric corrosion. |   | 39 | |
| CORAL | A rocklike deposit consisting of the calcareous skeletons secreted by various anthozoans. |   | 40 | |
| CORAL_HEAD |   | 41 | ||
| COTTON | A soft, downy substance, resembling fine wool, consisting of the unicellular twisted hairs which grow on the seeds of the cotton plant. |   | 42 | |
| CRUSTACEANS | Any of various predominantly aquatic arthropods of the class Crustacea, including lobsters, crabs, shrimps, and barnacles. |   | 43 | |
| CULTIVATED_SHELLFISH | Any of various predominantly aquatic arthropods of the class Crustacea, including lobsters, crabs, shrimps, and barnacles. |   | 44 | |
| CULTURED_PEARLS | A dense variously coloured and usually lustrous concretion formed of concentric layers of nacre as an abnormal growth within the shell of some molluscs and used as a gem. |   | 45 | |
| DESALINATED_WATER | Water that has undergone the process of desalinization. |   | 46 | |
| DIAMOND | A form of carbon, a colourless, white, or occasionally tinted cubic mineral commonly occurring in octahedral crystals with a brilliant to greasy lustre and a highly perfect cleavage, having a specific gravity of 3,51 and a hardness of 10 on the Mohs scale. |   | 47 | |
| DIATOM | A soft, fine, porous, yellow, light grey, or white siliceous sedimentary deposit; composed mainly of the microscopic skeletons of diatoms. |   | 48 | |
| DOLOMITE | A white to reddish to greenish trigonal mineral with a vitreous lustre and a perfect cleavage, occurring as rhombohedral crystals or in massive form, having a specific gravity of 2,85 and a hardness of 3,5 to 4 on the Mohs scale; |   | 49 | |
| DRINKING_WATER | Water safe for human consumption; potable or drinking water. |   | 50 | |
| EARTHEN | Made from the loose, fragmented material that composes part of the surface of the planet Earth. |   | 51 | |
| ELECTRICITY | Energy made available by the flow of electric charge through a conductor. |   | 52 | |
| ERODED_LANDS |   | 53 | ||
| EXPLOSIVES | Any material that has a tendency to explode, such as gunpowder, nitro-glycerine, or dynamite. |   | 54 | |
| FISH | Any of numerous cold-blooded aquatic vertebrates of the superclass Pisces, characteristically having fins, gills, and a streamlined body. |   | 55 | |
| FLYSCH | A marine sedimentary facies characterized by a thick sequence of poorly fossiliferous, thinly bedded, graded deposits composed chiefly of marls, sandy and calcareous shales, and muds, rhythmically interbedded with conglomerates, coarse sandstones, and greywackes. May be loosely applied to any sediment with most of the lithologic and stratigraphic characteristics of a flysch, such as almost any turbidite. |   | 56 | |
| FOOD |   | 57 | ||
| FORAMINIFERA | Made from an order of chiefly marine protozoa in the phylum Sarcodina, whose shells are the main ingredient of chalk. |   | 58 | |
| FROZEN_PRODUCTS | To preserve (e.g., foods) by subjecting to freezing temperatures. |   | 59 | |
| FRUIT_AND_NUTS | The usually edible reproductive body of a seed plant or dry indehiscent one-seeded fruit with a woody pericarp. |   | 60 | |
| FUCUS | Any of various brown algae of the genus Fucus, which includes many of the rockweeds. |   | 61 | |
| GAS | One of the three fundamental forms of matter, along with liquids and solids. Unlike a solid (and like a liquid), a gas has no fixed shape and will conform in shape to the space available. Unlike a liquid, it has no fixed volume and will conform in volume to the space available. In comparison with solids and liquids, gases have widely separated molecules, are light in weight, and are easily compressed. |   | 62 | |
| GASOLINE | A volatile, liquid mixture of hydrocarbons that is obtained by refining petroleum and is used as a fuel in most internal-combustion engines. |   | 63 | |
| GLASS | A brittle, noncrystalline, usually transparent or translucent material that is generally formed by the fusion of dissolved silica and silicates with soda and lime. |   | 64 | |
| GLOBIGERINA | Made from the calcareous remains of a small genus of foraminiferids. |   | 65 | |
| GOLD | A very ductile, malleable, yellow metallic element, atomic number 79, that is an excellent conductor of heat and electricity, and chemically nonreactive. |   | 66 | |
| GRAIN | The seed or seed like fruits of wheat, oats, corn, or other cereal grasses. |   | 67 | |
| GRANITE | Coarse-grained igneous rock of even texture and light colour, composed chiefly of quartz and feldspars, and which may be pink, dark grey, or light grey depending on the feldspar present. Granite usually contains small quantities of mica or hornblende, and minor accessory minerals may be present. |   | 68 | |
| GRASS | Any plant of the large family Gramineae, having jointed stems, long, narrow leaves, and usually a distichously arranged flower on the axis of a spikelet; includes wheat, corn, rye, and bamboo. |   | 69 | |
| GRASS_OR_THATCH | May be further delineated specifically as EE GRASS and EE THATCH. |   | 70 | |
| GRAVEL | Rounded pebbles between 6,35 millimetres and 76,2 millimetres in diameter. |   | 71 | |
| GREEN_ROCKS |   | 72 | ||
| GROUND | The top layer of the surface of the planet Earth. |   | 73 | |
| GROUND_SHELLS | The calcareous, horny, or chitinous covering or encasement of certain animals such as molluscs. The calcareous, horny, or chitinous covering or encasement of certain animals such as molluscs that has been reduced to a fine powder or dust by grinding. |   | 74 | |
| HEAT | The energy associated with the random motions of the molecules, atoms, or smaller structural units of which matter is composed. |   | 75 | |
| ICE |   | 76 | ||
| IRON | Malleable, ductile, hard metallic element having the symbol Fe, atomic number 26, that is magnetic or magnetizable. |   | 77 | |
| LAVA | A previously molten mass of rock material that is extruded by a volcano or through a fissure in the terrain surface. |   | 78 | |
| LEAD | A soft, malleable, ductile, bluish-white, dense metallic element having the symbol Pb, atomic number 82. |   | 79 | |
| LIME | Any of various mineral and industrial forms of calcium oxide differing chiefly in water content and percentage of constituents such as silica, alumina, and iron. |   | 80 | |
| LIQUIFIED_NATURAL_GAS |   | 81 | ||
| LIQUIFIED_PETROLEUM_GAS |   | 82 | ||
| LOESS | An extremely fertile, fine-grained loam composed of quartz, feldspar, hornblende, mica, and clay |   | 83 | |
| LUMBER | A collective term for wood that has been sawed into appropriate sizes for building and other uses. |   | 84 | |
| MACADAM | Macadam - crushed rock water bound. |   | 85 | |
| MADREPORES | Any of various stony reef-building corals (order Madreporaria) of tropical seas that assume a variety of branching, encrusting, or massive forms. |   | 86 | |
| MANGANESE | A pinkish-grey, chemically active metallic element that has the symbol Mn, atomic number 25, which resembles iron but is harder and more brittle. |   | 87 | |
| MARBLE | Resembling or suggesting metamorphic rock, as in being very hard, smooth, or cold; mottled in appearance. |   | 88 | |
| MARL | A calcerous clay, or a mixture of clay and particles of calcite and dolomite, usually derived from shell fragments. |   | 89 | |
| MASONRY | Stonework or brickwork of any type. |   | 90 | |
| MATTES |   | 91 | ||
| MEDICAL_SUPPLIES | Supplies used in the prevention or treatment of human illness. |   | 92 | |
| METAL | Any of a class of elements (or alloy thereof) that generally are solid at ordinary temperatures, have a greyish colour and a shiny surface, and will conduct heat and electricity well. |   | 93 | |
| MILK |   | 94 | ||
| MINERAL_OIL |   | 95 | ||
| MUD | Any very wet, soft soil. |   | 96 | |
| MUSSELS | Any bivalve mollusc, especially an edible marine bivalve of the family Mytilidae living attached to wharf pilings, sea walls, and rocks in coastal seas, or a freshwater bivalve of the family Unionidae whose shell provides mother-of-pearl. |   | 97 | |
| NO_PRODUCT |   | 98 | ||
| NON_SOLID_HYDROCARBON_FUEL | Fuel in the form of hydrocarbons, either liquid or gaseous. |   | 99 | |
| OIL |   | 100 | ||
| OIL_BLISTER |   | 101 | ||
| OOZE | A soft, soupy mud or slime that typically overlies the bottom of a lake, river, or estuary. |   | 102 | |
| ORDNANCE | Military materiel, such as weapons, ammunition, combat vehicles, and equipment. |   | 103 | |
| ORE | Any naturally occurring material that contains extractable minerals of economic value |   | 104 | |
| OYSTERS | The common name for sessile marine bivalve molluscs of the genera Ostrea and Crassostrea, family Ostreidae; adults have a rough, asymmetrical shell and a single adductor muscle. |   | 105 | |
| PALMETTO |   | 106 | ||
| PALMS |   | 107 | ||
| PAPER | A common material made of fibres such as wood pulp or rags that have been laid on a fine screen in liquid suspension. |   | 108 | |
| PART_METAL | An object comprised partially of metal. |   | 109 | |
| PEBBLES | A small, roundish, water worn or wind worn rock fragment, larger than a granule and smaller than a cobble, generally ranging from 4 to 64 millimetres in diameter. |   | 110 | |
| PERSONNEL | Those individuals required in either a military or civilian capacity to accomplish the assigned mission. |   | 111 | |
| PETROLEUM | Petroleum; oil or gas. |   | 112 | |
| PLASTIC | Any of various synthetic or organic materials that can be moulded or shaped, generally when heated, and then hardened into a desired form; for example, polymers, resins, and cellulose derivatives. |   | 113 | |
| POLYZOA | The moss animals, a phylum of minute, moss like marine and freshwater creatures, with distinct alimentary canals, that form permanent colonies and reproduce by budding. |   | 114 | |
| PORPHYRY | Any igneous rock with numerous large phenocrysts embedded in a fine-grained groundmass. |   | 115 | |
| PRESTRESSED_CONCRETE |   | 116 | ||
| PTEROPODS | A calcareous deep-sea deposit consisting of at least 45% skeletal remains of marine organisms, especially pteropods. |   | 117 | |
| PUMICE | A highly vesicular, glassy, volcanic rock, compositionally similar to rhyolite and often light enough to float on water. |   | 118 | |
| QUARTZ | A transparent to translucent trigonal mineral with a vitreous lustre, commonly white or colourless but also occurring in a variety of colours, massive in habit or as hexagonal prismatic crystals, and having a specific gravity of 2,65 and a hardness of 7 on the Mohs scale; the most abundant and widely distributed of all minerals. |   | 119 | |
| RADIOACTIVE_MATERIAL | Any substance that spontaneously emits ionizing radiation. |   | 120 | |
| RADIOLARIA | A soft, fine-grained, deep-sea siliceous sediment composed of at least 30% skeletal remains of Radiolaria. |   | 121 | |
| REFUSE |   | 122 | ||
| REINFORCED_CONCRETE | Concrete in which steel bars or wires (at least 0,6% by volume) are embedded to increase tensile load-bearing capacity. |   | 123 | |
| RICE | A cereal grass (Oryza sativa) that is cultivated extensively in warm climates and is a staple food throughout the world. |   | 124 | |
| ROCK | Any naturally formed aggregate of one or more minerals, consolidated or not, with some degree of mineralogic and chemical constancy. |   | 125 | |
| RUBBER |   | 126 | ||
| RUBBLE |   | 127 | ||
| SALT | A crystalline compound NaCl that consists of sodium chloride, is abundant in nature, and is used especially to season or preserve food or in industry. |   | 128 | |
| SAND | Sand, graded, rolled or oiled. |   | 129 | |
| SANDSTONE | A cemented or otherwise compacted detrital sedimentary rock consisting primarily of quartz and featuring sand-size grains between 0,06 and 2 millimetres in diameter; the consolidated equivalent of sand. |   | 130 | |
| SAWDUST |   | 131 | ||
| SAWDUST_WOOD_CHIPS | May be further delineated specifically as EE SAWDUST and EE WOOD_CHIPS. |   | 132 | |
| SCHIST | A strongly foliated, crystalline, coarse-grained metamorphic rock with lamellar mineral constituents that allow it to split easily into thin flakes or slabs. |   | 133 | |
| SCORIA | A cindery, vesicular crust formed on the surface of basaltic or andesitic lava as a result of the escape and expansion of gases before solidification. |   | 134 | |
| SCRAP_METAL |   | 135 | ||
| SEA_TANGLE | Any of various brown algae, especially of the genus Laminaria. |   | 136 | |
| SEAWEED | A general term applied to a plant or plants growing in a saltwater environment, especially marine algae. |   | 137 | |
| SEWAGE | Any liquid-born waste that contains animal or plant matter in suspension or solution, chemicals in solution, or soils and storm water. |   | 138 | |
| SHELLS | The calcareous, horny, or chitinous covering or encasement of certain animals such as molluscs. |   | 139 | |
| SHINGLE | A thin piece of wood, slate, or other material, usually rectangular and 20 to 25 centimetres across; laid in overlapping rows to cover the roof or walls of a building. |   | 140 | |
| SILK | A fabric made from the fine threads produced by certain insect larvae. |   | 141 | |
| SILT | A very small rock fragment or mineral particle, smaller than a very fine grain of sand and larger than coarse clay; usually described as having a diameter from 0,002 millimetre to 0,06 millimetre; the smallest soil material that can be seen with the naked eye. |   | 142 | |
| SILVER | A very ductile, malleable, chemically inactive, lustrous, and nearly white metallic element, atomic number 47, that is an excellent conductor of heat and electricity. |   | 143 | |
| SLAG | A synonym for scoria; also, the vitreous mass left as a residue by the smelting of metallic ore. |   | 144 | |
| SLUDGE | A soft, soupy or muddy stream-bottom deposit, especially a black ooze formed on the bottom of a lake. |   | 145 | |
| SNOW |   | 146 | ||
| SNOW_OR_ICE | May be further delineated specifically as EE SNOW and EE ICE. |   | 147 | |
| SOIL | All loose, unconsolidated, weathered, or otherwise altered rock material above bedrock. |   | 148 | |
| SPICULES |   | 149 | ||
| SPONGE | The soft, porous, fibrous framework of certain animals or colonies of the group Porifera, especially of the genera Spongia and Hippospongia, from which the living matter has been removed; it readily absorbs water and remains soft when wet; |   | 150 | |
| STEEL | Any of various alloys of the elements iron and carbon containing less than 2,5% carbon, usually also with lesser amounts of other elements, having substantial qualities of strength, hardness, and malleability. |   | 151 | |
| STONE | Aggregation of solid mineral matter, also known as rock. Stone is commonly classified, according to its origin, into one of 3 major categories: igneous rock (formed by the cooling of magma), sedimentary rock (formed by the consolidation of sediments), and metamorphic rock (formed by extreme heat and pressure from other types of rock, including older metamorphic rock). |   | 152 | |
| SUGAR |   | 153 | ||
| TAILINGS | Refuse material from processed ore. |   | 154 | |
| TALC | A soft mineral of a soapy feel and a greenish, whitish, or greyish colour, usually occurring in foliated masses. It is hydrous silicate of magnesia. Steatite, or soapstone, is a compact granular variety. |   | 155 | |
| TELECOMMUNICATIONS |   | 156 | ||
| TEXTILE | A cloth, especially one manufactured by weaving or knitting; a fabric. |   | 157 | |
| THATCH |   | 158 | ||
| TOBACCO |   | 159 | ||
| TRAVERTINE | A hard, compact limestone with a white, tan, or cream colour, deposited by solution from surface or ground waters. |   | 160 | |
| TUFA | A soft, porous limestone rock or deposit that is formed from solution by springs or percolations. |   | 161 | |
| URANIUM | A silver-white, hard, dense, malleable, ductile, and radioactive metallic element having the symbol U, atomic number 92. |   | 162 | |
| VEGETATION_PRODUCTS | Produced by the plant life growing in a given region. |   | 163 | |
| VOLCANIC | Relating to, or produced by, a volcano. |   | 164 | |
| VOLCANIC_ASH | Fine or very fine pyroclastic particles, less than 4 millimetres in diameter, that are blown out from a volcanic explosion. |   | 165 | |
| WASTE |   | 166 | ||
| WATER | Water. |   | 167 | |
| WINE |   | 168 | ||
| WOOD | The hard ligneous substance, composed primarily of xylem, that is found under the bark of the trunks and branches of trees and shrubs. |   | 169 | |
| WOOD_CHIPS |   | 170 | ||
| ZINC | A metallic element having the symbol Zn, atomic number 30. |   | 171 | |
| PROFILE_MSRMNT_TECHNIQUE | The technique or method of profile measurement; a profile is a data set intended to represent a series of measurements collected along a (roughly) vertical axis. | |||
| DROPSONDE | An instrument attached to a parachute that is dropped from an aircraft and transmits measurements of atmospheric conditions as it descends. |   | 11 | |
| PIBALL | Pilot balloon (piball); a small balloon which is released to allow a current reading of conditions from a take off site indicated by speed and distance travelled by the balloon. |   | 12 | |
| RADIOSONDE | A balloon-borne instrument that simultaneously measures and transmits meteorological data. |   | 13 | |
| ROCKETSONDE | Radiosonde: A rocket vehicle designed for upper-air observation in the portion of the lower atmosphere that is inaccessible to balloons, particularly between 30,48 and 76,2 kilometres (approximately 100 000 and 250 000 feet). |   | 14 | |
| SATELLITE | Remote sensing from satellites for instantaneous determination of the atmospheric state. |   | 15 | |
| WIND_PROFILER | A system consisting of radiosonde and radiosonde ground equipment, used to measure and transmit meteorological data from the upper atmosphere, including pressure, temperature, and humidity, as well as wind vectors. |   | 16 |