Soil Health Data Cube

Digital service Spatial context Supporting layer
The Soil Health Data Cube is a supporting digital service that provides contextual maps, background layers, and wider spatial information for the AI4SoilHealth Toolbox.
It is not the toolbox itself. Instead, it acts as a supporting layer that helps users place local observations and measurements into a broader context.
What is it for?
A user would use the Soil Health Data Cube to:
- view background spatial information relevant to soil health,
- compare local observations with wider patterns,
- explore contextual layers and mapped variables,
- support interpretation of field or laboratory findings,
- and access broader digital information linked to soil condition and change over time.
How is it presented publicly?
The main AI4SoilHealth website describes the Soil Health Data Cube as a unified, decision-ready format that integrates soil, climate, and vegetation information to support sustainable soil management across Europe. (Soil health data cube)
The SHDC technical site presents it as a pan-European data platform available through open-data services such as S3 and STAC, and as a computing engine that other applications can build upon. (SHDC welcome page; SHDC specifications)
Where is it used?
Digital environment
The Data Cube is used through digital interfaces and supporting services rather than as a physical field tool.
What kind of information does it provide?
Public SHDC pages explain that the Data Cube integrates large collections of soil, climate, vegetation, terrain, crop, and degradation-related layers into a single digital environment. (SHDC welcome page; Available layers)
For an end-user, this means access to:
- mapped soil-relevant variables,
- wider environmental context,
- comparisons across areas,
- and support for interpreting local observations in a broader spatial setting.
Useful links
Practical note
The Soil Health Data Cube should be understood as a supporting digital service within the wider toolbox environment. It strengthens interpretation, but it is not a replacement for field methods or laboratory analysis.
Use the Soil Health Data Cube when you want to place local observations or measurements into a wider spatial and digital context.