Class <<Type>> InorganicFluid (extends EarthMaterial )

An inorganic, non-crystalline EarthMaterial (solid, liquid, or gas) that tends to flow or conform to the shape of its container. Includes glass. By convention liquid mercury is considered a mineral (examples: water, brine, glass)

Local Subclasses:

Attributes

Name Type Bounds From Class Notes
color CGI_TermValue 0..* EarthMaterial Terms to specify color of the earth material. Color schemes such as the Munsell rock and soil color schemes could be used.
Attribute tagged values
Tag Value
sequenceNumber 2
purpose DescriptionPurpose 1..1 EarthMaterial Specification of the intended purpose/level of abstraction for the given EarthMaterial. Scoped name because intention is asserted by author of the data instance.
Values: Instance, TypicalNorm, IdentifyingNorm.
Attribute tagged values
Tag Value
sequenceNumber 3
 

Outbound Associations

Name Type Multiplicity From Class Notes
metadata MD_Metadata 0..1 EarthMaterial
Association tagged values
Tag Value
inlineOrByReference byReference
 

Constraints

Constraint Type Status Weight
 

Tagged values

Tag Value Notes
byValuePropertyType Values: true,false
Default: false
Description: enforce the 'by value' property pattern without xl
hasXmlLang false Values: true | false
Default: false
Description: axml attribute xml:lang shall be generated for the type representing the class
isCollection false Values: true,false
Default: false
Description: attribute group gml:AggregationAttributeGroup is a
noPropertyType false Values: true,false
Default: false
Description: suppress automatic creation of *PropertyType compl
xmlSchemaType Description: no type shall be generated for the class, but the
 

GML-conformant XML Implementation Details

<xs:element xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" name="InorganicFluid" substitutionGroup="gsml:EarthMaterial" type="gsml:InorganicFluidType">
    <xs:annotation>
        <xs:documentation>An inorganic, non-crystalline EarthMaterial (solid, liquid, or gas) that tends to flow or conform to the shape of its container.  Includes glass.  By convention liquid mercury is considered a mineral (examples: water, brine, glass)</xs:documentation>
    </xs:annotation>
</xs:element>
<xs:complexType xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" name="InorganicFluidType">
    <xs:complexContent>
        <xs:extension base="gsml:EarthMaterialType"/>
    </xs:complexContent>
</xs:complexType>
<xs:complexType xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" name="InorganicFluidPropertyType">
    <xs:sequence minOccurs="0">
        <xs:element ref="gsml:InorganicFluid"/>
    </xs:sequence>
    <xs:attributeGroup ref="gml:AssociationAttributeGroup"/>
</xs:complexType>