Imagery is from 2006. No other information in regards to its collection or accuracy is available.Access the Data:Access the REST Service from https://ags.roseville.ca.us/arcgis/rest/services/PublicServices/. View the data in our Historical Imagery Collection.Add data to ArcMap or ArcPro by clicking on "View Metadata" and selecting "Open in ArcGIS Desktop".
World Imagery provides one meter or better satellite and aerial imagery for most of the world’s landmass and lower resolution satellite imagery worldwide. The map is currently comprised of the following sources: Worldwide 15-m resolution TerraColor imagery at small and medium map scales.Maxar imagery basemap products around the world: Vivid Premium at 15-cm HD resolution for select metropolitan areas, Vivid Advanced 30-cm HD for more than 1,000 metropolitan areas, and Vivid Standard from 1.2-m to 0.6-cm resolution for the most of the world, with 30-cm HD across the United States and parts of Western Europe. More information on the Maxar products is included below. High-resolution aerial photography contributed by the GIS User Community. This imagery ranges from 30-cm to 3-cm resolution. You can contribute your imagery to this map and have it served by Esri via the Community Maps Program. Maxar Basemap ProductsVivid PremiumProvides committed image currency in a high-resolution, high-quality image layer over defined metropolitan and high-interest areas across the globe. The product provides 15-cm HD resolution imagery.Vivid AdvancedProvides committed image currency in a high-resolution, high-quality image layer over defined metropolitan and high-interest areas across the globe. The product includes a mix of native 30-cm and 30-cm HD resolution imagery.Vivid StandardProvides a visually consistent and continuous image layer over large areas through advanced image mosaicking techniques, including tonal balancing and seamline blending across thousands of image strips. Available from 1.2-m down to 30-cm HD. More on Maxar HD. Imagery UpdatesYou can use the Updates Mode in the World Imagery Wayback app to learn more about recent and pending updates. Accessing this information requires a user login with an ArcGIS organizational account. CitationsThis layer includes imagery provider, collection date, resolution, accuracy, and source of the imagery. With the Identify tool in ArcGIS Desktop or the ArcGIS Online Map Viewer you can see imagery citations. Citations returned apply only to the available imagery at that location and scale. You may need to zoom in to view the best available imagery. Citations can also be accessed in the World Imagery with Metadata web map.UseYou can add this layer to the ArcGIS Online Map Viewer, ArcGIS Desktop, or ArcGIS Pro. To view this layer with a useful reference overlay, open the Imagery Hybrid web map.FeedbackHave you ever seen a problem in the Esri World Imagery Map that you wanted to report? You can use the Imagery Map Feedback web map to provide comments on issues. The feedback will be reviewed by the ArcGIS Online team and considered for one of our updates.
The existing raster dataset corresponds to the year 1952, with data obtained from the UCSB Frame Finder Aerials, an online library collection database of aerial photography. The existing raster dataset contains two different flights, ABM-1952 and PAI-ABC, flown by Southwestern Aerial Surveys and Pacific Air Industries respectively, in order to provide a more comprehensive coverage of the city of Roseville. Some areas display apparent constrasts, such as plowed field vs. unplowed field, due to the fact that each flight was taken in different months in 1952. Both flights are displayed at a scale of 1:20:000The following photo frames were used to create the raster dataset: pai-abc_y8-144, pai-abc_y8-146, pai-abc_y8-140, pai-abc_y8-139, pai-abc_y8-141, pai-abc_y8-143, pai-abc_3k-28, pai-abc_3k-106, abm-1952_1k-68, amb-1952_1k-65, abm-1952_1k-28, abm-1952_1k-12, abm-1952_1k-67, abm-1952_1k-82, abm-1952_1k-80, abm-1952_1k-81, abm-1952_9k-84, abm-1952_9k-81.
Access the Data:
Access the REST Service from https://ags.roseville.ca.us/arcgis/rest/services/PublicServices/. View the data in our Historical Imagery Collection.Add data to ArcMap or ArcPro by clicking on “View Metadata” and selecting “Open in ArcGIS Desktop”.
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Aerial Photography data set includes over 2.5 million film transparencies. Beginning in 1937, photographs were acquired for mapping purposes at different altitudes using various focal lengths and film types. The resultant black-and-white photographs contain less than 5 percent cloud cover and were acquired under rigid quality control and project specifications (e.g., stereo coverage, continuous area coverage of map or administrative units). Prior to the initiation of the National High Altitude Photography (NHAP) program in 1980, the USGS photography collection was one of the major sources of aerial photographs used for mapping the United States. Since 1980, the USGS has acquired photographs over project areas that require photographs at a larger scale than the photographs in the NHAP and National Aerial Photography Program collections.
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This dataset is available on Brisbane City Council’s open data website – data.brisbane.qld.gov.au. The site provides additional features for viewing and interacting with the data and for downloading the data in various formats.
This dataset features a collection of historical orthorectified aerial photographed images of the Brisbane City Council local government area captured by piloted aircraft during 1946\.
Prior to satellite imagery, extensive use was made of aerial photography to capture land information. The 1946 imagery service uses the Geocentric Datum of Australia 1994 (GDA94\) datum and is projected in Zone 56 of the Map Grid of Australia (MGA56\).
This dataset is a tile layer, to view the images or to access the data, use the ArcGIS Hub, HTML and API links in the Data and resources section below.
This layer is a mosaic dataset of approx 649 individual color scanned aerial photos approx. 9 ½” x 9 ½” in size. Images were captured by International Aerial Mapping Company for the City of Austin between February - March, 1977.
World Imagery provides one meter or better satellite and aerial imagery in many parts of the world and lower resolution satellite imagery worldwide. The map includes 15m TerraColor imagery at small and mid-scales (~1:591M down to ~1:72k) and 2.5m SPOT Imagery (~1:288k to ~1:72k) for the world. The map features 0.5m resolution imagery in the continental United States and parts of Western Europe from DigitalGlobe. Additional DigitalGlobe sub-meter imagery is featured in many parts of the world. In the United States, 1 meter or better resolution NAIP imagery is available in some areas. In other parts of the world, imagery at different resolutions has been contributed by the GIS User Community. In select communities, very high resolution imagery (down to 0.03m) is available down to ~1:280 scale. You can contribute your imagery to this map and have it served by Esri via the Community Maps Program. View the list of Contributors for the World Imagery Map.CoverageView the links below to learn more about recent updates and map coverage:What's new in World ImageryWorld coverage mapCitationsThis layer includes imagery provider, collection date, resolution, accuracy, and source of the imagery. With the Identify tool in ArcGIS Desktop or the ArcGIS Online Map Viewer you can see imagery citations. Citations returned apply only to the available imagery at that location and scale. You may need to zoom in to view the best available imagery. Citations can also be accessed in the World Imagery with Metadata web map.UseYou can add this layer to the ArcGIS Online Map Viewer, ArcGIS Desktop, or ArcGIS Pro. To view this layer with a useful reference overlay, open the Imagery Hybrid web map. A similar raster web map, Imagery with Labels, is also available.FeedbackHave you ever seen a problem in the Esri World Imagery Map that you wanted to report? You can use the Imagery Map Feedback web map to provide comments on issues. The feedback will be reviewed by the ArcGIS Online team and considered for one of our updates.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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The dataset comprises aerial imagery of Dubai acquired by MBRSC satellites and annotated with pixel-level semantic segmentation across 6 distinct classes. The dataset comprises a total of 72 images, which are organised into 6 larger tiles. The categories are as follows: Credit: Humans in the Loop is releasing an openly accessible dataset that has been annotated for a collaborative project with the Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Centre in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Deep Learning Projects for Final… See the full description on the dataset page: https://huggingface.co/datasets/gymprathap/Semantic-Segmentation-Aerial-Imagery-Dataset.
AID is a new large-scale aerial image dataset, by collecting sample images from Google Earth imagery. Note that although the Google Earth images are post-processed using RGB renderings from the original optical aerial images, it has proven that there is no significant difference between the Google Earth images with the real optical aerial images even in the pixel-level land use/cover mapping. Thus, the Google Earth images can also be used as aerial images for evaluating scene classification algorithms.
The new dataset is made up of the following 30 aerial scene types: airport, bare land, baseball field, beach, bridge, center, church, commercial, dense residential, desert, farmland, forest, industrial, meadow, medium residential, mountain, park, parking, playground, pond, port, railway station, resort, river, school, sparse residential, square, stadium, storage tanks and viaduct. All the images are labelled by the specialists in the field of remote sensing image interpretation, and some samples of each class are shown in Fig.1. In all, the AID dataset has a number of 10000 images within 30 classes.
The images in AID are actually multi-source, as Google Earth images are from different remote imaging sensors. This brings more challenges for scene classification than the single source images like UC-Merced dataset. Moreover, all the sample images per each class in AID are carefully chosen from different countries and regions around the world, mainly in China, the United States, England, France, Italy, Japan, Germany, etc., and they are extracted at different time and seasons under different imaging conditions, which increases the intra-class diversities of the data.
description: USGS Imagery Only is a tile cache base map of orthoimagery in The National Map visible to the 1:18,000 scale. Orthoimagery data are typically high resolution images that combine the visual attributes of an aerial photograph with the spatial accuracy and reliability of a planimetric map. USGS digital orthoimage resolution may vary from 6 inches to 1 meter. In the former resolution, every pixel in an orthoimage covers a six inch square of the earth's surface, while in the latter resolution, one meter square is represented by each pixel. Blue Marble: Next Generation source is displayed at small to medium scales. However, the majority of the imagery service source is from the National Agriculture Imagery Program (NAIP) for the conterminous United States. The data is 1-meter pixel resolution with "leaf-on". Collection of NAIP imagery is administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Farm Service Agency (FSA). In areas where NAIP data is not available, other imagery may be acquired through partnerships by the USGS. The National Map program is working on acquisition of high resolution orthoimagery (HRO) for Alaska and Hawaii. Most of the new Alaska imagery data will not be available in this service due to license restrictions. The National Map viewer allows free downloads of public domain, 1-meter resolution orthoimagery in JPEG 2000 (jp2) format for the conterminous United States, with many urban areas and other locations at 1-foot (or better) resolution also in JPEG 2000 (jp2) format. For scales below 1:18,000, use the dynamic USGS Imagery Only Large service, https://services.nationalmap.gov/arcgis/rest/services/USGSImageOnlyLarge/MapServer.; abstract: USGS Imagery Only is a tile cache base map of orthoimagery in The National Map visible to the 1:18,000 scale. Orthoimagery data are typically high resolution images that combine the visual attributes of an aerial photograph with the spatial accuracy and reliability of a planimetric map. USGS digital orthoimage resolution may vary from 6 inches to 1 meter. In the former resolution, every pixel in an orthoimage covers a six inch square of the earth's surface, while in the latter resolution, one meter square is represented by each pixel. Blue Marble: Next Generation source is displayed at small to medium scales. However, the majority of the imagery service source is from the National Agriculture Imagery Program (NAIP) for the conterminous United States. The data is 1-meter pixel resolution with "leaf-on". Collection of NAIP imagery is administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Farm Service Agency (FSA). In areas where NAIP data is not available, other imagery may be acquired through partnerships by the USGS. The National Map program is working on acquisition of high resolution orthoimagery (HRO) for Alaska and Hawaii. Most of the new Alaska imagery data will not be available in this service due to license restrictions. The National Map viewer allows free downloads of public domain, 1-meter resolution orthoimagery in JPEG 2000 (jp2) format for the conterminous United States, with many urban areas and other locations at 1-foot (or better) resolution also in JPEG 2000 (jp2) format. For scales below 1:18,000, use the dynamic USGS Imagery Only Large service, https://services.nationalmap.gov/arcgis/rest/services/USGSImageOnlyLarge/MapServer.
This collection of geo-referenced photos vary with regards to spatial accuracy and resolution. Use the hotlinks below to learn the details of each collection or review MassGIS's new story map explaining all the vintages of aerial photos. Tip: Reviewing that story map might be an easier way to digest the information rather than reviewing the more formal/standard metadata accessible via the hotlinks below.Within the web map certain layers will only be visible at particular zoom extents. If a layer is unavailable to turn on/off, then zoom in or out as needed until the layer becomes active.All photos, except year 1938, are captured during leaf-off (typically late winter/early spring). With the exception of the 1938 & 1990s collection, all photos are in true color. The 1938 & 1990s are in black and white. With regards to Dukes County (which includes the Islands of Martha's Vineyard and the Elizabeth Islands) these are the applicable years of acquisition for those State-wide collections that span multiple years: "1990s collection" -- Only year 1999 for Dukes County"2001-2003 collection" -- Only year 2003 for Dukes County"2008-2009 collection" - Only year 2009 for Dukes County"2011-2012 collection" - Only year 2011 for Dukes County"2013-2014 collection" - Only year 2014 for Dukes CountyPhoto Details (Metadata)1938 Black & White Aerials (georeferenced & hosted by Harvard Forest)1990s Black & White Aerials2001-2003 Color Aerials2005 Color Aerials2008-2009 Color Aerials2011-2012 Color Aerials2013-2014 Color Aerials2015 Satellite Images - Extra Details2019 Color Aerials2021 Color Aerials2023 Color AerialsParcel Lines -- These data are NOT survey grade and are intended for general reference only. The parcel data comply with the MassGIS Level 3 parcel data standard. Each town in Dukes County hires a GIS Consultant to prepare their digital parcel lines and to link the properties to the respective records from the town's assessing database. The linkage is static and not updated in real-time - it is only 'as current' as the day the data was exported from the assessing database. The Martha's Vineyard Commission does not edit nor maintain any assessing data or parcel lines/property bounds. Each town within Dukes County updates their digital parcel data when they see fit (most, typically, update annually). Click on a specific town in this map to see when their parcel data was updated and by whom. Similarly, clicking on a parcel in this "MA Aerial Photos Since 1990s web map" will show you the applicable Fiscal Year the assessing info was exported.
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This image service features aerial photographs collected March 5 - April 4, 2023 by Eagle View Technologies, Inc, under contract to the Rhode Island Department of Transportation. The source images are 3-band true color, have a 3-inch spatial resolution, and were flown during leaf-on conditions. These images are not traditionally orthorectified.These data were contributed to the Rhode Island Geographic Information System (RIGIS; https://www.rigis.org) by the Rhode Island Department of Transportation.While these aerial photographs are very detailed (3-in pixel resolution), they are not traditionally orthorectified. Their horizontal accuracy may vary throughout the state. Potential users are encouraged to carefully evaluate the suitability of these images before use.These images will be made available for traditional file download by RIGIS when resources are available.Metadata (not currently available)Web servicesArcGIS image service, WGS84 Web Mercator (EPSG 102700)ArcGIS image service, NAD83 RI State Plane feet (EPSG 3438)Tile index shapefile (not currently available)Traditional file listing (not currently available)
This imagery service contains natural color orthophotos covering counties in north Florida that had imagery captured from October 2012 till spring 2013. An orthophoto is remotely sensed image data in which displacement of features in the image caused by terrain relief and sensor orientation have been mathematically removed. Orthophotography combines the image characteristics of a photograph with the geometric qualities of a map. Counties covered in this dataset are: Bay, Bradford, Calhoun, Columbia, Dixie, Duval, Escambia, Franklin, Gadsden, Gilchrist, Gulf, Hamilton, Holmes, Jackson, Jefferson, Lafayette, Levy, Madison, Okaloosa, Palm Beach (partial), Santa Rosa, Suwannee, Taylor, Union, Wakulla, Walton, and Washington. Please contact GIS.Librarian@FloridaDEP.gov for more information.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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Oblique aerial photography is an airborne mapping technique, which uses a professional grade DSLR camera to capture images out the side of our aircraft. Images are geo-referenced using our GPS systems to provide the position of the plane for each image. The Environment Agency has been capturing oblique aerial photography during incident response since 2010, and for bespoke surveys such as cliff line monitoring. Images can be captured in all survey conditions which can have a large influence on the quality of the imagery.
The imagery is available as a JPEG image. Contained within the EXIF metadata for each image is a geo-referenced GPS coordinate of the plane during exposure. These coordinates are in WGS1984 latitude, longitude.
When requesting download of aerial obliques all imagery within a 5km OS Grid is retuned for each type and year of survey. The 'types' of survey available are 'Incident Response' (data captured in varying lighting conditions usually for assessment of flood extent) and 'Other' (bespoke monitoring surveys such as cliff line assessments).
Please refer to the metadata index catalgoues which provde the date and time each image was taken and the location of the plane. The direction the plane was travelling along with the the image view angle is also provided. The image view angle is an approximate direction the camera was pointing for each image with all images captured out the left hand side of the plane.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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This dataset is part of the larger data collection, “Aerial imagery object identification dataset for building and road detection, and building height estimation”, linked to in the references below and can be accessed here: https://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3290519. For a full description of the data, please see the metadata: https://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.3504413.
Imagery data from the United States Geological Survey (USGS); building and road shapefiles are from OpenStreetMaps (OSM) (these OSM data are made available under the Open Database License: http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/1.0/); and the Lidar data are from U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the Texas Natural Resources Information System (TNRIS).
Oakland County has utilized Aerial Photographs for mapping purposes for decades. By comparing photographs taken at different times, county cartographers can create accurate and detailed maps of ever-changing features on the Earth’s surface. The process of comparing different aerial photographs and determining accurate measurements is called photogrammetry. Maps created by using aerial photographs are called orthophoto maps. Take a trip back to 1940 and explore our County 70 years ago, or “live in the now” and check out our super-detailed 3-inch resolution 2023 imagery!
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Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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https://data.linz.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/https://data.linz.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/
Orthophotography within the Waikato Region captured in the flying season of 2022-2023. Coverage encompasses Hamilton City District.
Imagery was captured for Hamilton City Council by Woolpert NZ Ltd (formerly AAM NZ Ltd), 6 Ossian St, Napier, New Zealand.
Data comprises: • 1470 ortho-rectified RGB GeoTIFF images in NZTM projection, tiled into the LINZ Standard 1:1000 tile layout. • Tile layout in NZTM projection containing relevant information.
The supplied imagery is in terms of New Zealand Transverse Mercator (NZTM) map projection. Please refer to the tile index layer for specific details, naming conventions, etc.
Imagery supplied as 5cm pixel resolution (0.05m GSD), 3-band (RGB) uncompressed GeoTIFF. The final spatial accuracy is ±0.1 at 68% confidence level in clear flat areas.
Index tiles for this dataset are available as layer Hamilton 0.05m Urban Aerial Photos Index Tiles (2023)
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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1962 Digital Aerial Photography Contributor: Rhode Island Department of Administration, Statewide Planning Program This map service features scanned historical aerial photography collected in the spring of 1962. The scanned images are panchromatic (black and white) and have a spatial resolution of approximately 4 feet. While the original prints are archived by the Rhode Island Statewide Planning Program, the scanned images are available from the Rhode Island Geographic Information System (RIGIS) consortium (https://www.rigis.org).Users can download these images from RIGIS:use this link to download them all with a download manager orUse the Imagery Download App.These download in zipped MrSID format. Web services available:ArcGIS Online hosted tile layer ArcGIS map service (REST endpoint)Metadata
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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This dataset contains an aerial image mosaic of the City of Melbourne municipal area. This image provies a 'top down' view of the city and is availible for download in a georeferenced format.
Capture Information - Capture Date: 2nd/3rd February 2019 - Capture Pixel Size: 5cm - Map Projection: MGA Zone 55 (MGA55)
Additional technical information: ArborCarbon collected the aerial image using the ArborCam, a unique 11-band airborne multispectral camera system optimized for the accurate detection of vegetation and subtle changes in vegetation condition. ArborCarbon have created this seamless 5cm pixel resolution RGB mosaic co-registered to the 4-band image.
The multispectral imagery was acquired at 8,000ft above ground level over the City of Melbourne under cloudless conditions between 09:45 and 12:45 on 2nd and 3rd February 2019. Imagery was acquired with the ArborCam system with a ground sample distance (GSD) ranging from 6 cm/pixel to 25 cm/pixel dependent on the band.Preview Image:See an example image showing the data quality of the aerial.Download:Download the aerial image as a ecw file (6GB)
Imagery is from 2006. No other information in regards to its collection or accuracy is available.Access the Data:Access the REST Service from https://ags.roseville.ca.us/arcgis/rest/services/PublicServices/. View the data in our Historical Imagery Collection.Add data to ArcMap or ArcPro by clicking on "View Metadata" and selecting "Open in ArcGIS Desktop".