Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The purpose of the�Natural Resources Atlas�is to provide geographic information about environmental features and sites that the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources manages, monitors, permits, or regulates. In addition to standard map navigation tools, this site allows you to link from sites to documents where available, generate reports, export search results, import data, search, measure, mark-up, query map features, and print PDF maps.
The Australian Natural Resources Atlas (ANRA) was developed by the National Land and Water Resources Audit to provide online access to information to support natural resource management. The Atlas was managed and maintained within the Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts. The Atlas comprises of a number of tools and information on Australia's natural resources:
* Australia's Resources Online: Generate a report containing the latest available data on Australia's natural resources against the Natural Resource Management Monitoring and Evaluation framework . (See below).
* Map Maker: View and query the data from the Atlas or make a map of a region of interest
* Natural Resource Topics: View National, State and regional theme assessments of Australia's natural resources undertaken by the National Land and Water Resources Audit in 2000-2002, and find links to other sources of natural resource data.
Pool Visit data includes a reference to its VPAtlas Mapped Pool data. Pool Visit data is information used toverify the status of a vernal pool. It includes geoLocation information, landscape, size and depth, water inletand outlet, disturbances, surrounding habitat, hydro-period, and the identification of indicator species.Vernal Pool Visit data may also include photos of the pool and its surroundings and photos of indicatorspecies, as well as links to iNaturalist species observations.VPAtlas Pool Visit data does not itself confirm the presence of a vernal pool. VPAtlas Visits are reviewed byAdministrative staff to determine and assign a status (Confirmed, Probable, Potential, Duplicate,Eliminated).VPAtlas Pool Visit data may also include VPAtlas Review data. VPAtlas Reviews are conducted by VPAtlasadministrators - biologists who determine the status of each Visited pool according to the informationincluded in each Visit. Reviews include the assignment of a pool’s status, provide a coded reason for thatstatus value, may include QA notes, may assign the Visit’s geoLocation to the Mapped Pool’s geoLocation,records the QA person and date, and assigns a unique ID to the Review.
The Vermont Flood Ready Atlas is an online-map tool that can help you identify critical facilities, transportation services and buildings in your community that are at risk of damage from flooding. The Atlas can also help you identify local watersheds and the extent of natural flood protection provided by forests, wetlands, floodplains and river corridors.The Vermont Flood Ready Atlas allows you to easily find data about your community and watershed. Nonetheless, you may want to refer to theTips and Tricks section below to get your bearings. If you have any questions, ideas or problems – let us know! Thank you.
Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
License information was derived automatically
Text pages are provided in png-format in the zip-archive linked with the reference; maps in jpg-format are ordered by page number in the dataset table. All map files as zip-archive see Other version.
The U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) requests burn severity assessments through an agreement with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) to be completed by analysts with the Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity (MTBS) Program. These data products are burned area boundary shapefiles derived from post-fire sensor data (including Landsat TM, Landsat ETM+, Landsat OLI). The pre-fire and post-fire subsets included were used to create Normalized Burn Ratio (NBR) and then a differenced Normalized Burn Ratio (dNBR) image. The objective of this assessment was to generate burned area boundaries for each fire. Data bundles also include post-fire subset, pre-fire subset, NBR, and dNBR images. This map layer contains burned areas boundaries of the location of all currently inventoried fires occurring between calendar year 1983 and 2014. Fires omitted from this mapped inventory are those where suitable satellite imagery was not available, or fires which were not discernable from available imagery.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The World Ocean Atlas (WOA) is a collection of objectively analyzed, quality controlled temperature, salinity, oxygen, phosphate, silicate, and nitrate means based on profile data from the World Ocean Database (WOD). It can be used to create boundary and/or initial conditions for a variety of ocean models, verify numerical simulations of the ocean, and corroborate satellite data.
This layer uses annual means for all averaged decades years. Each value represents the "objectively analyzed climatologies" - the objectively interpolated mean fields for oceanographic variables at standard depth levels for the World Ocean.
There are 8 different variables available through the World Ocean Atlas.
Temperature (°C) Sallinity (unitless) Oxygen
Dissolved Oxygen (µmol/kg) Apparent Oxygen Utilization (µmol/kg) Percent Oxygen Saturation (%)
Nitrate (µmol/kg) Phosphate (µmol/kg) Silicate (µmol/kg)
There are 102 different depths that range between 0-5,500m that can be accessed using the depth/range slider or queries/filters.
World Ocean Atlas 2018 Source Data: https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/world-ocean-atlas-2018/World Ocean Atlas 2018 Product Documentation: https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/sites/default/files/2020-04/woa18documentation.pdf World Ocean Atlas 2013 Source Data: https://www.nodc.noaa.gov/OC5/woa13/World Ocean Atlas 2013 Product Documentation: https://data.nodc.noaa.gov/woa/WOA13/DOC/woa13documentation.pdf
https://hub.arcgis.com/api/v2/datasets/3e5d119680544b3b95c470cb262c49e3_13/licensehttps://hub.arcgis.com/api/v2/datasets/3e5d119680544b3b95c470cb262c49e3_13/license
(Link to Metadata) This database contains town-level totals of documented species records for several plant and animal taxa including vascular plants, trees, bryophytes, ferns, fish, mammals, and reptiles & amphibians. Also contained are number of Black Bear kills by town for the years 1980-1996, and number of non-hunter Moose deaths by town for the years 1980-1997. A breeding bird atlas collected at finer resolution than town-level is included but was not summarized by town. Data were originally acquired from Vermont's Agency of Natural Resources (ANR), U.S. Forest Service, museum and herbarium collections, and other published or unpublished atlases.
This data set contains sensitive biological resource data for sea turtles, estuarine turtles, and amphibians for Long Island, New York. Vector polygons in this data set represent turtle and amphibian distribution. Species-specific abundance, seasonality, status, life history, and source information are stored in relational data tables (described below) designed to be used in conjunction with this spatial data layer.This data set comprises a portion of the Environmental Sensitivity Index (ESI) data for Long Island. ESI data characterize the marine and coastal environments and wildlife by their sensitivity to spilled oil. The ESI data include information for three main components: shoreline habitats, sensitive biological resources, and human-use resources.
The Atlas of ShakeMaps (~14,100 earthquakes, 1900-2020) provides a consistent and quantitative description of the distribution of shaking intensity for calibrating earthquake loss estimation methodologies, like those used in the PAGER system. Version 4 of the Atlas includes a vastly expanded compilation of ShakeMaps for consequential and widely felt earthquakes using updated ShakeMap (Version 4) software. For each event, we have attempted to gather available macroseismic, recorded ground motions and finite fault inputs. AtlasCat is the companion catalog to Atlas V4. For each event in the Atlas, AtlasCat contains population exposure to each intensity level, loss information, and summary data regarding the number of ground motion recordings, intensity observations, and availability of a finite fault.
Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 (CC BY-ND 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/
License information was derived automatically
Statistics illustrates consumption, production, prices, and trade of Maps and hydrographic or similar charts; printed in book form, including atlases, topographical plans and similar articles in Latin America and the Caribbean from 2007 to 2024.
Public Domain Mark 1.0https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
The Allen Coral Atlas combines high resolution satellite imagery, machine learning and field data to produce globally consistent benthic and geomorphic maps of the world's coral reefs. The Atlas is funded primarily by Vulcan Inc. (founded by the late Paul G. Allen); partners include Planet Labs Inc., Arizona State University’s Center for Global Discovery and Conservation Science, the National Geographic Society, and the University of Queensland’s Remote Sensing Research Center (UQ-RSRC).
Recommendation for Citing: Allen Coral Atlas (2020). Imagery, maps and monitoring of the world's tropical coral reefs. Zendodo. DOI: doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3833242
Neighborhood map atlas district areas are derived from the Seattle City Clerk's Office Geographic Indexing Atlas. These are the largest neighborhood areas and have been supplemented with alternate names from other sources in 2020. They are subdivided further into the neighborhood map atlas sub-areas called neighborhoods. The sub-neighborhoods field contains a comma delimited list of all the sub-areas and their alternate names.The original atlas is designed for subject indexing of legislation, photographs, and other documents and is an unofficial delineation of neighborhood boundaries used by the City Clerks Office. Sources for this atlas and the neighborhood names used in it include a 1980 neighborhood map produced by the Department of Community Development, Seattle Public Library indexes, a 1984-1986 Neighborhood Profiles feature series in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, numerous parks, land use and transportation planning studies, and records in the Seattle Municipal Archives. Many of the neighborhood names are traditional names whose meaning has changed over the years, and others derive from subdivision names or elementary school attendance areas.Disclaimer: The Seattle City Clerk's Office Geographic Indexing Atlas is designed for subject indexing of legislation, photographs, and other records in the City Clerk's Office and Seattle Municipal Archives according to geographic area. Neighborhoods are named and delineated in this collection of maps in order to provide consistency in the way geographic names are used in describing records of the Archives and City Clerk, thus allowing precise retrieval of records. The neighborhood names and boundaries are not intended to represent any "official" City of Seattle neighborhood map. The Office of the City Clerk makes no claims as to the completeness, accuracy, or content of any data contained in the Geographic Indexing Atlas; nor does it make any representation of any kind, including, but not limited to, warranty of the accuracy or fitness for a particular use; nor are any such warranties to be implied or inferred with respect to the representations furnished herein. The maps are subject to change for administrative purposes of the Office of the City Clerk. Information contained in the site, if used for any purpose other than as an indexing and search aid for the databases of the Office of the City Clerk, is being used at one's own risk.
The Ocean Uses Atlas Project is an innovative partnership between the Coastal Response Research Center (CRRC) and NOAA's Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management (OCRM). The Project was designed to enhance ocean management through geospatial data on the full range of significant human uses of the ocean environment from the shorelines of New Hampshire and Southern Maine to the EEZ boundary. The data were gathered from regional ocean experts and users through participatory GIS methods. For more information on the project scope, background and related data products, please visit http://www.crrc.unh.edu/workshops/ocean_uses/index.html or https://coast.noaa.gov/arcgis/rest/services/MarineCadastre/OceanUsesNewHampshireMaine/MapServer.
The World Atlas of Desertification was published by UNEP in 1992 as the result of a cooperative effort between UNEP's Desertification ControlProgramme Activity Centre (DC/PAC), the Global Environment Monitoring System (GEMS) and the Global Resource Information Database (GRID).GRID compiled and/or derived most of the global and regional databases, produced the maps and carried out the data analyses and tabulations forthe Atlas, assisted by a Technical Advisory Group on Desertification Assessment and Mapping composed of various international experts.The Atlas includes information and many maps derived from the Global Assessment of Human-Induced Soil Degradation (GLASOD), as conducted in1990 by the International Soil Reference and Information Centre (ISRIC) at Wageningen, The Netherlands, on behalf of UNEP. Aside from GLASOD's data on soil degradation, and in order to capture the multi-dimensional nature of global desertification processes, otherdata layers relating to global climate and vegetation were compiled by GRID for inclusion in the 1992 World Atlas of Desertification. TheNOAA/GVI data set described herein was created by GRID-Nairobi as a unique product for the Desertification Atlas, in order to representbaseline or "normal" conditions of global vegetation, and to be used in combination with the climate, GLASOD and land degradation data sets.
The Digital Data Series encompasses a broad range of digital data, including computer programs, interpreted results of investigations, comprehensive reviewed data bases, spatial data sets, digital images and animation, and multimedia presentations that are not intended for printed release. Scientific reports in this series cover a wide variety of subjects on all facets of U.S. Geological Survey investigations and research that are of lasting scientific interest and value. Releases in the Digital Data Series offer access to scientific information that is available in digital form; the information is primarily for viewing, processing, and (or) analyzing by computer
Available on CD Rom through the Map and Data Library. CD #008.
Map shows the Departments (Admin 1) and Municipalities (Admin 2) boundaries with Pcodes
Official NWS Advanced Weather Interactive Processing System (AWIPS) background US Coastal and Offshore Marine Zones.
Directive 2007/60/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council on Flood Risk Assessment and Management (HWRM-RL), adopted on 23.10.2007, has been in force since 26.11.2007. The preparation of the flood risk maps and flood risk maps (HWGK and hwrk) is the second implementation step of the HWRM Directive and forms the basis for the subsequent update of the flood risk management plan by the end of 2021. HWGK describes the spatial spread of flooding as well as the water depth of a flood in various flood scenarios. The hazard maps depict floods caused by a flood of a water body itself. Floods caused by capacitive overburdening of wastewater plants, groundwater coming to light, failure of water-management dams or heavy rain are not shown in the HWGK. Hwrk provide information on the potential flood-related adverse consequences of these flood events in relation to the protected goods defined in the European HWRM Directive.
The All Energy Infrastructure web mapping application is a map of all U.S. energy infrastructure that EIA has available in geospatial format. The map enables users to visualize the geospatial location of various energy infrastructure assets and explore attribute data on individual features. The data layers are developed by U.S. Energy Information Administration or from other publicly available data.
Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The purpose of the�Natural Resources Atlas�is to provide geographic information about environmental features and sites that the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources manages, monitors, permits, or regulates. In addition to standard map navigation tools, this site allows you to link from sites to documents where available, generate reports, export search results, import data, search, measure, mark-up, query map features, and print PDF maps.