If you have geographic information stored as a table, ArcGIS Pro can display it on a map and convert it to spatial data. In this tutorial, you'll create spatial data from a table containing the latitude-longitude coordinates of huts in a New Zealand national park. Huts in New Zealand are equivalent to cabins in the United States—they may or may not have sleeping bunks, kitchen facilities, electricity, and running water. The table of hut locations is stored as a comma-separated values (CSV) file. CSV files are a common, nonproprietary file type for tabular data.Estimated time: 45 minutesSoftware requirements: ArcGIS Pro
The new Oregon Address Geocoder is used to find the location coordinates for street addresses in the State of Oregon. This service is:Free PublicUpdated regularlyOutputs location coordinates in Oregon Lambert, feet (SRID 2992)Uses over 2 million address points and 288,000 streets for referenceIt is an ArcGIS multirole locator with two roles:Point Address - Generally more accurate results from rooftop location points. Includes a Subaddress if a unit number is located. Street Address - Less accurate results from an estimated distance along a street centerline address range if a Point Address was not found.Instructions for using the Geocoder via ArcGIS Pro, ArcGIS Online, and REST Services are below:ArcGIS ProWeb ServicesArcGIS Online
Purpose:This feature layer describes the boundaries of Proposed Critical Habitat for the Rusty Patched Bumble Bee in Virginia and West Virginia.Source & Date:Data was downloaded from Regulations.gov, Document FWS-R3-ES-2024-0132-0016: CORRECTED_Rusty Patched Bumble Bee Critical Habitat Plot Points. Posted by the Fish and Wildlife Service on Dec 6, 2024 and accessible here as of 1/16/2025.Processing:The data was downloaded as a list of Latitude and Longitude coordinates in a PDF document. The PPDF was converted to Microsoft Excel format using Nitro Pro PDF editor. Data was cleaned of extra tabs, spaces, etc., given an OBJECTID field and saved as a comma-separated values (CSV) text file. The CSV file was loaded into ArcGIS Pro and converted to a point feature class using Latitude and Longitude as Y & X coordinates, respectively. The point featureclass was converted to polyline using the Points to Line script in Data management Tools - Features tool set. The polyline feature was converted to Polygon using Feature to Polygon (again in Features tool set). Fields for Square Miles (SqMi) and Acres were added and calculated with Calculate Geometry. The polygon feature class was exported to shapefile, zipped and uploaded to ArcGIS Online, where it was published as a feature layer.Symbology:Varies - default is medium blue polygon with dark gray outline.
This layer presents the Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) zones of the world. The layer symbolizes the 6-degree wide zones employed for UTM projection.To download the data for this layer as a layer package for use in ArcGIS desktop applications, refer to World UTM Zones Grid.
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If you have geographic information stored as a table, ArcGIS Pro can display it on a map and convert it to spatial data. In this tutorial, you'll create spatial data from a table containing the latitude-longitude coordinates of huts in a New Zealand national park. Huts in New Zealand are equivalent to cabins in the United States—they may or may not have sleeping bunks, kitchen facilities, electricity, and running water. The table of hut locations is stored as a comma-separated values (CSV) file. CSV files are a common, nonproprietary file type for tabular data.Estimated time: 45 minutesSoftware requirements: ArcGIS Pro