Clark County Planned Land Use. This data is maintained by the Clark County Comprehensive Planning Department.
Vector polygon map data of property parcels from Las Vegas, Nevada, containing 794,465 features.
Property parcel GIS map data consists of detailed information about individual land parcels, including their boundaries, ownership details, and geographic coordinates.
Property parcel data can be used to analyze and visualize land-related information for purposes such as real estate assessment, urban planning, or environmental management.
Available for viewing and sharing as a map in a Koordinates map viewer. This data is also available for export to DWG for CAD, PDF, KML, CSV, and GIS data formats, including Shapefile, MapInfo, and Geodatabase.
Represents both land parcels and any tax accounts associated with them. In the case of condominiums and mobile homes, this can result in many taxlots being stacked on top of one another. This layer is used for property assessment and taxation purposes and is updated on a weekly basis. Please note that taxlot boundaries are not surveys and cannot be used to determine the location of property lines on the ground. This is a version of our original Taxlots layer that is intended for public use. All property owner-related information has been removed to ensure compliance with Washington State Law, RCW 46.52.070(8), and Washington State Office of the Attorney General opinion AGO 2019 No. 3. Anyone who needs to obtain the property owner name data must submit an email request to the Clark County Treasurer's Office (treasoff@clark.wa.gov) which specifies that they are requesting access to the property owner name data that are maintained by Clark County GIS.See Clark County Metadata Data source: ..\FGDB\dw_clark.gdb\TaxlotsPublic
Vector polygon map data of city limits from Las Vegas, Nevada containing 87 features.
City limits GIS (Geographic Information System) data provides valuable information about the boundaries of a city, which is crucial for various planning and decision-making processes. Urban planners and government officials use this data to understand the extent of their jurisdiction and to make informed decisions regarding zoning, land use, and infrastructure development within the city limits.
By overlaying city limits GIS data with other layers such as population density, land parcels, and environmental features, planners can analyze spatial patterns and identify areas for growth, conservation, or redevelopment. This data also aids in emergency management by defining the areas of responsibility for different emergency services, helping to streamline response efforts during crises..
This city limits data is available for viewing and sharing as a map in a Koordinates map viewer. This data is also available for export to DWG for CAD, PDF, KML, CSV, and GIS data formats, including Shapefile, MapInfo, and Geodatabase.
This dataset provides information about the number of properties, residents, and average property values for County Line Road cross streets in Clark, MO.
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
Download .zipThis ground water resources theme shows an estimate of sustainable yield available from the aquifers in the area. It was digitized in vector format from a paper county map with a scale of 1:62500.
Original coverage data was converted from the .e00 file to a more standard ESRI shapefile(s) in November 2014.Contact Information:GIS Support, ODNR GIS ServicesOhio Department of Natural ResourcesReal Estate & Land ManagementReal Estate and Lands Management2045 Morse Rd, Bldg I-2Columbus, OH, 43229Telephone: 614-265-6462Email: gis.support@dnr.ohio.gov
Planning and Zoning includes: Planned Land Use, Zoning, Historic Neighborhood Overlay District, Hard Rural Neighborhood Preservation, ROIS, PC Overlay, RNP Boundary, Flood Control Layers
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
Download .zipThis theme shows detailed watersheds for Clark County, as digitized in vector mode from mylar copies of maps maintained by the U.S. Geological Survey, Water Resources Division.
Original coverage data was converted from the .e00 file to a more standard ESRI shapefile(s) in November 2014.Contact Information:GIS Support, ODNR GIS ServicesOhio Department of Natural ResourcesReal Estate & Land ManagementReal Estate and Lands Management2045 Morse Rd, Bldg I-2Columbus, OH, 43229Telephone: 614-265-6462Email: gis.support@dnr.ohio.gov
Geospatial data about Clallam County, Washington Parcels. Export to CAD, GIS, PDF, CSV and access via API.
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
Download .zipThis map was derived by combining the Clark County Soil Survey with other geologic, land use and environmental data for the county. It was developed as a general planning tool and should not be used to substitute for a detailed site analysis.The analysis was conducted by combining the following variables in order of increasing severity: 1. Slope 2. Texture 3. Bedrock 4. Glacial Geology 5. Flood Problem Areas 6. Ground-Water Availability 7. Drainage 7. Permeability 8. Depth to Seasonal High Water Table 9. Land Use
Soils and other variable used in this analysis were digitized using run-length encoding technique sampling along horizontal lines which represented the midline of cells with a height of 250 feet. The measurement increment along these lines was one decafoot (10 feet). These files were in a raster format. The final analysis was subsequently converted from raster to ARC/INFO format.
Additional details of the digitizing process are available upon request.
Original coverage data was converted from the .e00 file to a more standard ESRI shapefile(s) in November 2014.Contact Information:GIS Support, ODNR GIS ServicesOhio Department of Natural ResourcesReal Estate & Land ManagementReal Estate and Lands Management2045 Morse Rd, Bldg I-2Columbus, OH, 43229Telephone: 614-265-6462Email: gis.support@dnr.ohio.gov
Planning and Zoning includes: Planned Land Use, Zoning, Historic Neighborhood Overlay District, Hard Rural Neighborhood Preservation, ROIS, PC Overlay, RNP Boundary, Flood Control Layers
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
Download .zipThis coverage represents an interpretation of land use and land cover types done from aerial photography by Tom Eller, Remote Sensing Unit, Division of Water. For an explanation of categories see Ohio Land Use/ Cover Classifications System, Misc. Report 17 available upon request, or at http://apps.ohiodnr.gov/geodata/documents/Ohio_LULC_Misc_Report17.pdf . This publication is keyed to the four digit code found in the OCAPCODE item name code description.
This coverage was digitized from Land Use/ Land Cover drafted onto USGS quadrangle maps utilizing a run length encoding technique sampling along horizontal lines which represent the midline of cells with a height of 250 feet . The measurement increment along these horizontal lines was one decafoot (10 feet) the quadrangle files were then merged into a county file which was subsequently converted to ARC / Info format.
The user should bear in mind that this coverage is only an approximation of the Land Use / Land Cover as drafted. Blue line copies of the original Land Use / Land Cover interpretation can be provided for a nominal charge.
Additional details on the digitizing process are available on request.
Original coverage data was converted from the .e00 file to a more standard ESRI shapefile(s) in November 2014.Contact Information:GIS Support, ODNR GIS ServicesOhio Department of Natural ResourcesReal Estate & Land ManagementReal Estate and Lands Management2045 Morse Rd, Bldg I-2Columbus, OH, 43229Telephone: 614-265-6462Email: gis.support@dnr.ohio.gov
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
Download .zipThis map was derived from the Clark County Soil Survey using the Universal Soil Loss Equation to calculate estimated erosion rates from soil with no till management systems. Land use data from 1979 aerial photography was utilized in the analysis to exlude all lands except cropland, pasture, and shrub and brush rangeland. Soil erosion rates were then compared to "T", the soil loss rate which can be allowed and still maintain long term productivity.
Factors combined by the universal soil loss equation include: rainfall factor(R), ersosion factor ("K"), slope length and steepness factor (L-S) and the cropping factor (C). For this analysis a rainfall factor of 150 was used and a cropping factor of .09. The slope length and steepness factor was varied by soil mapping unit and was provided by the Clark County Office of the Natural Resources Conservation Service.
Soils used in this analysis were digitized from the paper original soil survey sheets using run-length encoding technique sampling along horizontal lines which represented the midline of cells with a height of 250 feet. The measurement increment along these lines was one decafoot (10 feet). The resulting county file has subsequently been converted to Arc/Info format.
The user should bear in mind that this coverage is only an approximation of the soil survey and should not be used for site specific analysis.
Additional details of the digitizing process are available upon request.
Original coverage data was converted from the .e00 file to a more standard ESRI shapefile(s) in November 2014.Contact Information:GIS Support, ODNR GIS ServicesOhio Department of Natural ResourcesReal Estate & Land ManagementReal Estate and Lands Management2045 Morse Rd, Bldg I-2Columbus, OH, 43229Telephone: 614-265-6462Email: gis.support@dnr.ohio.gov
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Nez Perce County, Lewis Clark Valley area 0.25, 0.5, and 1 foot ortho images, from Aero-Graphics, Inc., flown on May 28, 2018, May 29, 2018, and June 02, 2018. 1125 tiles cover 895.8 square miles over the area of interest and are available in TIFF and SID formats. The Lewis Clark Valley project was horizontally referenced to the North American Datum of 1983 (NAD83) 2011, Idaho: State Plane Idaho West Zone (Idaho portions), Washington: State Plane Washington South (Washington portions), and vertically referenced to the North American Vertical Datum of NAVD 1988. Survey Feet have been adjusted to ground for the Idaho portions. Units are in U.S. Foot.
The flight and images produced under this task order have been supplied to Nez Perce County for use in the development of the geographic information system (GIS) for the county of Nez Perce, Idaho and Lewis Clark Valley area. Digital orthophotos are aerial images corrected for displacement caused by relief in the Earth's surface, camera/sensor lens distortion and tilting of the sensor at the time of image acquisition. Additionally, orthophotos are assigned a uniform scale, which allows an end-user the ability to derive accurate measurements from the imagery. Orthophotos can be used as an accurate record of landscape conditions at the time of the corresponding aerial imagery. As such, the digital orthophotos are used in a variety of applications, such as environmental monitoring, facility engineering/maintenance, city/county planning, property line review, etc. The digital orthophoto can be used alone or as a raster base map for corresponding vector line mapping.
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
Download .zipThis map was derived from the Clark County Soil Survey using the Universal Soil Loss Equation to calculate estimated erosion rates from soil with conservation tillage management systems. Land use data from 1979 aerial photography was utilized in the analysis to exlude all lands except cropland, pasture, and shrub and brush rangeland. Soil erosion rates were then compared to "T", the soil loss rate which can be allowed and still maintain long term productivity.
Factors combined by the universal soil loss equation include: rainfall factor(R), ersosion factor ("K"), slope length and steepness factor (L-S) and the cropping factor (C). For this analysis a rainfall factor of 150 was used and a cropping factor of .21. The slope length and steepness factor was varied by soil mapping unit and was provided by the Clark County Office of the Natural Resources Conservation Service.
Soils used in this analysis were digitized from the paper original soil survey sheets using run-length encoding technique sampling along horizontal lines which represented the midline of cells with a height of 250 feet. The measurement increment along these lines was one decafoot (10 feet). The resulting county file has subsequently been converted to Arc/Info format.
The user should bear in mind that this coverage is only an approximation of the soil survey and should not be used for site specific analysis.
Additional details of the digitizing process are available upon request.
Original coverage data was converted from the .e00 file to a more standard ESRI shapefile(s) in November 2014.Contact Information:GIS Support, ODNR GIS ServicesOhio Department of Natural ResourcesReal Estate & Land ManagementReal Estate and Lands Management2045 Morse Rd, Bldg I-2Columbus, OH, 43229Telephone: 614-265-6462Email: gis.support@dnr.ohio.gov
The Montana Public Lands data contains public administered lands that are recorded in the Montana Department of Revenue's tax appraisal database. Each public land polygon is attributed with the name of the public agency that owns it. The data are derived from the statewide Montana Cadastral Parcel layer.
Surveyed Points (Public Land Survey Section Corners, Donation Land Claim Corners, etc.)See Clark County Metadata
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The flight and images produced under this task order have been supplied to Nez Perce County for use in the development of the geographic information system (GIS) for the county of Nez Perce, Idaho and Lewis Clark Valley area. Digital orthophotos are aerial images corrected for displacement caused by relief in the Earth's surface, camera/sensor lens distortion and tilting of the sensor at the time of image acquisition. Additionally, orthophotos are assigned a uniform scale, which allows an end-user the ability to derive accurate measurements from the imagery. Orthophotos can be used as an accurate record of landscape conditions at the time of the corresponding aerial imagery. As such, the digital orthophotos are used in a variety of applications, such as environmental monitoring, facility engineering/maintenance, city/county planning, property line review, etc. The digital orthophoto can be used alone or as a raster base map for corresponding vector line mapping. These data are horizontally referenced to the North American Datum of 1983 (NAD83) 2011, Idaho: State Plane Idaho West Zone (Idaho portions) and vertically referenced to the North American Vertical Datum of NAVD 1988. Survey Feet have been adjusted to ground for the Idaho portions. Units are in U.S. Foot.Individual image tiles can be downloaded using the Idaho Aerial Imagery Explorer.These data can be bulk downloaded from a web accessible folder.Users should be aware that temporal changes may have occurred since these data were collected and that some parts of these data may no longer represent actual surface conditions. Users should not use these data for critical applications without a full awareness of the limitations of these data as described in the lineage or elsewhere.
Existing Land Use/Land Cover for Montgomery, Miami, Greene, and Warren Counties; from 2007. For Darke, Preble and Clark counties, information is land cover data from 2000.Parcel data was acquired from each County Auditor's Office and compiled into a regional data set using a generalized code.
The flight and images produced under this task order have been supplied to Nez Perce County for use in the development of the geographic information system (GIS) for the county of Nez Perce, Idaho and Lewis Clark Valley area. Digital orthophotos are aerial images corrected for displacement caused by relief in the Earth's surface, camera/sensor lens distortion and tilting of the sensor at the time of image acquisition. Additionally, orthophotos are assigned a uniform scale, which allows an end-user the ability to derive accurate measurements from the imagery. Orthophotos can be used as an accurate record of landscape conditions at the time of the corresponding aerial imagery. As such, the digital orthophotos are used in a variety of applications, such as environmental monitoring, facility engineering/maintenance, city/county planning, property line review, etc. The digital orthophoto can be used alone or as a raster base map for corresponding vector line mapping. These data are horizontally referenced to the North American Datum of 1983 (NAD83) 2011, Idaho: State Plane Idaho West Zone (Idaho portions) and vertically referenced to the North American Vertical Datum of NAVD 1988. Survey Feet have been adjusted to ground for the Idaho portions. Units are in U.S. Foot.
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Clark County Planned Land Use. This data is maintained by the Clark County Comprehensive Planning Department.