14 datasets found
  1. a

    metadataProjectTemplate

    • city-of-vancouver-strategic-plan-dashboard-cityofvancouver.hub.arcgis.com
    • city-of-vancouver-wa-geo-hub-cityofvancouver.hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Oct 15, 2023
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    Vancouver Online Maps (2023). metadataProjectTemplate [Dataset]. https://city-of-vancouver-strategic-plan-dashboard-cityofvancouver.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/metadataprojecttemplate
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 15, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Vancouver Online Maps
    License

    MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Description of the item, its purpose, and any pertinent details about how it was made or used: this metadata resource is for use by City of Vancouver GIS employees or other CoV employees authoring data products in ArcGIS Pro or equivalent environment. Suggested use: Edit the Project metadata record by replacing only those elements that will likely change, including your name, phone, contact info (if different); keep elements that are common for all CoV data (bounding box, phone for metadata contact, etc.). NOTES FOR USING TEMPLATE FILES: If choosing "Open in ArcGIS Pro" option from the Item page, a pitemx file will be generated and you will be prompted to create a new project. Upon creating a new project, this template will generate the project metadata and open the thumbnail template. If choosing "Download" option: when opening ArcGIS Pro, choose "Start with Another Template" option (a folder icon below the main Template option row).

  2. a

    Permitting and Environmental Information Map Package

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • nbam.ntia.gov
    Updated Dec 19, 2024
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    NBAM_Org (2024). Permitting and Environmental Information Map Package [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/content/37fa42c6313e4bdb9d8a9c05d2624891
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 19, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    NBAM_Org
    Description

    Map Package OverviewThis map package includes all of the layers from the NTIA Permitting and Environmental Information Application. The layers included are all feature services from various Federal and State agencies. The map package was created with ArcGIS Pro 3.4.0. The map package was created to allow users easy access to all feature services including symbology. The map package will allow users to avoid downloading datasets individually and easily incorporate into their own GIS system. The map package includes three maps.1. Permitting and Environmental Information Application Layers for GIS Analysis - This map includes all of the map tabs shown in the application, except State Data which is provided in another tab. This map includes feature services that can be used for analysis with other project layers such as a route or project area. 2. Permitting and Environmental Information Application Layers – For Reference Only - This map includes layers that cannot be used for analysis since they are either imagery or tile layers.3. State Data - Reference Only - This map includes all relevant state data that is shown in the application.This map package was created on Dec.19th, 2024. It will be updated quarterly to reflect the latest changes in the application. If you have any questions regarding the map package please e-mail IFA Analytics.The NTIA Permitting and Environmental Information Application was created to help with your permitting planning and environmental review preparation efforts by providing access to multiple maps from publicly available sources, including federal review, permitting, and resource agencies. The application should be used for informational purposes only and is intended solely to assist users with preliminary identification of areas that may require permits or planning to avoid potentially significant impacts to environmental resources subject to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and other statutory requirements. Multiple maps are provided in the application which are created from public sources. This application does not have an exhaustive list of everything you need for permitting or environmental review for a project but is an initial starting point to see what might be required.DisclaimerThe NTIA Permitting and Environmental Information Application and Map Package should be used for informational purposes only and is intended solely to assist users with preliminary identification of broadband deployments that may require permits or planning to avoid potentially significant impacts to environmental resources subject to National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and other statutory requirements. Use of the Application presumes familiarity with training information provided for the tool. The Application is not an exhaustive or complete resource and does not and is not intended to substitute for, supersede, modify, or otherwise alter any applicable statutory or regulatory requirements, or the specific application requirements set forth in any NTIA NOFO, Terms and Conditions, or Special Award Condition. In all cases, statutory and regulatory mandates, and the requirements set forth in NTIA grant documents, shall prevail over any inconsistencies contained in these templates.The Application and Map Package relies on publicly available data available on the websites of other federal, state, local, and Tribal agencies, and in some instances, private organizations and research institutions. While NTIA continues to make amendments to its websites to comply with Section 508, NTIA cannot ensure Section 508 compliance of federal and non-federal websites or resources users may access from links on NTIA websites.

    All data is presented “as is,” “as available” for informational purposes. NTIA does not warrant the accuracy, adequacy, or completeness of this information and expressly disclaims liability for any errors or omissions.

  3. Sentinel-2 10m Land Use/Land Cover Change from 2018 to 2021 (Mature Support)...

    • pacificgeoportal.com
    • geoportal-pacificcore.hub.arcgis.com
    • +3more
    Updated Feb 10, 2022
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    Esri (2022). Sentinel-2 10m Land Use/Land Cover Change from 2018 to 2021 (Mature Support) [Dataset]. https://www.pacificgeoportal.com/datasets/30c4287128cc446b888ca020240c456b
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 10, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Esrihttp://esri.com/
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    Important Note: This item is in mature support as of February 2023 and will be retired in December 2025. A new version of this item is available for your use. Esri recommends updating your maps and apps to use the new version. This layer displays change in pixels of the Sentinel-2 10m Land Use/Land Cover product developed by Esri, Impact Observatory, and Microsoft. Available years to compare with 2021 are 2018, 2019 and 2020. By default, the layer shows all comparisons together, in effect showing what changed 2018-2021. But the layer may be changed to show one of three specific pairs of years, 2018-2021, 2019-2021, or 2020-2021.Showing just one pair of years in ArcGIS Online Map ViewerTo show just one pair of years in ArcGIS Online Map viewer, create a filter. 1. Click the filter button. 2. Next, click add expression. 3. In the expression dialogue, specify a pair of years with the ProductName attribute. Use the following example in your expression dialogue to show only places that changed between 2020 and 2021:ProductNameis2020-2021By default, places that do not change appear as a transparent symbol in ArcGIS Pro. But in ArcGIS Online Map Viewer, a transparent symbol may need to be set for these places after a filter is chosen. To do this:4. Click the styles button. 5. Under unique values click style options. 6. Click the symbol next to No Change at the bottom of the legend. 7. Click the slider next to "enable fill" to turn the symbol off.Showing just one pair of years in ArcGIS ProTo show just one pair of years in ArcGIS Pro, choose one of the layer's processing templates to single out a particular pair of years. The processing template applies a definition query that works in ArcGIS Pro. 1. To choose a processing template, right click the layer in the table of contents for ArcGIS Pro and choose properties. 2. In the dialogue that comes up, choose the tab that says processing templates. 3. On the right where it says processing template, choose the pair of years you would like to display. The processing template will stay applied for any analysis you may want to perform as well.How the change layer was created, combining LULC classes from two yearsImpact Observatory, Esri, and Microsoft used artificial intelligence to classify the world in 10 Land Use/Land Cover (LULC) classes for the years 2017-2021. Mosaics serve the following sets of change rasters in a single global layer: Change between 2018 and 2021Change between 2019 and 2021Change between 2020 and 2021To make this change layer, Esri used an arithmetic operation combining the cells from a source year and 2021 to make a change index value. ((from year * 16) + to year) In the example of the change between 2020 and 2021, the from year (2020) was multiplied by 16, then added to the to year (2021). Then the combined number is served as an index in an 8 bit unsigned mosaic with an attribute table which describes what changed or did not change in that timeframe. Variable mapped: Change in land cover between 2018, 2019, or 2020 and 2021 Data Projection: Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM)Mosaic Projection: WGS84Extent: GlobalSource imagery: Sentinel-2Cell Size: 10m (0.00008983152098239751 degrees)Type: ThematicSource: Esri Inc.Publication date: January 2022What can you do with this layer?Global LULC maps provide information on conservation planning, food security, and hydrologic modeling, among other things. This dataset can be used to visualize land cover anywhere on Earth. This layer can also be used in analyses that require land cover input. For example, the Zonal Statistics tools allow a user to understand the composition of a specified area by reporting the total estimates for each of the classes. Land Cover processingThis map was produced by a deep learning model trained using over 5 billion hand-labeled Sentinel-2 pixels, sampled from over 20,000 sites distributed across all major biomes of the world. The underlying deep learning model uses 6 bands of Sentinel-2 surface reflectance data: visible blue, green, red, near infrared, and two shortwave infrared bands. To create the final map, the model is run on multiple dates of imagery throughout the year, and the outputs are composited into a final representative map. Processing platformSentinel-2 L2A/B data was accessed via Microsoft’s Planetary Computer and scaled using Microsoft Azure Batch.Class definitions1. WaterAreas where water was predominantly present throughout the year; may not cover areas with sporadic or ephemeral water; contains little to no sparse vegetation, no rock outcrop nor built up features like docks; examples: rivers, ponds, lakes, oceans, flooded salt plains.2. TreesAny significant clustering of tall (~15-m or higher) dense vegetation, typically with a closed or dense canopy; examples: wooded vegetation,
    clusters of dense tall vegetation within savannas, plantations, swamp or mangroves (dense/tall vegetation with ephemeral water or canopy too thick to detect water underneath).4. Flooded vegetationAreas of any type of vegetation with obvious intermixing of water throughout a majority of the year; seasonally flooded area that is a mix of grass/shrub/trees/bare ground; examples: flooded mangroves, emergent vegetation, rice paddies and other heavily irrigated and inundated agriculture.5. CropsHuman planted/plotted cereals, grasses, and crops not at tree height; examples: corn, wheat, soy, fallow plots of structured land.7. Built AreaHuman made structures; major road and rail networks; large homogenous impervious surfaces including parking structures, office buildings and residential housing; examples: houses, dense villages / towns / cities, paved roads, asphalt.8. Bare groundAreas of rock or soil with very sparse to no vegetation for the entire year; large areas of sand and deserts with no to little vegetation; examples: exposed rock or soil, desert and sand dunes, dry salt flats/pans, dried lake beds, mines.9. Snow/IceLarge homogenous areas of permanent snow or ice, typically only in mountain areas or highest latitudes; examples: glaciers, permanent snowpack, snow fields. 10. CloudsNo land cover information due to persistent cloud cover.11. Rangeland Open areas covered in homogenous grasses with little to no taller vegetation; wild cereals and grasses with no obvious human plotting (i.e., not a plotted field); examples: natural meadows and fields with sparse to no tree cover, open savanna with few to no trees, parks/golf courses/lawns, pastures. Mix of small clusters of plants or single plants dispersed on a landscape that shows exposed soil or rock; scrub-filled clearings within dense forests that are clearly not taller than trees; examples: moderate to sparse cover of bushes, shrubs and tufts of grass, savannas with very sparse grasses, trees or other plants.CitationKarra, Kontgis, et al. “Global land use/land cover with Sentinel-2 and deep learning.” IGARSS 2021-2021 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium. IEEE, 2021.AcknowledgementsTraining data for this project makes use of the National Geographic Society Dynamic World training dataset, produced for the Dynamic World Project by National Geographic Society in partnership with Google and the World Resources Institute.For questions please email environment@esri.com

  4. Tutorial: Get started with raster functions in ArcGIS Pro

    • imagery-ivt.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Apr 26, 2022
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    Esri Imagery Virtual Team (2022). Tutorial: Get started with raster functions in ArcGIS Pro [Dataset]. https://imagery-ivt.hub.arcgis.com/items/597f264510564ed6a51168b6ed6ac527
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 26, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    Esrihttp://esri.com/
    Authors
    Esri Imagery Virtual Team
    Description

    In this tutorial, you'll learn how to build a raster function template (RFT) in ArcGIS Pro to support a processing workflow for assessing vegetation coverage and relative health.

  5. a

    India: GLDAS Change in Storage 2000 - Present

    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Mar 22, 2022
    + more versions
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    GIS Online (2022). India: GLDAS Change in Storage 2000 - Present [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/d0143cb70eb24e7bbe8c5d69a35f7499
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 22, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    GIS Online
    Area covered
    Description

    Calculating the total volume of water stored in a landscape can be challenging. In addition to lakes and reservoirs, water can be stored in soil, snowpack, or even inside plants and animals, and tracking the all these different mediums is not generally possible. However, calculating the change in storage is easy - just subtract the water output from the water input. Using the GLDAS layers we can do this calculation for every month from January 2000 to the present day. The precipitation layer tells us the input to each cell and runoff plus evapotranspiration is the output. When the input is higher than the output during a given month, it means water was stored. When output is higher than input, storage is being depleted. Generally the change in storage should be close to the change in soil moisture content plus the change in snowpack, but it will not match up exactly because of the other storage mediums discussed above.Dataset SummaryThe GLDAS Change in Storage layer is a time-enabled image service that shows net monthly change in storage from 2000 to the present, measured in millimeters of water. It is calculated by NASA using the Noah land surface model, run at 0.25 degree spatial resolution using satellite and ground-based observational data from the Global Land Data Assimilation System (GLDAS-2.1). The model is run with 3-hourly time steps and aggregated into monthly averages. Review the complete list of model inputs, explore the output data (in GRIB format), and see the full Hydrology Catalog for all related data and information!Phenomenon Mapped: Change in Water StorageUnits: MillimetersTime Interval: MonthlyTime Extent: 2000/01/01 to presentCell Size: 28 kmSource Type: ScientificPixel Type: Signed IntegerData Projection: GCS WGS84Mosaic Projection: Web Mercator Auxiliary SphereExtent: Global Land SurfaceSource: NASAUpdate Cycle: SporadicWhat can you do with this layer?This layer is suitable for both visualization and analysis. It can be used in ArcGIS Online in web maps and applications and can be used in ArcGIS for Desktop. It is useful for scientific modeling, but only at global scales.In ArcGIS Pro you can use the built-in raster functions or create your own to create custom extracts of the data. Imagery layers provide fast, powerful inputs to geoprocessing tools, models, or Python scripts in Pro.Online you can filter the layer to show subsets of the data using the filter button and the layer's built-in raster functions.By applying the "Calculate Anomaly" raster function, it is possible to view these data in terms of deviation from the mean, instead of total change in storage. Mean change in storage for a given month is calculated over the entire period of record - 2000 to present.Time: This is a time-enabled layer. By default, it will show the first month from the map's time extent. Or, if time animation is disabled, a time range can be set using the layer's multidimensional settings. If you wish to calculate the average, sum, or min/max change in storage over the time extent, change the mosaic operator used to resolve overlapping pixels. In ArcGIS Online, you do this in the "Image Display Order" tab. In ArcGIS Pro, use the "Data" ribbon. In ArcMap, it is in the 'Mosaic' tab of the layer properties window. The minimum time extent is one month, and the maximum is 8 years. Important: You must switch from the cartographic renderer to the analytic renderer in the processing template tab in the layer properties window before using this layer as an input to geoprocessing tools.

  6. u

    USA NLCD Impervious Surface Time Series

    • colorado-river-portal.usgs.gov
    • community-climatesolutions.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Sep 26, 2019
    + more versions
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    Esri (2019). USA NLCD Impervious Surface Time Series [Dataset]. https://colorado-river-portal.usgs.gov/datasets/1fdbb561c58b45c58f8f966c00c78ae6
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 26, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Esri
    Area covered
    Description

    Impervious surfaces are surfaces that do not allow water to pass through. Examples of these surfaces include highways, parking lots, rooftops, and airport runways. Instead of allowing rain to pass into the soil, impervious surfaces cause water to collect at the surface, then run off. An increase in impervious surface area causes an increase of water volume which needs to be managed by stormwater systems. With the flow come pollutants, which collect on impervious surfaces then discharge with the runoff into streams and the ocean. Runoff water does not enter the water table, and that can cause other management issues, such as interruptions in baseline stream flow.The NLCD imperviousness layer represents urban impervious surfaces as a percentage of developed surface over every 30-meter pixel in the United States. Phenomenon Mapped: The proportion of the landscape that is impervious to water.Time Extent: 2001, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2011, 2013, 2016, 2019, and 2021 for the lower 48 conterminous US states. A small portion of Alaska around Anchorage displays a time series of 2001, 2011, and 2016. Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and the US Virgin Islands unfortunately only have data for 2001 so there is only one image in the series. This information may be used in conjunction with the USA NLCD Land Cover layer.Units: PercentCell Size: 30 metersSource Type: DiscretePixel Type: Unsigned integerData Coordinate System: North America Albers Equal Area Conic (102008)Mosaic Projection: North America Albers Equal Area Conic (102008)Extent: CONUS, Hawaii, A portion of Alaska around Anchorage, District of Columbia, Puerto RicoNoData Value: 127Source: Multi-Resolution Land Characteristics ConsortiumPublication Date: June 30, 2023ArcGIS Server URL: https://landscape10.arcgis.com/arcgis/Time SeriesBy default, this layer will appear in your client with a time slider which allows you to play the series as an animation. The animation will advance year by year, but the layer only changes appearance every few years in the lower 48 states, in 2001, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2011, 2013, 2016, 2019, and 2021. To select just one year in the series, first turn the time series off on the time slider, then create a definition query on the layer which selects only the desired year.Time Series DescriptorMRLC issued a set of companion rasters with this impervious surface layer showing the reason why each pixel is impervious. This companion layer, called the Developed Imperviousness Descriptor, is not currently available in this map service. The descriptor layer identifies types of roads, core urban areas, and energy production sites for each impervious pixel to allow deeper analysis of developed features. The descriptor layer may be downloaded directly from MRLC and added to ArcGIS Pro.Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto RicoAt this time Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico are produced with a different methodology, and are not set up to be directly compared the way the CONUS time series is. To analyze change between the latest two data years for this portion of Alaska, be sure to use the NLCD 2011 to 2016 Developed Impervious Change raster. For Hawaii and Puerto Rico, only the year 2001 is available for download at the MRLC.North America Albers ProjectionAll NLCD layers in the Living Atlas are projected into the North America Albers Projection before serving in the Living Atlas. This allows the coterminous USA, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, and Alaska to be served from a common projection and analyzed together. In tests performed by esri, the NLCD land cover classes after projection to North America Albers had the exact same number of pixels in input as output, but pixels had been slightly rearranged after projection. Processing TemplatesThis layer comes with two color schemes, cool and warm. The default is a cool gray color scheme, designed to look good on light and dark gray web maps. To choose a warm color scheme which was the default until 2021, change the processing template to the Impervious Surface Warm Renderer in your map client.Dataset SummaryThe National Land Cover Database products are created through a cooperative project conducted by the Multi-Resolution Land Characteristics Consortium (MRLC). The MRLC Consortium is a partnership of federal agencies, consisting of the U.S. Geological Survey, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Forest Service, the National Park Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Bureau of Land Management and the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service.What can you do with this layer?This layer can be used to create maps and to visualize the underlying data. This layer can be used as an analytic input in ArcGIS Desktop.This layer is part of a larger collection of landscape layers that you can use to perform a wide variety of mapping and analysis tasks.The Living Atlas of the World provides an easy way to explore the landscape layers and many other beautiful and authoritative maps on hundreds of topics.

  7. a

    IRWIN Data Service User's Guide ( 20190325)

    • gis-fema.hub.arcgis.com
    • prep-response-portal.napsgfoundation.org
    • +3more
    Updated Nov 5, 2019
    + more versions
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    NAPSG Foundation (2019). IRWIN Data Service User's Guide ( 20190325) [Dataset]. https://gis-fema.hub.arcgis.com/documents/29d7b53aecc1491b9d42fd559368b22f
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 5, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    NAPSG Foundation
    Description

    IntroductionIRWIN ArcGIS Online GeoPlatform Services The Integrated Reporting of Wildland-Fire Information (IRWIN) Production data is replicated every 60 seconds to the ArcGIS Online GeoPlatform organization so that read-only views can be provided for consumers. This replicated view is called the hosted datastore. The “IRWIN Data” group is a set of Feature Layer views based on the replicated IRWIN layers. These feature layers provide a near real-time feed of all valid IRWIN data. All incidents that have been shared through the integration service since May 20, 2014 are available through this service. The incident data provides the location of existing fires, size, conditions and several other attributes that help classify fires. The IRWIN Data service allows users to create a web map, share it with their organization, or pull it into ArcMap or ArcGIS Pro for more in-depth analysis.InstructionsTo allow the emergency management GIS staff to join the IRWIN Data group, they will need to set up an ArcGIS Online account through our account manager. Please send the response to Samantha Gibbes (Samantha.C.Gibbes@saic.com) and Kayloni Ahtong (kayloni_ahtong@ios.doi.gov). Use the below template and fill in each part as best as possible, where the point of contact (POC) is the person responsible for the account.Reply Email Body: The (name of application) application requests the following user account and access to the IRWIN Data group.POC Name: First name Last name and titlePOC Email: Username: <>_irwin (choose a username, something short, followed by _irwin)Business Justification: Once you are set up with the account, I will coordinate a call to go over any questions.

  8. Visualize Urban Sprawl

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • africageoportal.com
    • +4more
    Updated Sep 11, 2020
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    Esri (2020). Visualize Urban Sprawl [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/content/9d344a720f274f7fb331f8ae00fecdce
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 11, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Esrihttp://esri.com/
    Description

    This template is used to compute urban growth between two land cover datasets, that are classified into 20 classes based on the Anderson Level II classification system. This raster function template is used to generate a visual representation indicating urbanization across two different time periods. Typical datasets used for this template is the National Land Cover Database. A more detailed blog on the datasets can be found on ArcGIS Blogs. This template works in ArcGIS Pro Version 2.6 and higher. It's designed to work on Enterprise 10.8.1 and higher.References:Raster functionsWhen to use this raster function templateThe template is useful to generate an intuitive visualization of urbanization across two images.Sample Images to test this againstNLCD2006 and NLCD2011How to use this raster function templateIn ArcGIS Pro, search ArcGIS Living Atlas for raster function templates to apply them to your imagery layer. You can also download the raster function template, attach it to a mosaic dataset, and publish it as an image service. The output is a visual representation of urban sprawl across two images. Applicable geographiesThe template is designed to work globally.

  9. USA Flood Hazard Areas

    • sea-level-rise-esrioceans.hub.arcgis.com
    • legacy-cities-lincolninstitute.hub.arcgis.com
    • +5more
    Updated Oct 3, 2018
    + more versions
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    Esri (2018). USA Flood Hazard Areas [Dataset]. https://sea-level-rise-esrioceans.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/11955f1b47ec41a3af86650824e0c634
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 3, 2018
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Esrihttp://esri.com/
    Area covered
    Pacific Ocean, North Pacific Ocean
    Description

    The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) produces Flood Insurance Rate maps and identifies Special Flood Hazard Areas as part of the National Flood Insurance Program's floodplain management. Special Flood Hazard Areas have regulations that include the mandatory purchase of flood insurance for holders of federally regulated mortgages. In addition, in the USA, this layer can help planners and firms avoid areas of flood risk and also avoid additional cost to carry insurance for certain planned activities.Dataset SummaryPhenomenon Mapped: Flood Hazard AreasUnits: NoneCell Sizes: 10 meters (default), 30 meters, and 90 metersSource Type: ThematicPixel Type: Unsigned integerData Coordinate System: USA Contiguous Albers Equal Area Conic USGS version (contiguous US, Puerto Rico, US Virgin Islands), WGS 1984 Albers (Alaska), Hawaii Albers Equal Area Conic (Hawaii), Western Pacific Albers Equal Area Conic (Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa)Mosaic Projection: Web Mercator Auxiliary SphereExtents: Contiguous United States, Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Guam, US Virgin Islands, Northern Mariana Islands and American Samoa.Source: Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)Publication Date: June 27, 2024ArcGIS Server URL: https://landscape11.arcgis.com/arcgis/This layer is derived from the June 27, 2024 version Flood Insurance Rate Map feature class S_FLD_HAZ_AR. The vector data were then flagged with an index of 88 classes, representing a unique combination of values displayed by three renderers. (In three resolutions the three renderers make nine processing templates.) Repair Geometry was run on the set of features, then the features were rasterized using the 88 class index at a resolutions of 10, 30, and 90 meters, using the Polygon to Raster tool and the "MAXIMUM_COMBINED_AREA" option. Not every part of the United States is covered by flood rate maps. This layer compiles all the flood insurance maps available at the time of publication. To make analysis easier, areas that were NOT mapped by FEMA for flood insurance rates no longer are served as NODATA but are filled in with a value of 250, representing any unmapped areas which appear in the US Census' boundary of the USA states and territories. The attribute table corresponding to value 250 will indicate that the area was not mapped.What can you do with this Layer? This layer is suitable for both visualization and analysis across the ArcGIS system. This layer can be combined with your data and other layers from the ArcGIS Living Atlas of the World in ArcGIS Online and ArcGIS Pro to create powerful web maps that can be used alone or in a story map or other application.Because this layer is part of the ArcGIS Living Atlas of the World it is easy to add to your map:In ArcGIS Online, you can add this layer to a map by selecting Add then Browse Living Atlas Layers. A window will open. Type "flood hazard areas" in the search box and browse to the layer. Select the layer then click Add to Map.In ArcGIS Pro, open a map and select Add Data from the Map Tab. Select Data at the top of the drop down menu. The Add Data dialog box will open on the left side of the box, expand Portal if necessary, then select Living Atlas. Type "flood hazard areas" in the search box, browse to the layer then click OK.In ArcGIS Pro you can use the built-in raster functions to create custom extracts of the data. Imagery layers provide fast, powerful inputs to geoprocessing tools, models, or Python scripts in Pro.The ArcGIS Living Atlas of the World provides an easy way to explore many other beautiful and authoritative maps on hundreds of topics like this one.Processing TemplatesCartographic Renderer - The default. These are meaningful classes grouped by FEMA which group its own Flood Zone Type and Subtype fields. This renderer uses FEMA's own cartographic interpretations of its flood zone and zone subtype fields to help you identify and assess risk. Flood Zone Type Renderer - Specifically renders FEMA FLD_ZONE (flood zone) attribute, which distinguishes the original, broadest categories of flood zones. This renderer displays high level categories of flood zones, and is less nuanced than the Cartographic Renderer. For example, a fld_zone value of X can either have moderate or low risk depending on location. This renderer will simply render fld_zone X as its own color without identifying "500 year" flood zones within that category.Flood Insurance Requirement Renderer - Shows Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA) true-false status. This may be helpful if you want to show just the places where flood insurance is required. A value of True means flood insurance is mandatory in a majority of the area covered by each 10m pixel.Each of these three renderers have templates at three different raster resolutions depending on your analysis needs. To include the layer in web maps to serve maps and queries, the 10 meter renderers are the preferred option. These are served with overviews and render at all resolutions. However, when doing analysis of larger areas, we now offer two coarser resolutions of 30 and 90 meters in processing templates for added convenience and time savings.

  10. a

    Sentinel-2 10m Land Use/Land Cover Change from 2018 to 2021

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • supply-chain-data-hub-nmcdc.hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated May 19, 2022
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    New Mexico Community Data Collaborative (2022). Sentinel-2 10m Land Use/Land Cover Change from 2018 to 2021 [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/NMCDC::sentinel-2-10m-land-use-land-cover-change-from-2018-to-2021/about
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    Dataset updated
    May 19, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    New Mexico Community Data Collaborative
    Area covered
    Description

    This layer displays change in pixels of the Sentinel-2 10m Land Use/Land Cover product developed by Esri, Impact Observatory, and Microsoft. Available years to compare with 2021 are 2018, 2019 and 2020.By default, the layer shows all comparisons together, in effect showing what changed 2018-2021. But the layer may be changed to show one of three specific pairs of years, 2018-2021, 2019-2021, or 2020-2021.Showing just one pair of years in ArcGIS Online Map ViewerTo show just one pair of years in ArcGIS Online Map viewer, create a filter.1. Click the filter button.2. Next, click add expression.3. In the expression dialogue, specify a pair of years with the ProductName attribute. Use the following example in your expression dialogue to show only places that changed between 2020 and 2021:ProductNameis2020-2021By default, places that do not change appear as a transparent symbol in ArcGIS Pro. But in ArcGIS Online Map Viewer, a transparent symbol may need to be set for these places after a filter is chosen. To do this:4. Click the styles button.5. Under unique values click style options.6. Click the symbol next to No Change at the bottom of the legend.7. Click the slider next to "enable fill" to turn the symbol off.Showing just one pair of years in ArcGIS ProTo show just one pair of years in ArcGIS Pro, choose one of the layer's processing templates to single out a particular pair of years. The processing template applies a definition query that works in ArcGIS Pro.1. To choose a processing template, right click the layer in the table of contents for ArcGIS Pro and choose properties.2. In the dialogue that comes up, choose the tab that says processing templates.3. On the right where it says processing template, choose the pair of years you would like to display.The processing template will stay applied for any analysis you may want to perform as well.How the change layer was created, combining LULC classes from two yearsImpact Observatory, Esri, and Microsoft used artificial intelligence to classify the world in 10 Land Use/Land Cover (LULC) classes for the years 2017-2021. Mosaics serve the following sets of change rasters in a single global layer:Change between 2018 and 2021Change between 2019 and 2021Change between 2020 and 2021To make this change layer, Esri used an arithmetic operation combining the cells from a source year and 2021 to make a change index value. ((from year * 16) + to year) In the example of the change between 2020 and 2021, the from year (2020) was multiplied by 16, then added to the to year (2021). Then the combined number is served as an index in an 8 bit unsigned mosaic with an attribute table which describes what changed or did not change in that timeframe.Variable mapped: Change in land cover between 2018, 2019, or 2020 and 2021Data Projection: Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM)Mosaic Projection: WGS84Extent: GlobalSource imagery: Sentinel-2Cell Size: 10m (0.00008983152098239751 degrees)Type: ThematicSource: Esri Inc.Publication date: January 2022What can you do with this layer?Global LULC maps provide information on conservation planning, food security, and hydrologic modeling, among other things. This dataset can be used to visualize land cover anywhere on Earth. This layer can also be used in analyses that require land cover input. For example, the Zonal Statistics tools allow a user to understand the composition of a specified area by reporting the total estimates for each of the classes.Land Cover processingThis map was produced by a deep learning model trained using over 5 billion hand-labeled Sentinel-2 pixels, sampled from over 20,000 sites distributed across all major biomes of the world. The underlying deep learning model uses 6 bands of Sentinel-2 surface reflectance data: visible blue, green, red, near infrared, and two shortwave infrared bands. To create the final map, the model is run on multiple dates of imagery throughout the year, and the outputs are composited into a final representative map.Processing platformSentinel-2 L2A/B data was accessed via Microsoft’s Planetary Computer and scaled using Microsoft Azure Batch.Class definitions1. WaterAreas where water was predominantly present throughout the year; may not cover areas with sporadic or ephemeral water; contains little to no sparse vegetation, no rock outcrop nor built up features like docks; examples: rivers, ponds, lakes, oceans, flooded salt plains.2. TreesAny significant clustering of tall (~15-m or higher) dense vegetation, typically with a closed or dense canopy; examples: wooded vegetation, clusters of dense tall vegetation within savannas, plantations, swamp or mangroves (dense/tall vegetation with ephemeral water or canopy too thick to detect water underneath).4. Flooded vegetationAreas of any type of vegetation with obvious intermixing of water throughout a majority of the year; seasonally flooded area that is a mix of grass/shrub/trees/bare ground; examples: flooded mangroves, emergent vegetation, rice paddies and other heavily irrigated and inundated agriculture.5. CropsHuman planted/plotted cereals, grasses, and crops not at tree height; examples: corn, wheat, soy, fallow plots of structured land.7. Built AreaHuman made structures; major road and rail networks; large homogenous impervious surfaces including parking structures, office buildings and residential housing; examples: houses, dense villages / towns / cities, paved roads, asphalt.8. Bare groundAreas of rock or soil with very sparse to no vegetation for the entire year; large areas of sand and deserts with no to little vegetation; examples: exposed rock or soil, desert and sand dunes, dry salt flats/pans, dried lake beds, mines.9. Snow/IceLarge homogenous areas of permanent snow or ice, typically only in mountain areas or highest latitudes; examples: glaciers, permanent snowpack, snow fields. 10. CloudsNo land cover information due to persistent cloud cover.11. RangelandOpen areas covered in homogenous grasses with little to no taller vegetation; wild cereals and grasses with no obvious human plotting (i.e., not a plotted field); examples: natural meadows and fields with sparse to no tree cover, open savanna with few to no trees, parks/golf courses/lawns, pastures. Mix of small clusters of plants or single plants dispersed on a landscape that shows exposed soil or rock; scrub-filled clearings within dense forests that are clearly not taller than trees; examples: moderate to sparse cover of bushes, shrubs and tufts of grass, savannas with very sparse grasses, trees or other plants.CitationKarra, Kontgis, et al. “Global land use/land cover with Sentinel-2 and deep learning.” IGARSS 2021-2021 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium. IEEE, 2021.AcknowledgementsTraining data for this project makes use of the National Geographic Society Dynamic World training dataset, produced for the Dynamic World Project by National Geographic Society in partnership with Google and the World Resources Institute.For questions please email environment@esri.com

  11. Terrain Ruggedness Index (TRI)

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • africageoportal.com
    • +3more
    Updated Sep 27, 2020
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    Esri (2020). Terrain Ruggedness Index (TRI) [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/content/28360713391948af9303c0aeabb45afd
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 27, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Esrihttp://esri.com/
    Description

    The Terrain Ruggedness Index (TRI) is used to express the amount of elevation difference between adjacent cells of a DEM. This raster function template is used to generate a visual representation of the TRI with your elevation data. The results are interpreted as follows:0-80m is considered to represent a level terrain surface81-116m represents a nearly level surface117-161m represents a slightly rugged surface162-239m represents an intermediately rugged surface240-497m represents a moderately rugged surface498-958m represents a highly rugged surface959-4367m represents an extremely rugged surfaceWhen to use this raster function templateThe main value of this measurement is that it gives a relatively accurate view of the vertical change taking place in the terrain model from cell to cell. The TRI provides data on the relative change in height of the hillslope (rise), such as the side of a canyon.How to use this raster function templateIn ArcGIS Pro, search ArcGIS Living Atlas for raster function templates to apply them to your imagery layer. You can also download the raster function template, attach it to a mosaic dataset, and publish it as an image service. The output is a visual TRI representation of your imagery. This index supports elevation data.References:Raster functionsApplicable geographiesThe index is a standard index which is designed to work globally.

  12. My Precious style for ArcGIS Pro

    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Sep 11, 2018
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    Esri Styles (2018). My Precious style for ArcGIS Pro [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/content/0ca1526cfa254f4e9d4b1392b343861d
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 11, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    Esrihttp://esri.com/
    Authors
    Esri Styles
    Description

    May this style be a light to you in dark places when all other light goes out.Here is a shortcut through the Mines of Moria to an ArcGIS Pro project with all this data and styles all set up and ready to go.Happy Fantasy Mapping! John Nelson

  13. a

    Heat Severity - USA 2023

    • community-climatesolutions.hub.arcgis.com
    • giscommons-countyplanning.opendata.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Apr 23, 2024
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    The Trust for Public Land (2024). Heat Severity - USA 2023 [Dataset]. https://community-climatesolutions.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/db5bdb0f0c8c4b85b8270ec67448a0b6
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 23, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    The Trust for Public Land
    Area covered
    Description

    Notice: this is the latest Heat Island Severity image service.This layer contains the relative heat severity for every pixel for every city in the United States, including Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico. This 30-meter raster was derived from Landsat 8 imagery band 10 (ground-level thermal sensor) from the summer of 2023.To explore previous versions of the data, visit the links below:Heat Severity - USA 2022Heat Severity - USA 2021Heat Severity - USA 2020Heat Severity - USA 2019Federal statistics over a 30-year period show extreme heat is the leading cause of weather-related deaths in the United States. Extreme heat exacerbated by urban heat islands can lead to increased respiratory difficulties, heat exhaustion, and heat stroke. These heat impacts significantly affect the most vulnerable—children, the elderly, and those with preexisting conditions.The purpose of this layer is to show where certain areas of cities are hotter than the average temperature for that same city as a whole. Severity is measured on a scale of 1 to 5, with 1 being a relatively mild heat area (slightly above the mean for the city), and 5 being a severe heat area (significantly above the mean for the city). The absolute heat above mean values are classified into these 5 classes using the Jenks Natural Breaks classification method, which seeks to reduce the variance within classes and maximize the variance between classes. Knowing where areas of high heat are located can help a city government plan for mitigation strategies.This dataset represents a snapshot in time. It will be updated yearly, but is static between updates. It does not take into account changes in heat during a single day, for example, from building shadows moving. The thermal readings detected by the Landsat 8 sensor are surface-level, whether that surface is the ground or the top of a building. Although there is strong correlation between surface temperature and air temperature, they are not the same. We believe that this is useful at the national level, and for cities that don’t have the ability to conduct their own hyper local temperature survey. Where local data is available, it may be more accurate than this dataset. Dataset SummaryThis dataset was developed using proprietary Python code developed at Trust for Public Land, running on the Descartes Labs platform through the Descartes Labs API for Python. The Descartes Labs platform allows for extremely fast retrieval and processing of imagery, which makes it possible to produce heat island data for all cities in the United States in a relatively short amount of time.What can you do with this layer?This layer has query, identify, and export image services available. Since it is served as an image service, it is not necessary to download the data; the service itself is data that can be used directly in any Esri geoprocessing tool that accepts raster data as input.In order to click on the image service and see the raw pixel values in a map viewer, you must be signed in to ArcGIS Online, then Enable Pop-Ups and Configure Pop-Ups.Using the Urban Heat Island (UHI) Image ServicesThe data is made available as an image service. There is a processing template applied that supplies the yellow-to-red or blue-to-red color ramp, but once this processing template is removed (you can do this in ArcGIS Pro or ArcGIS Desktop, or in QGIS), the actual data values come through the service and can be used directly in a geoprocessing tool (for example, to extract an area of interest). Following are instructions for doing this in Pro.In ArcGIS Pro, in a Map view, in the Catalog window, click on Portal. In the Portal window, click on the far-right icon representing Living Atlas. Search on the acronyms “tpl” and “uhi”. The results returned will be the UHI image services. Right click on a result and select “Add to current map” from the context menu. When the image service is added to the map, right-click on it in the map view, and select Properties. In the Properties window, select Processing Templates. On the drop-down menu at the top of the window, the default Processing Template is either a yellow-to-red ramp or a blue-to-red ramp. Click the drop-down, and select “None”, then “OK”. Now you will have the actual pixel values displayed in the map, and available to any geoprocessing tool that takes a raster as input. Below is a screenshot of ArcGIS Pro with a UHI image service loaded, color ramp removed, and symbology changed back to a yellow-to-red ramp (a classified renderer can also be used): A typical operation at this point is to clip out your area of interest. To do this, add your polygon shapefile or feature class to the map view, and use the Clip Raster tool to export your area of interest as a geoTIFF raster (file extension ".tif"). In the environments tab for the Clip Raster tool, click the dropdown for "Extent" and select "Same as Layer:", and select the name of your polygon. If you then need to convert the output raster to a polygon shapefile or feature class, run the Raster to Polygon tool, and select "Value" as the field.Other Sources of Heat Island InformationPlease see these websites for valuable information on heat islands and to learn about exciting new heat island research being led by scientists across the country:EPA’s Heat Island Resource CenterDr. Ladd Keith, University of ArizonaDr. Ben McMahan, University of Arizona Dr. Jeremy Hoffman, Science Museum of Virginia Dr. Hunter Jones, NOAA Daphne Lundi, Senior Policy Advisor, NYC Mayor's Office of Recovery and ResiliencyDisclaimer/FeedbackWith nearly 14,000 cities represented, checking each city's heat island raster for quality assurance would be prohibitively time-consuming, so Trust for Public Land checked a statistically significant sample size for data quality. The sample passed all quality checks, with about 98.5% of the output cities error-free, but there could be instances where the user finds errors in the data. These errors will most likely take the form of a line of discontinuity where there is no city boundary; this type of error is caused by large temperature differences in two adjacent Landsat scenes, so the discontinuity occurs along scene boundaries (see figure below). Trust for Public Land would appreciate feedback on these errors so that version 2 of the national UHI dataset can be improved. Contact Dale.Watt@tpl.org with feedback.

  14. Lesson: Calculate landslide potential for communities affected by wildfires

    • imagery-ivt.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated May 19, 2022
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    Esri Imagery Virtual Team (2022). Lesson: Calculate landslide potential for communities affected by wildfires [Dataset]. https://imagery-ivt.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/lesson-calculate-landslide-potential-for-communities-affected-by-wildfires
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    Dataset updated
    May 19, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    Esrihttp://esri.com/
    Authors
    Esri Imagery Virtual Team
    Description

    Lesson: Use distributed raster analysis to analyze burn severity, slope and landcover.Wildfires make the landscape more susceptible to landslides when rainstorms pass through an area after wildfires. Post-fire debris flows are particularly hazardous because they can occur with little warning, can exert great impulsive loads on objects in their paths, and can strip vegetation, block drainage ways, damage structures, and endanger human life. Often there is not enough time between a fire and a rainstorm to implement an effective emergency response plan. However, various post-fire debris-flow hazard assessment models have been developed to estimate the probability and volume of debris flows that may occur in response to a storm.For more detailed information on hazard assessment, review the following resources:Emergency Assessment of Post-Fire Debris-Flow HazardsPost-fire debris-flow modelsUSDA/USFS site for burn area emergency responseIn this lesson, you will use ArcGIS Enterpriseconfigured for distributed raster analysis using ArcGIS Image Server. In the steps, you will create a landslide risk map to kick off more advanced debris-flow hazard assessment modeling. Creating the landslide risk map uses raster function chains to derive a burn severity map, topographic slope map, and a land-cover index map, which are combined into one processing chain for ArcGIS Enterprise to execute.The use of distributed raster analysis for this workflow demonstrates how ArcGIS Enterprise can be deployed in a rapid way to process large volumes of data across a widely affected area. However, when using raster and image analysis tools in ArcGIS Pro, a similar workflow may be developed and deployed without the benefit of distributed raster analysis. In addition, functionality in ArcGIS Image for ArcGIS Online may also be used to achieve similar results.This lesson was last tested on January 31, 2021, using ArcGIS Pro 2.9. If you're using a different version of ArcGIS Pro, you may encounter different functionality and results.View final resultRequirementsArcGIS Pro (get a free trial)ArcGIS Enterprise 10.6.1 or later: base deployment with a dedicated ArcGIS Image ServerArcGIS Image Server license for ArcGIS EnterpriseLesson Plan1. Configure the image serverSet up ArcGIS Enterprise to perform distributed raster processing.20 minutes2. Create a landslide risk mapUse raster function templates to create a map that summarizes landslide risk by watershed.1 hour3. Share a web appConfigure a web app to share your findings with your ArcGIS Enterprise account.10 minutes

  15. Not seeing a result you expected?
    Learn how you can add new datasets to our index.

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Vancouver Online Maps (2023). metadataProjectTemplate [Dataset]. https://city-of-vancouver-strategic-plan-dashboard-cityofvancouver.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/metadataprojecttemplate

metadataProjectTemplate

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Dataset updated
Oct 15, 2023
Dataset authored and provided by
Vancouver Online Maps
License

MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically

Description

Description of the item, its purpose, and any pertinent details about how it was made or used: this metadata resource is for use by City of Vancouver GIS employees or other CoV employees authoring data products in ArcGIS Pro or equivalent environment. Suggested use: Edit the Project metadata record by replacing only those elements that will likely change, including your name, phone, contact info (if different); keep elements that are common for all CoV data (bounding box, phone for metadata contact, etc.). NOTES FOR USING TEMPLATE FILES: If choosing "Open in ArcGIS Pro" option from the Item page, a pitemx file will be generated and you will be prompted to create a new project. Upon creating a new project, this template will generate the project metadata and open the thumbnail template. If choosing "Download" option: when opening ArcGIS Pro, choose "Start with Another Template" option (a folder icon below the main Template option row).

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