43 datasets found
  1. BLM OR Management Ownership Dissolve Polygon Hub

    • catalog.data.gov
    • datasets.ai
    • +1more
    Updated Nov 11, 2025
    + more versions
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    Bureau of Land Management (2025). BLM OR Management Ownership Dissolve Polygon Hub [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/blm-or-management-ownership-dissolve-polygon-hub-079fc
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Nov 11, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Bureau of Land Managementhttp://www.blm.gov/
    Description

    ownership_poly_dissolve: This theme portrays information related to surface jurisdiction of lands located in the states of Oregon and Washington.

  2. a

    Maine Town and Townships Boundary Polygons Dissolved Feature

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • mainegeolibrary-maine.hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Aug 2, 2021
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    State of Maine (2021). Maine Town and Townships Boundary Polygons Dissolved Feature [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/datasets/b0c7b943162f45e48b3a829b7f35709a
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Aug 2, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    State of Maine
    Area covered
    Description

    METWP24PD depicts dissolved political boundaries for all Organized Towns and Unorganized Territories in Maine at 1:24,000 scale. "Dissolved" means that municipalities or townships with multiple disconnected entities (ex. islands) are grouped as multipart polygons in a single geometry with the appropriate municipality or township label and attribute data. This approach reduces the number of labels required and improves layer drawing performance for low-bandwidth environments. Example: a town has 430 distinct island entities that are all labeled as "town" in addition to the municipality itself. When dissolved, it has only one geometry that includes all 430 entities' combined area and attributes with the municipality, and one label of "town". METWP24PD includes common town names and authoritative geocodes in its attribute information. The layer was created using the USGS 7.5-minute map series and the Maine GIS base layer COAST, which contains Maine's coastal Mean High Water (MHW) mark and Maine islands. To correct mapping errors and reflect changes to Minor Civil Division (MCD) boundaries, arcs and polygons were added or updated using the following data sources: photorevised USGS data; Maine GIS base layer coincident features; legal descriptions; GPS data; and Maine Department of Transportation (MEDOT) engineering plans. METWP24P also contains USGS 1:100,000-scale data and U.S. Department of Commerce Census Bureau TIGER Line Files from 1990 and 2000 where these provide a more correct or best available representation of a feature in question.

  3. W

    Cold and Heat Hazards (Dissolved Polygons)

    • wifire-data.sdsc.edu
    csv, esri rest +5
    Updated Oct 10, 2019
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    CA Governor's Office of Emergency Services (2019). Cold and Heat Hazards (Dissolved Polygons) [Dataset]. https://wifire-data.sdsc.edu/dataset/cold-and-heat-hazards-dissolved-polygons
    Explore at:
    csv, esri rest, kml, geojson, zip, ogc wms, htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 10, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    CA Governor's Office of Emergency Services
    Description

    This nowCOASTtime-enabled map service provides maps depicting the geographic coverage of the latest NOAA/National Weather Service (NWS) WATCHES, WARNINGS, ADVISORIES, and STATEMENTS for long-duration hazardous weather, marine weather, hydrological, oceanographic, wildfire, air quality, and ecological conditions which may or are presently affecting inland, coastal, and maritime areas. A few examples include Gale Watch, Gale Warning, High Surf Advisory, High Wind Watch, Areal Flood Warning, Coastal Flood Watch, Winter Storm Warning, Wind Chill Advisory, Frost Advisory, Tropical Storm Watch, Red Flag Warning, Air Stagnation Warning, and Beach Hazards Statement. (A complete list is given in the Background Information section below.) The coverage areas of these products are usually defined by county or sub-county boundaries. The colors used to identify the different watches, advisories, warnings, and statements are the same colors used by the NWS on their map at weather.gov. The NWS products for long-duration hazardous conditions are updated in the nowCOAST map service approximately every 10 minutes. For more detailed information about the update schedule, please see: http://new.nowcoast.noaa.gov/help/#section=updateschedule.

    The coverage areas of these products are usually defined by county or sub-county boundaries, but for simplicity and performance reasons, adjacent WWAs of the same type, issuance, and expiration are depicted in this service as unified (merged/dissolved) polygons in the layers indicated with the suffix "(Dissolved Polygons)". However, a set of equivalent layers containing the original individual zone geometries are also included for querying purposes, and are indicated with the suffix "(Zone Polygons)". Corresponding zone polygon and dissolved polygon layers are matched together in group layers for each WWA category. The zone polygon layers are included in this service only to support query/identify operations (e.g., in order to retrieve the original zone geometry or other attributes such as a URL to the warning text bulletin) and thus will not be drawn when included in a normal map image request. Thus, the dissolved polygon layers should be used when requesting a map image (e.g. WMS GetMap or ArcGIS REST export operations), while the zone polygon layers should be used when performing a query (e.g. WMS GetFeatureInfo or ArcGIS REST query or identify operations).

    The colors used to identify the different watches, advisories, warnings, and statements are the same colors used by the NWS on their map at http://www.weather.gov. The NWS products for long-duration hazardous conditions are updated in the nowCOAST™ map service approximately every 10 minutes. For more detailed information about layer update frequency and timing, please reference the
    nowCOAST™ Dataset Update Schedule.

    Background Information

    NWS watches depict the geographic areas where the risk of hazardous weather or hydrologic events has increased significantly, but their occurrence, location, and/or timing is still uncertain. A warning depicts where a hazardous weather or hydrologic event is occurring, is imminent, or has a very high probability of occurring. A warning is used for conditions posing a threat to life or property. Advisories indicate where special weather conditions are occurring, imminent, or have a very high probability of occurring but are less serious than a warning. They are for events that may cause significant inconvenience, and if caution is not exercised, could lead to situations that may threaten life and/or property. Statements usually contain updated information on a warning and are used to let the public know when a warning is no longer in effect. NWS issues over 75 different types of watches, warnings, and advisories (WWAs). WWAs are issued by the NWS regional Weather Forecast Offices (WFOs) and also the NWS Ocean Prediction Center, National Hurricane Center, Central Pacific Hurricane Center, and Storm Prediction Center.

    The NWS WWAs are organized on the nowCOAST™ map viewer and within this map service by hazardous condition/threat layer groups and then by the geographic area (i.e. coastal & inland, immediate coast or maritime) for which the WWA product is targeted. This was done to allow users to select WWAs for hazardous conditions that are important to their operations or activities.

    Please note that the Tropical Storm and Hurricane Warnings are provided in both the High Wind Hazards: Maritime Areas and Coastal & Inland Areas layer groups and the Flooding Hazards: Coastal Areas layer group. These warnings are included in the Flooding Hazards/Coastal Areas layer group because the NWS uses those warnings to inform the public that tropical storm or hurricane winds may be accompanied by significant coastal flooding but below the thresholds required for the issuance of a storm surge warning. In addition, a tropical storm or hurricane warning may remain in effect when dangerously high water or a combination of dangerously high water and waves continue, even though the winds may be less than hurricane or tropical storm force. The NWS does not issue a Coastal Flood Warning or Advisory when a tropical storm or hurricane warning is in effect; however that does not mean that there is not a significant coastal flooding threat.

    • High Wind Hazards (Associated with Non-Tropical & Tropical Cyclones)
      • Maritime Areas
        • Brisk Wind Advisory
        • Small Craft Advisory
        • Small Craft Advisory for Winds
        • Gale Watch
        • Gale Warning
        • Storm Watch
        • Storm Warning
        • Hurricane Force Wind Watch
        • Hurricane Force Wind Warning
        • Tropical Storm Watch
        • Tropical Storm Warning
        • Hurricane Watch
        • Hurricane Warning
         </li>
         <li>
          Coastal & Inland Areas
          <ul>
           <li>High Wind Watch</li>
           <li>Wind Advisory</li>
           <li>Lake Wind Advisory</li>
           <li>High Wind Warning</li>
           <li>Tropical Storm Watch</li>
           <li>Tropical Storm Warning</li>
           <li>Hurricane Watch</li>
           <li>Hurricane Warning</li>
          </ul>
         </li>
        </ul>
        

      • Hazardous Seas, Surf, and Beach Conditions
        • Maritime Areas
          • Small Craft Advisory for Hazardous Seas
          • Small Craft Advisory for Rough Bar
          • Hazardous Seas Watch
          • Hazardous Seas Warning
        • Immediate Coast
          • Beach Hazards Statement
          • High Surf Advisory
          • High Surf Warning
          • Low Water Advisory
          • Rip Current Statement
      • Flooding Hazards
        • Coastal Areas
          • Coastal Flood Statement
          • Coastal Flood Watch
          • Coastal Flood Advisory
          • Coastal Flood Warning
          • Lakeshore Flood Watch
          • Lakeshore Flood Advisory
          • Lakeshore Flood Warning
          • Lakeshore Flood Statement
          • Storm Surge Watch
          • Storm Surge Warning
          • Tsunami Watch
          • Tsunami Warning
          • Tropical Storm Warning
          • Hurricane Warning
        • Inland Areas
          • Flood Watch (Point) (also called River Flood Watch)
          • Flood Watch (Areal)
          • Flood Advisory (Point) (also called River Flood Advisory)
          • Flood Advisory (Areal)
          • Flood Warning (Point) (also called River Flood Warning)
          • Flood Warning (Areal)
          • Hydrologic Outlook
          • Hydrologic Statement
      • Reduced Visibility Hazards
        • Maritime Areas
          • Dense Fog Advisory
        • Coastal & Inland Areas
          • Ashfall Advisory
          • Ashfall Warning
          • Blowing Dust Advisory
          • Blowing Dust Warning
          • Dense Fog Advisory
          • Dense Smoke Advisory
      • Freezing Spray Hazards
        • Maritime Areas
          • Heavy Freezing Spray Watch
          • Freezing Spray Advisory
          • Heavy Freezing Spray Advisory
      • Snow, Sleet, Freezing Rain, and Freezing Fog Hazards
        • Coastal & Inland Areas

  4. a

    Maine County Boundary Polygons Dissolved Feature

    • mainegeolibrary-maine.hub.arcgis.com
    • pmorrisas430623-gisanddata.opendata.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Aug 2, 2021
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    State of Maine (2021). Maine County Boundary Polygons Dissolved Feature [Dataset]. https://mainegeolibrary-maine.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/maine-county-boundary-polygons-dissolved-feature-1
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Aug 2, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    State of Maine
    Area covered
    Description

    Maine County Boundary Polygons Dissolved contains county boundary polygons for all sixteen counties in Maine, mapped at the 1:24,000 scale. "Dissolved" means that counties with multiple disconnected entities (ex. islands) are grouped as multipart polygons in a single geometry with the appropriate county label and attribute data. This approach reduces the number of labels required and improves layer drawing performance for low-bandwidth environments. The data layer has polygon topology and was originally created in ArcInfo using METWP24P with a selection on arcs coded "TYPE = state, county, and coastline".

  5. W

    Hazardous Air Quality (Dissolved Polygons)

    • wifire-data.sdsc.edu
    csv, esri rest +5
    Updated Oct 10, 2019
    + more versions
    Share
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    CA Governor's Office of Emergency Services (2019). Hazardous Air Quality (Dissolved Polygons) [Dataset]. https://wifire-data.sdsc.edu/dataset/hazardous-air-quality-dissolved-polygons
    Explore at:
    csv, geojson, ogc wms, html, zip, esri rest, kmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 10, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    CA Governor's Office of Emergency Services
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This nowCOASTtime-enabled map service provides maps depicting the geographic coverage of the latest NOAA/National Weather Service (NWS) WATCHES, WARNINGS, ADVISORIES, and STATEMENTS for long-duration hazardous weather, marine weather, hydrological, oceanographic, wildfire, air quality, and ecological conditions which may or are presently affecting inland, coastal, and maritime areas. A few examples include Gale Watch, Gale Warning, High Surf Advisory, High Wind Watch, Areal Flood Warning, Coastal Flood Watch, Winter Storm Warning, Wind Chill Advisory, Frost Advisory, Tropical Storm Watch, Red Flag Warning, Air Stagnation Warning, and Beach Hazards Statement. (A complete list is given in the Background Information section below.) The coverage areas of these products are usually defined by county or sub-county boundaries. The colors used to identify the different watches, advisories, warnings, and statements are the same colors used by the NWS on their map at weather.gov. The NWS products for long-duration hazardous conditions are updated in the nowCOAST map service approximately every 10 minutes. For more detailed information about the update schedule, please see: http://new.nowcoast.noaa.gov/help/#section=updateschedule.

    The coverage areas of these products are usually defined by county or sub-county boundaries, but for simplicity and performance reasons, adjacent WWAs of the same type, issuance, and expiration are depicted in this service as unified (merged/dissolved) polygons in the layers indicated with the suffix "(Dissolved Polygons)". However, a set of equivalent layers containing the original individual zone geometries are also included for querying purposes, and are indicated with the suffix "(Zone Polygons)". Corresponding zone polygon and dissolved polygon layers are matched together in group layers for each WWA category. The zone polygon layers are included in this service only to support query/identify operations (e.g., in order to retrieve the original zone geometry or other attributes such as a URL to the warning text bulletin) and thus will not be drawn when included in a normal map image request. Thus, the dissolved polygon layers should be used when requesting a map image (e.g. WMS GetMap or ArcGIS REST export operations), while the zone polygon layers should be used when performing a query (e.g. WMS GetFeatureInfo or ArcGIS REST query or identify operations).

    The colors used to identify the different watches, advisories, warnings, and statements are the same colors used by the NWS on their map at http://www.weather.gov. The NWS products for long-duration hazardous conditions are updated in the nowCOAST™ map service approximately every 10 minutes. For more detailed information about layer update frequency and timing, please reference the
    nowCOAST™ Dataset Update Schedule.

    Background Information

    NWS watches depict the geographic areas where the risk of hazardous weather or hydrologic events has increased significantly, but their occurrence, location, and/or timing is still uncertain. A warning depicts where a hazardous weather or hydrologic event is occurring, is imminent, or has a very high probability of occurring. A warning is used for conditions posing a threat to life or property. Advisories indicate where special weather conditions are occurring, imminent, or have a very high probability of occurring but are less serious than a warning. They are for events that may cause significant inconvenience, and if caution is not exercised, could lead to situations that may threaten life and/or property. Statements usually contain updated information on a warning and are used to let the public know when a warning is no longer in effect. NWS issues over 75 different types of watches, warnings, and advisories (WWAs). WWAs are issued by the NWS regional Weather Forecast Offices (WFOs) and also the NWS Ocean Prediction Center, National Hurricane Center, Central Pacific Hurricane Center, and Storm Prediction Center.

    The NWS WWAs are organized on the nowCOAST™ map viewer and within this map service by hazardous condition/threat layer groups and then by the geographic area (i.e. coastal & inland, immediate coast or maritime) for which the WWA product is targeted. This was done to allow users to select WWAs for hazardous conditions that are important to their operations or activities.

    Please note that the Tropical Storm and Hurricane Warnings are provided in both the High Wind Hazards: Maritime Areas and Coastal & Inland Areas layer groups and the Flooding Hazards: Coastal Areas layer group. These warnings are included in the Flooding Hazards/Coastal Areas layer group because the NWS uses those warnings to inform the public that tropical storm or hurricane winds may be accompanied by significant coastal flooding but below the thresholds required for the issuance of a storm surge warning. In addition, a tropical storm or hurricane warning may remain in effect when dangerously high water or a combination of dangerously high water and waves continue, even though the winds may be less than hurricane or tropical storm force. The NWS does not issue a Coastal Flood Warning or Advisory when a tropical storm or hurricane warning is in effect; however that does not mean that there is not a significant coastal flooding threat.

    • High Wind Hazards (Associated with Non-Tropical & Tropical Cyclones)
      • Maritime Areas
        • Brisk Wind Advisory
        • Small Craft Advisory
        • Small Craft Advisory for Winds
        • Gale Watch
        • Gale Warning
        • Storm Watch
        • Storm Warning
        • Hurricane Force Wind Watch
        • Hurricane Force Wind Warning
        • Tropical Storm Watch
        • Tropical Storm Warning
        • Hurricane Watch
        • Hurricane Warning
         </li>
         <li>
          Coastal & Inland Areas
          <ul>
           <li>High Wind Watch</li>
           <li>Wind Advisory</li>
           <li>Lake Wind Advisory</li>
           <li>High Wind Warning</li>
           <li>Tropical Storm Watch</li>
           <li>Tropical Storm Warning</li>
           <li>Hurricane Watch</li>
           <li>Hurricane Warning</li>
          </ul>
         </li>
        </ul>
        

      • Hazardous Seas, Surf, and Beach Conditions
        • Maritime Areas
          • Small Craft Advisory for Hazardous Seas
          • Small Craft Advisory for Rough Bar
          • Hazardous Seas Watch
          • Hazardous Seas Warning
        • Immediate Coast
          • Beach Hazards Statement
          • High Surf Advisory
          • High Surf Warning
          • Low Water Advisory
          • Rip Current Statement
      • Flooding Hazards
        • Coastal Areas
          • Coastal Flood Statement
          • Coastal Flood Watch
          • Coastal Flood Advisory
          • Coastal Flood Warning
          • Lakeshore Flood Watch
          • Lakeshore Flood Advisory
          • Lakeshore Flood Warning
          • Lakeshore Flood Statement
          • Storm Surge Watch
          • Storm Surge Warning
          • Tsunami Watch
          • Tsunami Warning
          • Tropical Storm Warning
          • Hurricane Warning
        • Inland Areas
          • Flood Watch (Point) (also called River Flood Watch)
          • Flood Watch (Areal)
          • Flood Advisory (Point) (also called River Flood Advisory)
          • Flood Advisory (Areal)
          • Flood Warning (Point) (also called River Flood Warning)
          • Flood Warning (Areal)
          • Hydrologic Outlook
          • Hydrologic Statement
      • Reduced Visibility Hazards
        • Maritime Areas
          • Dense Fog Advisory
        • Coastal & Inland Areas
          • Ashfall Advisory
          • Ashfall Warning
          • Blowing Dust Advisory
          • Blowing Dust Warning
          • Dense Fog Advisory
          • Dense Smoke Advisory
      • Freezing Spray Hazards
        • Maritime Areas
          • Heavy Freezing Spray Watch
          • Freezing Spray Advisory
          • Heavy Freezing

  6. W

    Hazardous Wildfire Conditions (Dissolved Polygons)

    • wifire-data.sdsc.edu
    csv, esri rest +5
    Updated Oct 10, 2019
    Share
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    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    CA Governor's Office of Emergency Services (2019). Hazardous Wildfire Conditions (Dissolved Polygons) [Dataset]. https://wifire-data.sdsc.edu/dataset/hazardous-wildfire-conditions-dissolved-polygons
    Explore at:
    kml, ogc wms, csv, geojson, html, zip, esri restAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 10, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    CA Governor's Office of Emergency Services
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This nowCOASTtime-enabled map service provides maps depicting the geographic coverage of the latest NOAA/National Weather Service (NWS) WATCHES, WARNINGS, ADVISORIES, and STATEMENTS for long-duration hazardous weather, marine weather, hydrological, oceanographic, wildfire, air quality, and ecological conditions which may or are presently affecting inland, coastal, and maritime areas. A few examples include Gale Watch, Gale Warning, High Surf Advisory, High Wind Watch, Areal Flood Warning, Coastal Flood Watch, Winter Storm Warning, Wind Chill Advisory, Frost Advisory, Tropical Storm Watch, Red Flag Warning, Air Stagnation Warning, and Beach Hazards Statement. (A complete list is given in the Background Information section below.) The coverage areas of these products are usually defined by county or sub-county boundaries. The colors used to identify the different watches, advisories, warnings, and statements are the same colors used by the NWS on their map at weather.gov. The NWS products for long-duration hazardous conditions are updated in the nowCOAST map service approximately every 10 minutes. For more detailed information about the update schedule, please see: http://new.nowcoast.noaa.gov/help/#section=updateschedule.

    The coverage areas of these products are usually defined by county or sub-county boundaries, but for simplicity and performance reasons, adjacent WWAs of the same type, issuance, and expiration are depicted in this service as unified (merged/dissolved) polygons in the layers indicated with the suffix "(Dissolved Polygons)". However, a set of equivalent layers containing the original individual zone geometries are also included for querying purposes, and are indicated with the suffix "(Zone Polygons)". Corresponding zone polygon and dissolved polygon layers are matched together in group layers for each WWA category. The zone polygon layers are included in this service only to support query/identify operations (e.g., in order to retrieve the original zone geometry or other attributes such as a URL to the warning text bulletin) and thus will not be drawn when included in a normal map image request. Thus, the dissolved polygon layers should be used when requesting a map image (e.g. WMS GetMap or ArcGIS REST export operations), while the zone polygon layers should be used when performing a query (e.g. WMS GetFeatureInfo or ArcGIS REST query or identify operations).

    The colors used to identify the different watches, advisories, warnings, and statements are the same colors used by the NWS on their map at http://www.weather.gov. The NWS products for long-duration hazardous conditions are updated in the nowCOAST™ map service approximately every 10 minutes. For more detailed information about layer update frequency and timing, please reference the
    nowCOAST™ Dataset Update Schedule.

    Background Information

    NWS watches depict the geographic areas where the risk of hazardous weather or hydrologic events has increased significantly, but their occurrence, location, and/or timing is still uncertain. A warning depicts where a hazardous weather or hydrologic event is occurring, is imminent, or has a very high probability of occurring. A warning is used for conditions posing a threat to life or property. Advisories indicate where special weather conditions are occurring, imminent, or have a very high probability of occurring but are less serious than a warning. They are for events that may cause significant inconvenience, and if caution is not exercised, could lead to situations that may threaten life and/or property. Statements usually contain updated information on a warning and are used to let the public know when a warning is no longer in effect. NWS issues over 75 different types of watches, warnings, and advisories (WWAs). WWAs are issued by the NWS regional Weather Forecast Offices (WFOs) and also the NWS Ocean Prediction Center, National Hurricane Center, Central Pacific Hurricane Center, and Storm Prediction Center.

    The NWS WWAs are organized on the nowCOAST™ map viewer and within this map service by hazardous condition/threat layer groups and then by the geographic area (i.e. coastal & inland, immediate coast or maritime) for which the WWA product is targeted. This was done to allow users to select WWAs for hazardous conditions that are important to their operations or activities.

    Please note that the Tropical Storm and Hurricane Warnings are provided in both the High Wind Hazards: Maritime Areas and Coastal & Inland Areas layer groups and the Flooding Hazards: Coastal Areas layer group. These warnings are included in the Flooding Hazards/Coastal Areas layer group because the NWS uses those warnings to inform the public that tropical storm or hurricane winds may be accompanied by significant coastal flooding but below the thresholds required for the issuance of a storm surge warning. In addition, a tropical storm or hurricane warning may remain in effect when dangerously high water or a combination of dangerously high water and waves continue, even though the winds may be less than hurricane or tropical storm force. The NWS does not issue a Coastal Flood Warning or Advisory when a tropical storm or hurricane warning is in effect; however that does not mean that there is not a significant coastal flooding threat.

    • High Wind Hazards (Associated with Non-Tropical & Tropical Cyclones)
      • Maritime Areas
        • Brisk Wind Advisory
        • Small Craft Advisory
        • Small Craft Advisory for Winds
        • Gale Watch
        • Gale Warning
        • Storm Watch
        • Storm Warning
        • Hurricane Force Wind Watch
        • Hurricane Force Wind Warning
        • Tropical Storm Watch
        • Tropical Storm Warning
        • Hurricane Watch
        • Hurricane Warning
         </li>
         <li>
          Coastal & Inland Areas
          <ul>
           <li>High Wind Watch</li>
           <li>Wind Advisory</li>
           <li>Lake Wind Advisory</li>
           <li>High Wind Warning</li>
           <li>Tropical Storm Watch</li>
           <li>Tropical Storm Warning</li>
           <li>Hurricane Watch</li>
           <li>Hurricane Warning</li>
          </ul>
         </li>
        </ul>
        

      • Hazardous Seas, Surf, and Beach Conditions
        • Maritime Areas
          • Small Craft Advisory for Hazardous Seas
          • Small Craft Advisory for Rough Bar
          • Hazardous Seas Watch
          • Hazardous Seas Warning
        • Immediate Coast
          • Beach Hazards Statement
          • High Surf Advisory
          • High Surf Warning
          • Low Water Advisory
          • Rip Current Statement
      • Flooding Hazards
        • Coastal Areas
          • Coastal Flood Statement
          • Coastal Flood Watch
          • Coastal Flood Advisory
          • Coastal Flood Warning
          • Lakeshore Flood Watch
          • Lakeshore Flood Advisory
          • Lakeshore Flood Warning
          • Lakeshore Flood Statement
          • Storm Surge Watch
          • Storm Surge Warning
          • Tsunami Watch
          • Tsunami Warning
          • Tropical Storm Warning
          • Hurricane Warning
        • Inland Areas
          • Flood Watch (Point) (also called River Flood Watch)
          • Flood Watch (Areal)
          • Flood Advisory (Point) (also called River Flood Advisory)
          • Flood Advisory (Areal)
          • Flood Warning (Point) (also called River Flood Warning)
          • Flood Warning (Areal)
          • Hydrologic Outlook
          • Hydrologic Statement
      • Reduced Visibility Hazards
        • Maritime Areas
          • Dense Fog Advisory
        • Coastal & Inland Areas
          • Ashfall Advisory
          • Ashfall Warning
          • Blowing Dust Advisory
          • Blowing Dust Warning
          • Dense Fog Advisory
          • Dense Smoke Advisory
      • Freezing Spray Hazards
        • Maritime Areas
          • Heavy Freezing Spray Watch
          • Freezing Spray Advisory
          • Heavy Freezing

  7. c

    California Overlapping Cities and Counties and Identifiers with Coastal...

    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • data.ca.gov
    • +3more
    Updated Oct 25, 2024
    + more versions
    Share
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    TwitterTwitter
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    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    California Department of Technology (2024). California Overlapping Cities and Counties and Identifiers with Coastal Buffers [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/datasets/California::california-overlapping-cities-and-counties-and-identifiers-with-coastal-buffers
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 25, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Department of Technology
    License

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

    Area covered
    Description

    WARNING: This is a pre-release dataset and its fields names and data structures are subject to change. It should be considered pre-release until the end of 2024. Expected changes:Metadata is missing or incomplete for some layers at this time and will be continuously improved.We expect to update this layer roughly in line with CDTFA at some point, but will increase the update cadence over time as we are able to automate the final pieces of the process.This dataset is continuously updated as the source data from CDTFA is updated, as often as many times a month. If you require unchanging point-in-time data, export a copy for your own use rather than using the service directly in your applications.PurposeCounty and incorporated place (city) boundaries along with third party identifiers used to join in external data. Boundaries are from the authoritative source the California Department of Tax and Fee Administration (CDTFA), altered to show the counties as one polygon. This layer displays the city polygons on top of the County polygons so the area isn"t interrupted. The GEOID attribute information is added from the US Census. GEOID is based on merged State and County FIPS codes for the Counties. Abbreviations for Counties and Cities were added from Caltrans Division of Local Assistance (DLA) data. Place Type was populated with information extracted from the Census. Names and IDs from the US Board on Geographic Names (BGN), the authoritative source of place names as published in the Geographic Name Information System (GNIS), are attached as well. Finally, the coastline is used to separate coastal buffers from the land-based portions of jurisdictions. This feature layer is for public use.Related LayersThis dataset is part of a grouping of many datasets:Cities: Only the city boundaries and attributes, without any unincorporated areasWith Coastal BuffersWithout Coastal BuffersCounties: Full county boundaries and attributes, including all cities within as a single polygonWith Coastal BuffersWithout Coastal BuffersCities and Full Counties: A merge of the other two layers, so polygons overlap within city boundaries. Some customers require this behavior, so we provide it as a separate service.With Coastal Buffers (this dataset)Without Coastal BuffersPlace AbbreviationsUnincorporated Areas (Coming Soon)Census Designated Places (Coming Soon)Cartographic CoastlinePolygonLine source (Coming Soon)Working with Coastal BuffersThe dataset you are currently viewing includes the coastal buffers for cities and counties that have them in the authoritative source data from CDTFA. In the versions where they are included, they remain as a second polygon on cities or counties that have them, with all the same identifiers, and a value in the COASTAL field indicating if it"s an ocean or a bay buffer. If you wish to have a single polygon per jurisdiction that includes the coastal buffers, you can run a Dissolve on the version that has the coastal buffers on all the fields except COASTAL, Area_SqMi, Shape_Area, and Shape_Length to get a version with the correct identifiers.Point of ContactCalifornia Department of Technology, Office of Digital Services, odsdataservices@state.ca.govField and Abbreviation DefinitionsCOPRI: county number followed by the 3-digit city primary number used in the Board of Equalization"s 6-digit tax rate area numbering systemPlace Name: CDTFA incorporated (city) or county nameCounty: CDTFA county name. For counties, this will be the name of the polygon itself. For cities, it is the name of the county the city polygon is within.Legal Place Name: Board on Geographic Names authorized nomenclature for area names published in the Geographic Name Information SystemGNIS_ID: The numeric identifier from the Board on Geographic Names that can be used to join these boundaries to other datasets utilizing this identifier.GEOID: numeric geographic identifiers from the US Census Bureau Place Type: Board on Geographic Names authorized nomenclature for boundary type published in the Geographic Name Information SystemPlace Abbr: CalTrans Division of Local Assistance abbreviations of incorporated area namesCNTY Abbr: CalTrans Division of Local Assistance abbreviations of county namesArea_SqMi: The area of the administrative unit (city or county) in square miles, calculated in EPSG 3310 California Teale Albers.COASTAL: Indicates if the polygon is a coastal buffer. Null for land polygons. Additional values include "ocean" and "bay".GlobalID: While all of the layers we provide in this dataset include a GlobalID field with unique values, we do not recommend you make any use of it. The GlobalID field exists to support offline sync, but is not persistent, so data keyed to it will be orphaned at our next update. Use one of the other persistent identifiers, such as GNIS_ID or GEOID instead.AccuracyCDTFA"s source data notes the following about accuracy:City boundary changes and county boundary line adjustments filed with the Board of Equalization per Government Code 54900. This GIS layer contains the boundaries of the unincorporated county and incorporated cities within the state of California. The initial dataset was created in March of 2015 and was based on the State Board of Equalization tax rate area boundaries. As of April 1, 2024, the maintenance of this dataset is provided by the California Department of Tax and Fee Administration for the purpose of determining sales and use tax rates. The boundaries are continuously being revised to align with aerial imagery when areas of conflict are discovered between the original boundary provided by the California State Board of Equalization and the boundary made publicly available by local, state, and federal government. Some differences may occur between actual recorded boundaries and the boundaries used for sales and use tax purposes. The boundaries in this map are representations of taxing jurisdictions for the purpose of determining sales and use tax rates and should not be used to determine precise city or county boundary line locations. COUNTY = county name; CITY = city name or unincorporated territory; COPRI = county number followed by the 3-digit city primary number used in the California State Board of Equalization"s 6-digit tax rate area numbering system (for the purpose of this map, unincorporated areas are assigned 000 to indicate that the area is not within a city).Boundary ProcessingThese data make a structural change from the source data. While the full boundaries provided by CDTFA include coastal buffers of varying sizes, many users need boundaries to end at the shoreline of the ocean or a bay. As a result, after examining existing city and county boundary layers, these datasets provide a coastline cut generally along the ocean facing coastline. For county boundaries in northern California, the cut runs near the Golden Gate Bridge, while for cities, we cut along the bay shoreline and into the edge of the Delta at the boundaries of Solano, Contra Costa, and Sacramento counties.In the services linked above, the versions that include the coastal buffers contain them as a second (or third) polygon for the city or county, with the value in the COASTAL field set to whether it"s a bay or ocean polygon. These can be processed back into a single polygon by dissolving on all the fields you wish to keep, since the attributes, other than the COASTAL field and geometry attributes (like areas) remain the same between the polygons for this purpose.SliversIn cases where a city or county"s boundary ends near a coastline, our coastline data may cross back and forth many times while roughly paralleling the jurisdiction"s boundary, resulting in many polygon slivers. We post-process the data to remove these slivers using a city/county boundary priority algorithm. That is, when the data run parallel to each other, we discard the coastline cut and keep the CDTFA-provided boundary, even if it extends into the ocean a small amount. This processing supports consistent boundaries for Fort Bragg, Point Arena, San Francisco, Pacifica, Half Moon Bay, and Capitola, in addition to others. More information on this algorithm will be provided soon.Coastline CaveatsSome cities have buffers extending into water bodies that we do not cut at the shoreline. These include South Lake Tahoe and Folsom, which extend into neighboring lakes, and San Diego and surrounding cities that extend into San Diego Bay, which our shoreline encloses. If you have feedback on the exclusion of these items, or others, from the shoreline cuts, please reach out using the contact information above.Offline UseThis service is fully enabled for sync and export using Esri Field Maps or other similar tools. Importantly, the GlobalID field exists only to support that use case and should not be used for any other purpose (see note in field descriptions).Updates and Date of ProcessingConcurrent with CDTFA updates, approximately every two weeks, Last Processed: 12/17/2024 by Nick Santos using code path at https://github.com/CDT-ODS-DevSecOps/cdt-ods-gis-city-county/ at commit 0bf269d24464c14c9cf4f7dea876aa562984db63. It incorporates updates from CDTFA as of 12/12/2024. Future updates will include improvements to metadata and update frequency.

  8. c

    California County Boundaries and Identifiers with Coastal Buffers

    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • data.ca.gov
    • +2more
    Updated Oct 24, 2024
    + more versions
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    California Department of Technology (2024). California County Boundaries and Identifiers with Coastal Buffers [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/datasets/California::california-county-boundaries-and-identifiers-with-coastal-buffers
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 24, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Department of Technology
    License

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

    Area covered
    Description

    Note: The schema changed in February 2025 - please see below. We will post a roadmap of upcoming changes, but service URLs and schema are now stable. For deployment status of new services beginning in February 2025, see https://gis.data.ca.gov/pages/city-and-county-boundary-data-status. Additional roadmap and status links at the bottom of this metadata.This dataset is regularly updated as the source data from CDTFA is updated, as often as many times a month. If you require unchanging point-in-time data, export a copy for your own use rather than using the service directly in your applications. PurposeCounty boundaries along with third party identifiers used to join in external data. Boundaries are from the California Department of Tax and Fee Administration (CDTFA). These boundaries are the best available statewide data source in that CDTFA receives changes in incorporation and boundary lines from the Board of Equalization, who receives them from local jurisdictions for tax purposes. Boundary accuracy is not guaranteed, and though CDTFA works to align boundaries based on historical records and local changes, errors will exist. If you require a legal assessment of boundary location, contact a licensed surveyor.This dataset joins in multiple attributes and identifiers from the US Census Bureau and Board on Geographic Names to facilitate adding additional third party data sources. In addition, we attach attributes of our own to ease and reduce common processing needs and questions. Finally, coastal buffers are separated into separate polygons, leaving the land-based portions of jurisdictions and coastal buffers in adjacent polygons. This feature layer is for public use. Related LayersThis dataset is part of a grouping of many datasets:Cities: Only the city boundaries and attributes, without any unincorporated areasWith Coastal BuffersWithout Coastal BuffersCounties: Full county boundaries and attributes, including all cities within as a single polygonWith Coastal Buffers (this dataset)Without Coastal BuffersCities and Full Counties: A merge of the other two layers, so polygons overlap within city boundaries. Some customers require this behavior, so we provide it as a separate service.With Coastal BuffersWithout Coastal BuffersCity and County AbbreviationsUnincorporated Areas (Coming Soon)Census Designated PlacesCartographic CoastlinePolygonLine source (Coming Soon)State BoundaryWith Bay CutsWithout Bay Cuts Working with Coastal Buffers The dataset you are currently viewing includes the coastal buffers for cities and counties that have them in the source data from CDTFA. In the versions where they are included, they remain as a second polygon on cities or counties that have them, with all the same identifiers, and a value in the COASTAL field indicating if it"s an ocean or a bay buffer. If you wish to have a single polygon per jurisdiction that includes the coastal buffers, you can run a Dissolve on the version that has the coastal buffers on all the fields except OFFSHORE and AREA_SQMI to get a version with the correct identifiers. Point of ContactCalifornia Department of Technology, Office of Digital Services, gis@state.ca.gov Field and Abbreviation DefinitionsCDTFA_COUNTY: CDTFA county name. For counties, this will be the name of the polygon itself. For cities, it is the name of the county the city polygon is within.CDTFA_COPRI: county number followed by the 3-digit city primary number used in the Board of Equalization"s 6-digit tax rate area numbering system. The boundary data originate with CDTFA's teams managing tax rate information, so this field is preserved and flows into this dataset.CENSUS_GEOID: numeric geographic identifiers from the US Census BureauCENSUS_PLACE_TYPE: City, County, or Town, stripped off the census name for identification purpose.GNIS_PLACE_NAME: Board on Geographic Names authorized nomenclature for area names published in the Geographic Name Information SystemGNIS_ID: The numeric identifier from the Board on Geographic Names that can be used to join these boundaries to other datasets utilizing this identifier.CDT_COUNTY_ABBR: Abbreviations of county names - originally derived from CalTrans Division of Local Assistance and now managed by CDT. Abbreviations are 3 characters.CDT_NAME_SHORT: The name of the jurisdiction (city or county) with the word "City" or "County" stripped off the end. Some changes may come to how we process this value to make it more consistent.AREA_SQMI: The area of the administrative unit (city or county) in square miles, calculated in EPSG 3310 California Teale Albers.OFFSHORE: Indicates if the polygon is a coastal buffer. Null for land polygons. Additional values include "ocean" and "bay".PRIMARY_DOMAIN: Currently empty/null for all records. Placeholder field for official URL of the city or countyCENSUS_POPULATION: Currently null for all records. In the future, it will include the most recent US Census population estimate for the jurisdiction.GlobalID: While all of the layers we provide in this dataset include a GlobalID field with unique values, we do not recommend you make any use of it. The GlobalID field exists to support offline sync, but is not persistent, so data keyed to it will be orphaned at our next update. Use one of the other persistent identifiers, such as GNIS_ID or GEOID instead. Boundary AccuracyCounty boundaries were originally derived from a 1:24,000 accuracy dataset, with improvements made in some places to boundary alignments based on research into historical records and boundary changes as CDTFA learns of them. City boundary data are derived from pre-GIS tax maps, digitized at BOE and CDTFA, with adjustments made directly in GIS for new annexations, detachments, and corrections.Boundary accuracy within the dataset varies. While CDTFA strives to correctly include or exclude parcels from jurisdictions for accurate tax assessment, this dataset does not guarantee that a parcel is placed in the correct jurisdiction. When a parcel is in the correct jurisdiction, this dataset cannot guarantee accurate placement of boundary lines within or between parcels or rights of way. This dataset also provides no information on parcel boundaries. For exact jurisdictional or parcel boundary locations, please consult the county assessor's office and a licensed surveyor. CDTFA's data is used as the best available source because BOE and CDTFA receive information about changes in jurisdictions which otherwise need to be collected independently by an agency or company to compile into usable map boundaries. CDTFA maintains the best available statewide boundary information. CDTFA's source data notes the following about accuracy: City boundary changes and county boundary line adjustments filed with the Board of Equalization per Government Code 54900. This GIS layer contains the boundaries of the unincorporated county and incorporated cities within the state of California. The initial dataset was created in March of 2015 and was based on the State Board of Equalization tax rate area boundaries. As of April 1, 2024, the maintenance of this dataset is provided by the California Department of Tax and Fee Administration for the purpose of determining sales and use tax rates. The boundaries are continuously being revised to align with aerial imagery when areas of conflict are discovered between the original boundary provided by the California State Board of Equalization and the boundary made publicly available by local, state, and federal government. Some differences may occur between actual recorded boundaries and the boundaries used for sales and use tax purposes. The boundaries in this map are representations of taxing jurisdictions for the purpose of determining sales and use tax rates and should not be used to determine precise city or county boundary line locations. Boundary ProcessingThese data make a structural change from the source data. While the full boundaries provided by CDTFA include coastal buffers of varying sizes, many users need boundaries to end at the shoreline of the ocean or a bay. As a result, after examining existing city and county boundary layers, these datasets provide a coastline cut generally along the ocean facing coastline. For county boundaries in northern California, the cut runs near the Golden Gate Bridge, while for cities, we cut along the bay shoreline and into the edge of the Delta at the boundaries of Solano, Contra Costa, and Sacramento counties. In the services linked above, the versions that include the coastal buffers contain them as a second (or third) polygon for the city or county, with the value in the COASTAL field set to whether it"s a bay or ocean polygon. These can be processed back into a single polygon by dissolving on all the fields you wish to keep, since the attributes, other than the COASTAL field and geometry attributes (like areas) remain the same between the polygons for this purpose. SliversIn cases where a city or county"s boundary ends near a coastline, our coastline data may cross back and forth many times while roughly paralleling the jurisdiction"s boundary, resulting in many polygon slivers. We post-process the data to remove these slivers using a city/county boundary priority algorithm. That is, when the data run parallel to each other, we discard the coastline cut and keep the CDTFA-provided boundary, even if it extends into the ocean a small amount. This processing supports consistent boundaries for Fort Bragg, Point Arena, San Francisco, Pacifica, Half Moon Bay, and Capitola, in addition to others. More information on this algorithm will be provided soon. Coastline CaveatsSome cities have buffers extending into water bodies that we do not cut at the shoreline. These include South Lake Tahoe and Folsom, which extend into neighboring lakes, and San Diego and surrounding cities that extend into San Diego Bay, which our shoreline encloses. If you have feedback on the exclusion of these

  9. n

    Cold and Heat Hazards (Dissolved Polygons) - Dataset - CKAN

    • nationaldataplatform.org
    Updated Feb 28, 2024
    + more versions
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    (2024). Cold and Heat Hazards (Dissolved Polygons) - Dataset - CKAN [Dataset]. https://nationaldataplatform.org/catalog/dataset/cold-and-heat-hazards-dissolved-polygons
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Feb 28, 2024
    Description

    This nowCOAST™ time-enabled map service provides maps depicting the geographic coverage of the latest NOAA/National Weather Service (NWS) WATCHES, WARNINGS, ADVISORIES, and STATEMENTS for long-duration hazardous weather, marine weather, hydrological, oceanographic, wildfire, air quality, and ecological conditions which may or are presently affecting inland, coastal, and maritime areas. A few examples include Gale Watch, Gale Warning, High Surf Advisory, High Wind Watch, Areal Flood Warning, Coastal Flood Watch, Winter Storm Warning, Wind Chill Advisory, Frost Advisory, Tropical Storm Watch, Red Flag Warning, Air Stagnation Warning, and Beach Hazards Statement. (A complete list is given in the Background Information section below.) The coverage areas of these products are usually defined by county or sub-county boundaries. The colors used to identify the different watches, advisories, warnings, and statements are the same colors used by the NWS on their map at weather.gov. The NWS products for long-duration hazardous conditions are updated in the nowCOAST map service approximately every 10 minutes. For more detailed information about the update schedule, please see: http://new.nowcoast.noaa.gov/help/#section=updateschedule. The coverage areas of these products are usually defined by county or sub-county boundaries, but for simplicity and performance reasons, adjacent WWAs of the same type, issuance, and expiration are depicted in this service as unified (merged/dissolved) polygons in the layers indicated with the suffix "(Dissolved Polygons)". However, a set of equivalent layers containing the original individual zone geometries are also included for querying purposes, and are indicated with the suffix "(Zone Polygons)". Corresponding zone polygon and dissolved polygon layers are matched together in group layers for each WWA category. The zone polygon layers are included in this service only to support query/identify operations (e.g., in order to retrieve the original zone geometry or other attributes such as a URL to the warning text bulletin) and thus will not be drawn when included in a normal map image request. Thus, the dissolved polygon layers should be used when requesting a map image (e.g. WMS GetMap or ArcGIS REST export operations), while the zone polygon layers should be used when performing a query (e.g. WMS GetFeatureInfo or ArcGIS REST query or identify operations). The colors used to identify the different watches, advisories, warnings, and statements are the same colors used by the NWS on their map at http://www.weather.gov. The NWS products for long-duration hazardous conditions are updated in the nowCOAST™ map service approximately every 10 minutes. For more detailed information about layer update frequency and timing, please reference the nowCOAST™ Dataset Update Schedule. Background Information NWS watches depict the geographic areas where the risk of hazardous weather or hydrologic events has increased significantly, but their occurrence, location, and/or timing is still uncertain. A warning depicts where a hazardous weather or hydrologic event is occurring, is imminent, or has a very high probability of occurring. A warning is used for conditions posing a threat to life or property. Advisories indicate where special weather conditions are occurring, imminent, or have a very high probability of occurring but are less serious than a warning. They are for events that may cause significant inconvenience, and if caution is not exercised, could lead to situations that may threaten life and/or property. Statements usually contain updated information on a warning and are used to let the public know when a warning is no longer in effect. NWS issues over 75 different types of watches, warnings, and advisories (WWAs). WWAs are issued by the NWS regional Weather Forecast Offices (WFOs) and also the NWS Ocean Prediction Center, National Hurricane Center, Central Pacific Hurricane Center, and Storm Prediction Center. The NWS WWAs are organized on the nowCOAST™ map viewer and within this map service by hazardous condition/threat layer groups and then by the geographic area (i.e. coastal & inland, immediate coast or maritime) for which the WWA product is targeted. This was done to allow users to select WWAs for hazardous conditions that are important to their operations or activities. Please note that the Tropical Storm and Hurricane Warnings are provided in both the High Wind Hazards: Maritime Areas and Coastal & Inland Areas layer groups and the Flooding Hazards: Coastal Areas layer group. These warnings are included in the Flooding Hazards/Coastal Areas layer group because the NWS uses those warnings to inform the public that tropical storm or hurricane winds may be accompanied by significant coastal flooding but below the thresholds required for the issuance of a storm surge warning. In addition, a tropical storm or hurricane warning may remain in effect when dangerously high water or a combination of dangerously high water and waves continue, even though the winds may be less than hurricane or tropical storm force. The NWS does not issue a Coastal Flood Warning or Advisory when a tropical storm or hurricane warning is in effect; however that does not mean that there is not a significant coastal flooding threat. High Wind Hazards (Associated with Non-Tropical & Tropical Cyclones) Maritime Areas Brisk Wind Advisory Small Craft Advisory Small Craft Advisory for Winds Gale Watch Gale Warning Storm Watch Storm Warning Hurricane Force Wind Watch Hurricane Force Wind Warning Tropical Storm Watch Tropical Storm Warning Hurricane Watch Hurricane Warning Coastal & Inland Areas High Wind Watch Wind Advisory Lake Wind Advisory High Wind Warning Tropical Storm Watch Tropical Storm Warning Hurricane Watch Hurricane Warning Hazardous Seas, Surf, and Beach Conditions Maritime Areas Small Craft Advisory for Hazardous Seas Small Craft Advisory for Rough Bar Hazardous Seas Watch Hazardous Seas Warning Immediate Coast Beach Hazards Statement High Surf Advisory High Surf Warning Low Water Advisory Rip Current Statement Flooding Hazards Coastal Areas Coastal Flood Statement Coastal Flood Watch Coastal Flood Advisory Coastal Flood Warning Lakeshore Flood Watch Lakeshore Flood Advisory Lakeshore Flood Warning Lakeshore Flood Statement Storm Surge Watch Storm Surge Warning Tsunami Watch Tsunami Warning Tropical Storm Warning Hurricane Warning Inland Areas Flood Watch (Point) (also called River Flood Watch) Flood Watch (Areal) Flood Advisory (Point) (also called River Flood Advisory) Flood Advisory (Areal) Flood Warning (Point) (also called River Flood Warning) Flood Warning (Areal) Hydrologic Outlook Hydrologic Statement Reduced Visibility Hazards Maritime Areas Dense Fog Advisory Coastal & Inland Areas Ashfall Advisory Ashfall Warning Blowing Dust Advisory Blowing Dust Warning Dense Fog Advisory Dense Smoke Advisory Freezing Spray Hazards Maritime Areas Heavy Freezing Spray Watch Freezing Spray Advisory Heavy Freezing Spray Advisory Snow, Sleet, Freezing Rain, and Freezing Fog Hazards Coastal & Inland Areas Blizzard Watch Blizzard Warning Freezing Fog Advisory Freezing Rain Advisory Ice Storm Warning Lake-Effect Snow Watch Lake-Effect Snow Advisory Lake-Effect Snow Warning Winter Storm Watch Winter Weather Advisory Winter Storm Warning Cold and Heat Hazards Coastal & Inland Areas Excessive Cold Watch Excessive Cold Warning Excessive Heat Watch Heat Advisory Excessive Heat Warning Frost Advisory Freeze Watch Freeze Warning Wind Chill Advisory Wind Chill Warning Critical Wildfire Conditions Coastal & Inland Areas Fire Weather Watch Red Flag Warning Unhealthy Air Quality Coastal & Inland Areas Air Stagnation Advisory Air Quality Alerts from states are NOT available For descriptions of individual NWS watches, warnings, and advisories please see Section 2 of the NWS Reference Guide available at http://www.nws.noaa.gov/om/guide/Section2.pdf. Time Information This map service is time-enabled, meaning that each individual layer contains time-varying data and can be utilized by clients capable of making map requests that include a time component. In addition to ArcGIS Server REST access, time-enabled OGC WMS 1.3.0 access is also provided by this service. This particular service can be queried with or without the use of a time component. If the time parameter is specified in a request, the data or imagery most relevant to the provided time value, if any, will be returned. If the time parameter is not specified in a request, the latest data or imagery valid for the present system time will be returned to the client. If the time parameter is not specified and no data or imagery is available for the present time, no data will be returned. This service is configured with time coverage support, meaning that the service will always return the most relevant available data, if any, to the specified time value. For example, if the service contains data valid today at 12:00 and 12:10 UTC, but a map request specifies a time value of today at 12:07 UTC, the data valid at 12:10 UTC will be returned to the user. This behavior allows more flexibility for users, especially when displaying multiple time-enabled layers together despite slight differences in temporal resolution or update frequency. When interacting with this time-enabled service, only a single instantaneous time value should be specified in each request. If instead a time range is specified in a request (i.e. separate start time and end time values are given), the data returned may be different than what was intended. Care must be taken to ensure the time value specified in each request falls within the current time coverage of the service. Because this service is frequently updated as new data becomes available, the user must periodically determine the service's time extent. However, due to software limitations, the time extent of the service and

  10. W

    Hazardous Air Quality (Zone Polygons)

    • wifire-data.sdsc.edu
    csv, esri rest +5
    Updated Oct 10, 2019
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    CA Governor's Office of Emergency Services (2019). Hazardous Air Quality (Zone Polygons) [Dataset]. https://wifire-data.sdsc.edu/dataset/hazardous-air-quality-zone-polygons
    Explore at:
    esri rest, csv, kml, html, zip, ogc wms, geojsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 10, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    CA Governor's Office of Emergency Services
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This nowCOASTtime-enabled map service provides maps depicting the geographic coverage of the latest NOAA/National Weather Service (NWS) WATCHES, WARNINGS, ADVISORIES, and STATEMENTS for long-duration hazardous weather, marine weather, hydrological, oceanographic, wildfire, air quality, and ecological conditions which may or are presently affecting inland, coastal, and maritime areas. A few examples include Gale Watch, Gale Warning, High Surf Advisory, High Wind Watch, Areal Flood Warning, Coastal Flood Watch, Winter Storm Warning, Wind Chill Advisory, Frost Advisory, Tropical Storm Watch, Red Flag Warning, Air Stagnation Warning, and Beach Hazards Statement. (A complete list is given in the Background Information section below.) The coverage areas of these products are usually defined by county or sub-county boundaries. The colors used to identify the different watches, advisories, warnings, and statements are the same colors used by the NWS on their map at weather.gov. The NWS products for long-duration hazardous conditions are updated in the nowCOAST map service approximately every 10 minutes. For more detailed information about the update schedule, please see: http://new.nowcoast.noaa.gov/help/#section=updateschedule.

    The coverage areas of these products are usually defined by county or sub-county boundaries, but for simplicity and performance reasons, adjacent WWAs of the same type, issuance, and expiration are depicted in this service as unified (merged/dissolved) polygons in the layers indicated with the suffix "(Dissolved Polygons)". However, a set of equivalent layers containing the original individual zone geometries are also included for querying purposes, and are indicated with the suffix "(Zone Polygons)". Corresponding zone polygon and dissolved polygon layers are matched together in group layers for each WWA category. The zone polygon layers are included in this service only to support query/identify operations (e.g., in order to retrieve the original zone geometry or other attributes such as a URL to the warning text bulletin) and thus will not be drawn when included in a normal map image request. Thus, the dissolved polygon layers should be used when requesting a map image (e.g. WMS GetMap or ArcGIS REST export operations), while the zone polygon layers should be used when performing a query (e.g. WMS GetFeatureInfo or ArcGIS REST query or identify operations).

    The colors used to identify the different watches, advisories, warnings, and statements are the same colors used by the NWS on their map at http://www.weather.gov. The NWS products for long-duration hazardous conditions are updated in the nowCOAST™ map service approximately every 10 minutes. For more detailed information about layer update frequency and timing, please reference the
    nowCOAST™ Dataset Update Schedule.

    Background Information

    NWS watches depict the geographic areas where the risk of hazardous weather or hydrologic events has increased significantly, but their occurrence, location, and/or timing is still uncertain. A warning depicts where a hazardous weather or hydrologic event is occurring, is imminent, or has a very high probability of occurring. A warning is used for conditions posing a threat to life or property. Advisories indicate where special weather conditions are occurring, imminent, or have a very high probability of occurring but are less serious than a warning. They are for events that may cause significant inconvenience, and if caution is not exercised, could lead to situations that may threaten life and/or property. Statements usually contain updated information on a warning and are used to let the public know when a warning is no longer in effect. NWS issues over 75 different types of watches, warnings, and advisories (WWAs). WWAs are issued by the NWS regional Weather Forecast Offices (WFOs) and also the NWS Ocean Prediction Center, National Hurricane Center, Central Pacific Hurricane Center, and Storm Prediction Center.

    The NWS WWAs are organized on the nowCOAST™ map viewer and within this map service by hazardous condition/threat layer groups and then by the geographic area (i.e. coastal & inland, immediate coast or maritime) for which the WWA product is targeted. This was done to allow users to select WWAs for hazardous conditions that are important to their operations or activities.

    Please note that the Tropical Storm and Hurricane Warnings are provided in both the High Wind Hazards: Maritime Areas and Coastal & Inland Areas layer groups and the Flooding Hazards: Coastal Areas layer group. These warnings are included in the Flooding Hazards/Coastal Areas layer group because the NWS uses those warnings to inform the public that tropical storm or hurricane winds may be accompanied by significant coastal flooding but below the thresholds required for the issuance of a storm surge warning. In addition, a tropical storm or hurricane warning may remain in effect when dangerously high water or a combination of dangerously high water and waves continue, even though the winds may be less than hurricane or tropical storm force. The NWS does not issue a Coastal Flood Warning or Advisory when a tropical storm or hurricane warning is in effect; however that does not mean that there is not a significant coastal flooding threat.

    • High Wind Hazards (Associated with Non-Tropical & Tropical Cyclones)
      • Maritime Areas
        • Brisk Wind Advisory
        • Small Craft Advisory
        • Small Craft Advisory for Winds
        • Gale Watch
        • Gale Warning
        • Storm Watch
        • Storm Warning
        • Hurricane Force Wind Watch
        • Hurricane Force Wind Warning
        • Tropical Storm Watch
        • Tropical Storm Warning
        • Hurricane Watch
        • Hurricane Warning
         </li>
         <li>
          Coastal & Inland Areas
          <ul>
           <li>High Wind Watch</li>
           <li>Wind Advisory</li>
           <li>Lake Wind Advisory</li>
           <li>High Wind Warning</li>
           <li>Tropical Storm Watch</li>
           <li>Tropical Storm Warning</li>
           <li>Hurricane Watch</li>
           <li>Hurricane Warning</li>
          </ul>
         </li>
        </ul>
        

      • Hazardous Seas, Surf, and Beach Conditions
        • Maritime Areas
          • Small Craft Advisory for Hazardous Seas
          • Small Craft Advisory for Rough Bar
          • Hazardous Seas Watch
          • Hazardous Seas Warning
        • Immediate Coast
          • Beach Hazards Statement
          • High Surf Advisory
          • High Surf Warning
          • Low Water Advisory
          • Rip Current Statement
      • Flooding Hazards
        • Coastal Areas
          • Coastal Flood Statement
          • Coastal Flood Watch
          • Coastal Flood Advisory
          • Coastal Flood Warning
          • Lakeshore Flood Watch
          • Lakeshore Flood Advisory
          • Lakeshore Flood Warning
          • Lakeshore Flood Statement
          • Storm Surge Watch
          • Storm Surge Warning
          • Tsunami Watch
          • Tsunami Warning
          • Tropical Storm Warning
          • Hurricane Warning
        • Inland Areas
          • Flood Watch (Point) (also called River Flood Watch)
          • Flood Watch (Areal)
          • Flood Advisory (Point) (also called River Flood Advisory)
          • Flood Advisory (Areal)
          • Flood Warning (Point) (also called River Flood Warning)
          • Flood Warning (Areal)
          • Hydrologic Outlook
          • Hydrologic Statement
      • Reduced Visibility Hazards
        • Maritime Areas
          • Dense Fog Advisory
        • Coastal & Inland Areas
          • Ashfall Advisory
          • Ashfall Warning
          • Blowing Dust Advisory
          • Blowing Dust Warning
          • Dense Fog Advisory
          • Dense Smoke Advisory
      • Freezing Spray Hazards
        • Maritime Areas
          • Heavy Freezing Spray Watch
          • Freezing Spray Advisory
          • Heavy Freezing

  11. W

    Hazardous Wildfire Conditions (Zone Polygons)

    • wifire-data.sdsc.edu
    csv, esri rest +5
    Updated Oct 10, 2019
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    CA Governor's Office of Emergency Services (2019). Hazardous Wildfire Conditions (Zone Polygons) [Dataset]. https://wifire-data.sdsc.edu/dataset/hazardous-wildfire-conditions-zone-polygons
    Explore at:
    ogc wms, geojson, csv, kml, html, zip, esri restAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 10, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    CA Governor's Office of Emergency Services
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This nowCOASTtime-enabled map service provides maps depicting the geographic coverage of the latest NOAA/National Weather Service (NWS) WATCHES, WARNINGS, ADVISORIES, and STATEMENTS for long-duration hazardous weather, marine weather, hydrological, oceanographic, wildfire, air quality, and ecological conditions which may or are presently affecting inland, coastal, and maritime areas. A few examples include Gale Watch, Gale Warning, High Surf Advisory, High Wind Watch, Areal Flood Warning, Coastal Flood Watch, Winter Storm Warning, Wind Chill Advisory, Frost Advisory, Tropical Storm Watch, Red Flag Warning, Air Stagnation Warning, and Beach Hazards Statement. (A complete list is given in the Background Information section below.) The coverage areas of these products are usually defined by county or sub-county boundaries. The colors used to identify the different watches, advisories, warnings, and statements are the same colors used by the NWS on their map at weather.gov. The NWS products for long-duration hazardous conditions are updated in the nowCOAST map service approximately every 10 minutes. For more detailed information about the update schedule, please see: http://new.nowcoast.noaa.gov/help/#section=updateschedule.

    The coverage areas of these products are usually defined by county or sub-county boundaries, but for simplicity and performance reasons, adjacent WWAs of the same type, issuance, and expiration are depicted in this service as unified (merged/dissolved) polygons in the layers indicated with the suffix "(Dissolved Polygons)". However, a set of equivalent layers containing the original individual zone geometries are also included for querying purposes, and are indicated with the suffix "(Zone Polygons)". Corresponding zone polygon and dissolved polygon layers are matched together in group layers for each WWA category. The zone polygon layers are included in this service only to support query/identify operations (e.g., in order to retrieve the original zone geometry or other attributes such as a URL to the warning text bulletin) and thus will not be drawn when included in a normal map image request. Thus, the dissolved polygon layers should be used when requesting a map image (e.g. WMS GetMap or ArcGIS REST export operations), while the zone polygon layers should be used when performing a query (e.g. WMS GetFeatureInfo or ArcGIS REST query or identify operations).

    The colors used to identify the different watches, advisories, warnings, and statements are the same colors used by the NWS on their map at http://www.weather.gov. The NWS products for long-duration hazardous conditions are updated in the nowCOAST™ map service approximately every 10 minutes. For more detailed information about layer update frequency and timing, please reference the
    nowCOAST™ Dataset Update Schedule.

    Background Information

    NWS watches depict the geographic areas where the risk of hazardous weather or hydrologic events has increased significantly, but their occurrence, location, and/or timing is still uncertain. A warning depicts where a hazardous weather or hydrologic event is occurring, is imminent, or has a very high probability of occurring. A warning is used for conditions posing a threat to life or property. Advisories indicate where special weather conditions are occurring, imminent, or have a very high probability of occurring but are less serious than a warning. They are for events that may cause significant inconvenience, and if caution is not exercised, could lead to situations that may threaten life and/or property. Statements usually contain updated information on a warning and are used to let the public know when a warning is no longer in effect. NWS issues over 75 different types of watches, warnings, and advisories (WWAs). WWAs are issued by the NWS regional Weather Forecast Offices (WFOs) and also the NWS Ocean Prediction Center, National Hurricane Center, Central Pacific Hurricane Center, and Storm Prediction Center.

    The NWS WWAs are organized on the nowCOAST™ map viewer and within this map service by hazardous condition/threat layer groups and then by the geographic area (i.e. coastal & inland, immediate coast or maritime) for which the WWA product is targeted. This was done to allow users to select WWAs for hazardous conditions that are important to their operations or activities.

    Please note that the Tropical Storm and Hurricane Warnings are provided in both the High Wind Hazards: Maritime Areas and Coastal & Inland Areas layer groups and the Flooding Hazards: Coastal Areas layer group. These warnings are included in the Flooding Hazards/Coastal Areas layer group because the NWS uses those warnings to inform the public that tropical storm or hurricane winds may be accompanied by significant coastal flooding but below the thresholds required for the issuance of a storm surge warning. In addition, a tropical storm or hurricane warning may remain in effect when dangerously high water or a combination of dangerously high water and waves continue, even though the winds may be less than hurricane or tropical storm force. The NWS does not issue a Coastal Flood Warning or Advisory when a tropical storm or hurricane warning is in effect; however that does not mean that there is not a significant coastal flooding threat.

    • High Wind Hazards (Associated with Non-Tropical & Tropical Cyclones)
      • Maritime Areas
        • Brisk Wind Advisory
        • Small Craft Advisory
        • Small Craft Advisory for Winds
        • Gale Watch
        • Gale Warning
        • Storm Watch
        • Storm Warning
        • Hurricane Force Wind Watch
        • Hurricane Force Wind Warning
        • Tropical Storm Watch
        • Tropical Storm Warning
        • Hurricane Watch
        • Hurricane Warning
         </li>
         <li>
          Coastal & Inland Areas
          <ul>
           <li>High Wind Watch</li>
           <li>Wind Advisory</li>
           <li>Lake Wind Advisory</li>
           <li>High Wind Warning</li>
           <li>Tropical Storm Watch</li>
           <li>Tropical Storm Warning</li>
           <li>Hurricane Watch</li>
           <li>Hurricane Warning</li>
          </ul>
         </li>
        </ul>
        

      • Hazardous Seas, Surf, and Beach Conditions
        • Maritime Areas
          • Small Craft Advisory for Hazardous Seas
          • Small Craft Advisory for Rough Bar
          • Hazardous Seas Watch
          • Hazardous Seas Warning
        • Immediate Coast
          • Beach Hazards Statement
          • High Surf Advisory
          • High Surf Warning
          • Low Water Advisory
          • Rip Current Statement
      • Flooding Hazards
        • Coastal Areas
          • Coastal Flood Statement
          • Coastal Flood Watch
          • Coastal Flood Advisory
          • Coastal Flood Warning
          • Lakeshore Flood Watch
          • Lakeshore Flood Advisory
          • Lakeshore Flood Warning
          • Lakeshore Flood Statement
          • Storm Surge Watch
          • Storm Surge Warning
          • Tsunami Watch
          • Tsunami Warning
          • Tropical Storm Warning
          • Hurricane Warning
        • Inland Areas
          • Flood Watch (Point) (also called River Flood Watch)
          • Flood Watch (Areal)
          • Flood Advisory (Point) (also called River Flood Advisory)
          • Flood Advisory (Areal)
          • Flood Warning (Point) (also called River Flood Warning)
          • Flood Warning (Areal)
          • Hydrologic Outlook
          • Hydrologic Statement
      • Reduced Visibility Hazards
        • Maritime Areas
          • Dense Fog Advisory
        • Coastal & Inland Areas
          • Ashfall Advisory
          • Ashfall Warning
          • Blowing Dust Advisory
          • Blowing Dust Warning
          • Dense Fog Advisory
          • Dense Smoke Advisory
      • Freezing Spray Hazards
        • Maritime Areas
          • Heavy Freezing Spray Watch
          • Freezing Spray Advisory
          • Heavy Freezing

  12. u

    Utah Sales Tax Zones

    • opendata.gis.utah.gov
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Nov 21, 2019
    + more versions
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    Utah Automated Geographic Reference Center (AGRC) (2019). Utah Sales Tax Zones [Dataset]. https://opendata.gis.utah.gov/datasets/utah-sales-tax-zones/geoservice
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Nov 21, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Utah Automated Geographic Reference Center (AGRC)
    License

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

    Area covered
    Description

    This data set represents the approximate boundaries of Sales Tax Areas for the State of Utah. Individual Sales Tax Area polygons are formed by each municipality, special sales tax district (in 2006, there were 6 special transit districts) and the unincorporated areas of each county not in a special sales tax district. This dataset also contains an attribute that can be used to dissolve the Sales Tax polygons into the polygons representing tax areas for the proposed Streamlined Sales Tax implementation.Updated Q2 2025

  13. r

    Jurisdictions Open Data

    • data.roanokecountyva.gov
    Updated Sep 20, 2024
    + more versions
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    County of Roanoke (2024). Jurisdictions Open Data [Dataset]. https://data.roanokecountyva.gov/maps/Roanoke-Virginia::jurisdictions-open-data
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Sep 20, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Roanoke
    License

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

    Area covered
    Description

    Administration feature is the single most valuable feature maintained by the GIS Services staff. It combines the maintenance of many individual polygon features in one main overall feature.It is part of a ArcGIS Topology class maintained with our parcel and zoning features in the Editing Feature Data Set.We use the shared editing capabilities of this topology class to leverage our maintenance procedures as simply as possible. Weekly, the individual features maintained with our Administration feature are created with ArcGIS dissolve function. These include Jurisdiction boundaries, Public Safety Response areas, Voting Precincts, Schools Attendance Zones, Inspections, Library Service Zones, and more.Generally, maintenance of this feature is controlled thru shared editing performed with our parcel/zoning edits with the use of the Topology features in ArcGIS. Changes to features maintained in the Administration feature are caused by a number of issues. Parcel edits, new Public Safety Stations, changes in Voting Precincts, Police Reporting districts and other changes occur often. Most changes can be facilitated by selecting one or more “Administrative” polygons and changing the appropriate attribute value. Use of the “Cut Polygon” task may be necessary in those cases where part of a polygon must be changed from a district to another. The appropriate attribute can be changed in the affected area as necessary.

  14. n

    NOAA/National Weather Service (NWS) WATCHES, WARNINGS, ADVISORIES, and...

    • nationaldataplatform.org
    Updated Feb 28, 2024
    + more versions
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    (2024). NOAA/National Weather Service (NWS) WATCHES, WARNINGS, ADVISORIES, and STATEMENTS - Dataset - CKAN [Dataset]. https://nationaldataplatform.org/catalog/dataset/noaa-national-weather-service-nws-watches-warnings-advisories-and-statements
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Feb 28, 2024
    Description

    This nowCOAST™ time-enabled map service provides maps depicting the geographic coverage of the latest NOAA/National Weather Service (NWS) WATCHES, WARNINGS, ADVISORIES, and STATEMENTS for long-duration hazardous weather, marine weather, hydrological, oceanographic, wildfire, air quality, and ecological conditions which may or are presently affecting inland, coastal, and maritime areas. A few examples include Gale Watch, Gale Warning, High Surf Advisory, High Wind Watch, Areal Flood Warning, Coastal Flood Watch, Winter Storm Warning, Wind Chill Advisory, Frost Advisory, Tropical Storm Watch, Red Flag Warning, Air Stagnation Warning, and Beach Hazards Statement. (A complete list is given in the Background Information section below.) The coverage areas of these products are usually defined by county or sub-county boundaries. The colors used to identify the different watches, advisories, warnings, and statements are the same colors used by the NWS on their map at weather.gov. The NWS products for long-duration hazardous conditions are updated in the nowCOAST map service approximately every 10 minutes. For more detailed information about the update schedule, please see: http://new.nowcoast.noaa.gov/help/#section=updateschedule. The coverage areas of these products are usually defined by county or sub-county boundaries, but for simplicity and performance reasons, adjacent WWAs of the same type, issuance, and expiration are depicted in this service as unified (merged/dissolved) polygons in the layers indicated with the suffix "(Dissolved Polygons)". However, a set of equivalent layers containing the original individual zone geometries are also included for querying purposes, and are indicated with the suffix "(Zone Polygons)". Corresponding zone polygon and dissolved polygon layers are matched together in group layers for each WWA category. The zone polygon layers are included in this service only to support query/identify operations (e.g., in order to retrieve the original zone geometry or other attributes such as a URL to the warning text bulletin) and thus will not be drawn when included in a normal map image request. Thus, the dissolved polygon layers should be used when requesting a map image (e.g. WMS GetMap or ArcGIS REST export operations), while the zone polygon layers should be used when performing a query (e.g. WMS GetFeatureInfo or ArcGIS REST query or identify operations). The colors used to identify the different watches, advisories, warnings, and statements are the same colors used by the NWS on their map at http://www.weather.gov. The NWS products for long-duration hazardous conditions are updated in the nowCOAST™ map service approximately every 10 minutes. For more detailed information about layer update frequency and timing, please reference the nowCOAST™ Dataset Update Schedule. Background Information NWS watches depict the geographic areas where the risk of hazardous weather or hydrologic events has increased significantly, but their occurrence, location, and/or timing is still uncertain. A warning depicts where a hazardous weather or hydrologic event is occurring, is imminent, or has a very high probability of occurring. A warning is used for conditions posing a threat to life or property. Advisories indicate where special weather conditions are occurring, imminent, or have a very high probability of occurring but are less serious than a warning. They are for events that may cause significant inconvenience, and if caution is not exercised, could lead to situations that may threaten life and/or property. Statements usually contain updated information on a warning and are used to let the public know when a warning is no longer in effect. NWS issues over 75 different types of watches, warnings, and advisories (WWAs). WWAs are issued by the NWS regional Weather Forecast Offices (WFOs) and also the NWS Ocean Prediction Center, National Hurricane Center, Central Pacific Hurricane Center, and Storm Prediction Center. The NWS WWAs are organized on the nowCOAST™ map viewer and within this map service by hazardous condition/threat layer groups and then by the geographic area (i.e. coastal & inland, immediate coast or maritime) for which the WWA product is targeted. This was done to allow users to select WWAs for hazardous conditions that are important to their operations or activities. Please note that the Tropical Storm and Hurricane Warnings are provided in both the High Wind Hazards: Maritime Areas and Coastal & Inland Areas layer groups and the Flooding Hazards: Coastal Areas layer group. These warnings are included in the Flooding Hazards/Coastal Areas layer group because the NWS uses those warnings to inform the public that tropical storm or hurricane winds may be accompanied by significant coastal flooding but below the thresholds required for the issuance of a storm surge warning. In addition, a tropical storm or hurricane warning may remain in effect when dangerously high water or a combination of dangerously high water and waves continue, even though the winds may be less than hurricane or tropical storm force. The NWS does not issue a Coastal Flood Warning or Advisory when a tropical storm or hurricane warning is in effect; however that does not mean that there is not a significant coastal flooding threat. High Wind Hazards (Associated with Non-Tropical & Tropical Cyclones) Maritime Areas Brisk Wind Advisory Small Craft Advisory Small Craft Advisory for Winds Gale Watch Gale Warning Storm Watch Storm Warning Hurricane Force Wind Watch Hurricane Force Wind Warning Tropical Storm Watch Tropical Storm Warning Hurricane Watch Hurricane Warning Coastal & Inland Areas High Wind Watch Wind Advisory Lake Wind Advisory High Wind Warning Tropical Storm Watch Tropical Storm Warning Hurricane Watch Hurricane Warning Hazardous Seas, Surf, and Beach Conditions Maritime Areas Small Craft Advisory for Hazardous Seas Small Craft Advisory for Rough Bar Hazardous Seas Watch Hazardous Seas Warning Immediate Coast Beach Hazards Statement High Surf Advisory High Surf Warning Low Water Advisory Rip Current Statement Flooding Hazards Coastal Areas Coastal Flood Statement Coastal Flood Watch Coastal Flood Advisory Coastal Flood Warning Lakeshore Flood Watch Lakeshore Flood Advisory Lakeshore Flood Warning Lakeshore Flood Statement Storm Surge Watch Storm Surge Warning Tsunami Watch Tsunami Warning Tropical Storm Warning Hurricane Warning Inland Areas Flood Watch (Point) (also called River Flood Watch) Flood Watch (Areal) Flood Advisory (Point) (also called River Flood Advisory) Flood Advisory (Areal) Flood Warning (Point) (also called River Flood Warning) Flood Warning (Areal) Hydrologic Outlook Hydrologic Statement Reduced Visibility Hazards Maritime Areas Dense Fog Advisory Coastal & Inland Areas Ashfall Advisory Ashfall Warning Blowing Dust Advisory Blowing Dust Warning Dense Fog Advisory Dense Smoke Advisory Freezing Spray Hazards Maritime Areas Heavy Freezing Spray Watch Freezing Spray Advisory Heavy Freezing Spray Advisory Snow, Sleet, Freezing Rain, and Freezing Fog Hazards Coastal & Inland Areas Blizzard Watch Blizzard Warning Freezing Fog Advisory Freezing Rain Advisory Ice Storm Warning Lake-Effect Snow Watch Lake-Effect Snow Advisory Lake-Effect Snow Warning Winter Storm Watch Winter Weather Advisory Winter Storm Warning Cold and Heat Hazards Coastal & Inland Areas Excessive Cold Watch Excessive Cold Warning Excessive Heat Watch Heat Advisory Excessive Heat Warning Frost Advisory Freeze Watch Freeze Warning Wind Chill Advisory Wind Chill Warning Critical Wildfire Conditions Coastal & Inland Areas Fire Weather Watch Red Flag Warning Unhealthy Air Quality Coastal & Inland Areas Air Stagnation Advisory Air Quality Alerts from states are NOT available For descriptions of individual NWS watches, warnings, and advisories please see Section 2 of the NWS Reference Guide available at http://www.nws.noaa.gov/om/guide/Section2.pdf. Time Information This map service is time-enabled, meaning that each individual layer contains time-varying data and can be utilized by clients capable of making map requests that include a time component. In addition to ArcGIS Server REST access, time-enabled OGC WMS 1.3.0 access is also provided by this service. This particular service can be queried with or without the use of a time component. If the time parameter is specified in a request, the data or imagery most relevant to the provided time value, if any, will be returned. If the time parameter is not specified in a request, the latest data or imagery valid for the present system time will be returned to the client. If the time parameter is not specified and no data or imagery is available for the present time, no data will be returned. This service is configured with time coverage support, meaning that the service will always return the most relevant available data, if any, to the specified time value. For example, if the service contains data valid today at 12:00 and 12:10 UTC, but a map request specifies a time value of today at 12:07 UTC, the data valid at 12:10 UTC will be returned to the user. This behavior allows more flexibility for users, especially when displaying multiple time-enabled layers together despite slight differences in temporal resolution or update frequency. When interacting with this time-enabled service, only a single instantaneous time value should be specified in each request. If instead a time range is specified in a request (i.e. separate start time and end time values are given), the data returned may be different than what was intended. Care must be taken to ensure the time value specified in each request falls within the current time coverage of the service. Because this service is frequently updated as new data becomes available, the user must periodically determine the service's time extent. However, due to software limitations, the time extent of the service and

  15. l

    Eaton Perimeter 20250121

    • data.lacounty.gov
    • geohub.lacity.org
    • +1more
    Updated Jan 22, 2025
    + more versions
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    County of Los Angeles (2025). Eaton Perimeter 20250121 [Dataset]. https://data.lacounty.gov/maps/lacounty::eaton-perimeter-20250121
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jan 22, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Description

    The original NIFC FIRIS fire service contains snapshots of daily fire perimeters. The boundary polygons were dissolved for each fire to create a single fire burn perimeter.Note: One of the records (mission = 2025-CALAC-009087) for Eaton was not included because "destroyed" DINS points were buffered to be included in the perimeter. These properties may not represent a burned area.Please review/check source records for any updates and accuracy.Credit: NIFC FIRISThe source of the hosted service/dataset is herehttps://services1.arcgis.com/jUJYIo9tSA7EHvfZ/ArcGIS/rest/services/CA_Perimeters_NIFC_FIRIS_public_view/FeatureServer

  16. Offshore Wind Lease Outlines

    • catalog.data.gov
    • datasets.ai
    • +5more
    Updated Oct 23, 2025
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    Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (2025). Offshore Wind Lease Outlines [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/offshore-wind-lease-outlines
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 23, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Bureau of Ocean Energy Managementhttp://www.boem.gov/
    Description

    MetadataThese data are an outline version of offshore wind leases managed by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM). Active offshore wind leasing areas within the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) waters include commercial, research, and right of way lease areas. Leases are considered provisional after auction and prior to signatures from BOEM and the Lessee. All blocks for each lease have been dissolved by Lease Number to create outline polygons of active wind leases managed by BOEM. Easement sections are not dissolved into the lease but are considered part of the lease agreement.

  17. a

    Cities Dissolved Weekly

    • opendata-volusiacountyfl.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Nov 4, 2025
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    County of Volusia (2025). Cities Dissolved Weekly [Dataset]. https://opendata-volusiacountyfl.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/cities-dissolved-weekly
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Nov 4, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Volusia
    Area covered
    Description

    Polygon boundaries of municipalities in Volusia County. Maintained by Growth and Resource Management. Dissolved by city name to create a single, multipart polygon for each municipality.

  18. a

    Immediate Coast (Dissolved Polygons)

    • livingatlas-dcdev.opendata.arcgis.com
    • gis-fema.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Oct 1, 2015
    Share
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    NOAA GeoPlatform (2015). Immediate Coast (Dissolved Polygons) [Dataset]. https://livingatlas-dcdev.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/noaa::immediate-coast-dissolved-polygons
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 1, 2015
    Dataset authored and provided by
    NOAA GeoPlatform
    Area covered
    Description

    Map Information

    This nowCOAST time-enabled map service provides maps depicting the geographic coverage of the latest NOAA/National Weather Service (NWS) WATCHES, WARNINGS, ADVISORIES, and STATEMENTS for long-duration hazardous weather, marine weather, hydrological, oceanographic, wildfire, air quality, and ecological conditions which may or are presently affecting inland, coastal, and maritime areas. A few examples include Gale Watch, Gale Warning, High Surf Advisory, High Wind Watch, Areal Flood Warning, Coastal Flood Watch, Winter Storm Warning, Wind Chill Advisory, Frost Advisory, Tropical Storm Watch, Red Flag Warning, Air Stagnation Warning, and Beach Hazards Statement. (A complete list is given in the Background Information section below.) The coverage areas of these products are usually defined by county or sub-county boundaries. The colors used to identify the different watches, advisories, warnings, and statements are the same colors used by the NWS on their map at weather.gov. The NWS products for long-duration hazardous conditions are updated in the nowCOAST map service approximately every 10 minutes. For more detailed information about the update schedule, please see: http://new.nowcoast.noaa.gov/help/#section=updateschedule.

    Background Information

    NWS watches depict the geographic areas where the risk of hazardous weather or hydrologic events has increased significantly, but their occurrence, location, and/or timing is still uncertain. A warning depicts where a hazardous weather or hydrologic event is occurring, is imminent, or has a very high probability of occurring. A warning is used for conditions posing a threat to life or property. Advisories indicates where special weather conditions are occurring, imminent, or has a very high probability of occurring but are less serious than a warning. They are for events that may cause significant inconvenience, and if caution is not exercised, it could lead to situations that may threaten life and/or property. Statements usually contain updated information on a warning and to let the public know when a warning is no longer in effect. All of these products are issued by the NWS regional Weather Forecast Offices (WFO).

    NWS watches, warnings, and advisories (WWA) are organized on nowCOAST's map viewer and map services by hazardous conditions/threats groups and then by the geographic area (i.e. coastal & inland, immediate coast or maritime) that the WWA product is targeted for.

      High Wind Hazards (Associated with Non-Tropical & Tropical Cyclones)
    
    
          Maritime Areas
    
            Brisk Wind Advisory
            Small Craft Advisory
            Small Craft Advisory for Winds
            Gale Watch
            Gale Warning
            Storm Watch
            Storm Warning
            Hurricane Force Wind Watch
            Hurricane Force Wind Warning
            Tropical Storm Watch
            Tropical Storm Warning
            Hurricane Watch
            Hurricane Warning
    
    
    
          Coastal & Inland Areas
    
            High Wind Watch
            Wind Advisory
            Lake Wind Advisory
            High Wind Warning
            Tropical Storm Watch
            Tropical Storm Warning
            Hurricane Watch
            Hurricane Warning
    
    
    
    
    
      Hazardous Seas, Surf, and Beach Conditions
    
    
          Maritime Areas
    
            Small Craft Advisory for Hazardous Seas
            Small Craft Advisory for Rough Bar
            Hazardous Seas Watch
            Hazardous Seas Warning
    
    
    
          Immediate Coast
    
            Beach Hazards Statement
            High Surf Advisory
            High Surf Warning 
            Low Water Advisory
            Rip Current Statement
    
    
    
    
    
      Flooding Hazards
    
    
          Coastal Areas
    
            Coastal Flood Statement
            Coastal Flood Watch
            Coastal Flood Advisory
            Coastal Flood Warning
            Lakeshore Flood Watch
            Lakeshore Flood Advisory
            Lakeshore Flood Warning
            Lakeshore Flood Statement
            Tsunami Watch
            Tsunami Warning
    
    
    
          Inland Areas
    
            Flood Watch (Point) (also called River Flood Watch)
            Flood Watch (Areal)
            Flood Advisory (Point) (also called River Flood Advisory)
            Flood Advisory (Areal)
            Flood Warning (Point) (also called River Flood Warning)
            Flood Warning (Areal)
            Hydrologic Outlook
            Hydrologic Statement
    
    
    
    
    
      Reduced Visibility Hazards
    
    
          Maritime Areas
    
            Dense Fog Advisory
    
    
    
          Coastal & Inland Areas
    
            Ashfall Advisory
            Blowing Dust Advisory
            Dust Storm Warning
            Dense Fog Advisory
            Dense Smoke Advisory
    
    
    
    
    
      Freezing Spray Hazards
    
        Maritime Areas
    
            Heavy Freezing Spray Watch
            Freezing Spray Advisory
            Heavy Freezing Spray Advisory
    
    
    
    
    
      Snow, Sleet, Freezing Rain, and Freezing Fog Hazards
    
    
          Coastal & Inland Areas
    
            Blizzard Watch
            Blizzard Warning
            Freezing Fog Advisory
            Freezing Rain Advisory
            Ice Storm Warning
            Lake-Effect Snow Watch
            Lake-Effect Snow Advisory
            Lake-Effect Snow Warning
            Winter Storm Watch
            Winter Weather Advisory
            Winter Storm Warning
    
    
    
    
    
      Cold and Heat Hazards
    
    
          Coastal & Inland Areas
    
            Excessive Cold Watch
            Excessive Cold Warning
            Excessive Heat Watch
            Heat Advisory
            Excessive Heat Warning
            Frost Advisory
            Freeze Watch
            Freeze Warning
            Wind Chill Advisory
            Wind Chill Warning
    
    
    
    
    
      Critical Wildfire Conditions
    
    
          Coastal & Inland Areas
    
            Fire Weather Watch
            Red Flag Warning
    
    
    
    
    
      Unhealthy Air Quality
    
    
          Coastal & Inland Areas
    
            Air Stagnation Advisory
            Air Quality Alerts from states are NOT available
    

    For descriptions of individual NWS watches, warnings, and advisories please see Section 2 of the NWS Reference Guide available at http://www.nws.noaa.gov/om/guide/Section2.pdf

    Time Information

    This map is time-enabled, meaning that each individual layer contains time-varying data and can be utilized by clients capable of making map requests that include a time component.

    This particular service can be queried with or without the use of a time component. If the time parameter is specified in a request, the data or imagery most relevant to the provided time value, if any, will be returned. If the time parameter is not specified in a request, the latest data or imagery valid for the present system time will be returned to the client. If the time parameter is not specified and no data or imagery is available for the present time, no data will be returned.

    In addition to ArcGIS Server REST access, time-enabled OGC WMS 1.3.0 access is also provided by this service.

    Due to software limitations, the time extent of the service and map layers displayed below does not provide the most up-to-date start and end times of available data. Instead, users have three options for determining the latest time information about the service:

    Issue a returnUpdates=true request for an individual layer or for
    the service itself, which will return the current start and end times of
    available data, in epoch time format (milliseconds since 00:00 January 1,
    1970). To see an example, click on the "Return Updates" link at the bottom of
    this page under "Supported Operations". Refer to the
    ArcGIS REST API Map Service Documentation
    for more information.
    
    
      Issue an Identify (ArcGIS REST) or GetFeatureInfo (WMS) request against
      the proper layer corresponding with the target dataset. For raster
      data, this would be the "Image Footprints with Time Attributes" layer
      in the same group as the target "Image" layer being displayed. For
      vector (point, line, or polygon) data, the target layer can be queried
      directly. In either case, the attributes returned for the matching
      raster(s) or vector feature(s) will include the following:
    
    
          validtime: Valid timestamp.
    
    
          starttime: Display start time.
    
    
          endtime: Display end time.
    
    
          reftime: Reference time (sometimes reffered to as
          issuance time, cycle time, or initialization time).
    
    
          projmins: Number of minutes from reference time to valid
          time.
    
    
          desigreftime: Designated reference time; used as a
          common reference time for all items when individual reference
          times do not match.
    
    
          desigprojmins: Number of minutes from designated
          reference time to valid time.
    
    
    
    
      Query the nowCOAST LayerInfo web service, which has been created to
      provide additional information about each data layer in a service,
      including a list of all available "time stops" (i.e. "valid times"),
      individual timestamps, or the valid time of a layer's latest available
      data (i.e. "Product Time"). For more information about the LayerInfo
      web service, including examples of various types of requests, refer to
      the nowCOAST help documentation at:
      http://new.nowcoast.noaa.gov/help/#section=layerinfo
    

    References

    NWS, 2006: NWS Instructions 10-313, WFO Severe Weather Products Specification, NWS, Silver Spring, MD. NWS, 2007: NWS Instructions 10-320, Coastal/Lakeshore Hazard Services, NWS, Silver Spring, MD. NWS, 2007: NWS Instructions 10-922, Weather Forecast Office Hydrologic Products Specification, NWS, Silver Spring, MD. NWS, 2008: NWS Instructions 10-301, Marine and Coastal Services Abbreviations and Definitions, NWS, Silver Spring, MD. NWS, 2010: NWS Instructions 10-519, WFO Air Quality Products Specification, NWS, Silver Spring, MD. NWS, 2011: NWS Products and Services Reference Guidebook, NWS/Office of Climate, Water, and Weather Services, Silver Spring, MD. NWS,

  19. Florida Wood Stork Foraging Areas

    • geodata.dep.state.fl.us
    • maps-fdep.opendata.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Oct 7, 2021
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    Florida Department of Environmental Protection (2021). Florida Wood Stork Foraging Areas [Dataset]. https://geodata.dep.state.fl.us/items/c3428d8d914c448ca27921388d443c5b
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 7, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Florida Department of Environmental Protectionhttp://www.floridadep.gov/
    License

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

    Area covered
    Description

    Wood stork core foraging areas for active nesting colonies in Florida, dissolved to minimize polygons. Active includes nested within FL 2010-2019.

  20. e

    Revitalizing Baltimore Program - GIS Shapefile - Stream and Watershed...

    • portal.edirepository.org
    zip
    Updated Feb 12, 2007
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    Peter Groffman (2007). Revitalizing Baltimore Program - GIS Shapefile - Stream and Watershed Studies - GIS - Boundary - Masking coverage to isolate the GFW from surroundings [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.6073/pasta/8d598394179223ed5f4385b79b447da1
    Explore at:
    zip(20 kilobyte)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 12, 2007
    Dataset provided by
    EDI
    Authors
    Peter Groffman
    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 2000
    Area covered
    Description

    Originating Baltimore Ecosystem Study

       Description of Masking coverage to isolate the G.F. Wshed from other areas
    
    
       Status of Dataset final
    
    
       Geographic Area Gwynns Falls Watershed
    
    
       West Bounding 844643
    
    
       East Bounding 905481
    
    
       North Bounding 598260
    
    
       South Bounding 516090
    
    
       Keywords inverse boundary, mask
    
    
       Contact Person Jonathan Walsh
    
    
       Contact Phone # 845-677-5343
    
    
       Contact e-mail walshj@ecostudies.org
    
    
       Project Baltimore Ecosystem Study
    
    
       Format of Data and ARC/Info export (*.e00)
    
    
       File Name GFBNDINV
    
    
       File Size
    
    
       Type of Source gis coverage
    
    
       Scale of Source
    
    
       Date(s) of Source 1995
    
    
       Method of Data n/a
    
    
       Method of Digital This coverage was created by DISSOLVing all polygons in GF_REACH except the GF boundary
    
    
       Date(s) of Digital 1995
    
    
       Resolution/Accuracy n/a
    
    
       Geographic n/a
    
    
       Type of Data vector
    
    
       Coordinate Maryland State Plane, feet, NAD27
    
    
       Attribute n/a
    
    
       Available Media on-line
    
    
       Distribution free
    
    
       Access/Use No constraints. The authors of this dataset would appreciate acknowledgment in products derived.
    
    
       Level II Metadata none
    
    
       Level III Metadata none
    
Share
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Click to copy link
Link copied
Close
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Bureau of Land Management (2025). BLM OR Management Ownership Dissolve Polygon Hub [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/blm-or-management-ownership-dissolve-polygon-hub-079fc
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BLM OR Management Ownership Dissolve Polygon Hub

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Nov 11, 2025
Dataset provided by
Bureau of Land Managementhttp://www.blm.gov/
Description

ownership_poly_dissolve: This theme portrays information related to surface jurisdiction of lands located in the states of Oregon and Washington.

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