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TwitterThe Great Lakes Environmental Database (GLENDA) houses environmental data collected by EPA Great Lakes National Program Office (GLNPO) programs that sample water, aquatic life, sediments, and air to assess the health of the Great Lakes ecosystem. GLENDA is available to the public on the EPA Central Data Exchange (CDX). A CDX account is required, which anyone may create. GLENDA offers “Ready to Download Data Files” prepared by GLNPO or a “Query Data” interface that allows users to select from predefined parameters to create a customized query. Query results can be downloaded in .csv format. GLNPO programs providing data in GLENDA include the Great Lakes Water Quality Survey and Great Lakes Biology Monitoring Program (1983-present, biannual monitoring throughout the Great Lakes to assess water quality, chemical, nutrient, and physical parameters, and biota such as plankton and benthic invertebrates), the Great Lakes Fish Monitoring and Surveillance Program (1977-present, annual analysis of top predator fish composites to assess historic and emerging persistent, bioaccumulative, or toxic chemical contaminants), the Cooperative Science and Monitoring Initiative (2002-present, intensive water quality and biology sampling of one lake per year focusing on key challenges and data gaps), the Great Lakes Integrated Atmospheric Deposition Network (1990-present, monitoring Great Lakes air and precipitation for persistent toxic chemicals), the Lake Michigan Mass Balance Study (1993-1996, analyzed the atmosphere, tributaries, sediments, water column, and biota of Lake Michigan for nutrients, atrazine, PCBs, trans-nonachlor, and mercury modelling), and the Great Lakes Legacy Act (1996-present, evaluations of sediment contamination in Areas of Concern). GLENDA is updated frequently with new data.
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TwitterThe Environmental Protection Agency's Enforcement and Compliance History Online (ECHO) website provides customizable and downloadable information about environmental inspections, violations, and enforcement actions for EPA-regulated facilities related to the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, and Safe Drinking Water Act. These data are updated weekly as part of the ECHO data refresh, and ECHO offers many user-friendly options to explore data, including: • Facility Search: ECHO information is searchable by varied criteria, including location, facility type, and compliance status. Search results are customizable and downloadable. • Comparative Maps and State Dashboards: These tools offer aggregated information about facility compliance status, regulatory agency compliance monitoring, and enforcement activity at the national and state level. • Bulk Data Downloads: One of ECHO’s most popular features is the ability to work offline by downloading large data sets. Users can take advantage of the ECHO Exporter, which provides summary information about each facility in comma-separated values (csv) file format, or download data sets by program as zip files.
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Welcome to the Mayor's Office of Environmental Remediation's Searchable Property Environmental E-Database (SPEED) Portal. SPEED enables users to examine environmental and other data on properties in New York City. You can find information about certain sites in City, State, and Federal environmental remediation programs. You can also search for individual vacant tax parcels and view historical information, such as past land uses and historical and topographical maps. Further, the site has the general features of NYCityMap - map tools, aerial photos, political and geographic districts, and building footprint maps.Users can browse by navigating with the map interface or by searching for desired properties or locations, create reports, or print maps showing spatial information. Registered users can save properties of interest, make notes, and be notified of updates. If you are new to SPEED, please visit the User Guide/Help Document for more information about how to use the portal.For the Portal, OER developed one data set, the Vacant Property Database (VPD), which focuses on privately-owned lots that are zoned for commercial and manufacturing uses and that are unimproved, i.e. they had no structure or use on them according to 2009 PLUTO (Primary Land Use Tax Lot Output) data that are compiled for governmental use by the NYC Department of City Planning. Lots that are known to have been developed since the collection of the 2009 PLUTO data are not included in the database. If you wish to inform us of any updated information about the lots in the database or to provide any other feedback, please contact OER.
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TwitterThis Guide is designed to assist you with adding and viewing data on a map within the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water's Find Environmental Data (FED) geospatial data catalogue.This Guide assumes that you are familiar with locating data within FED. For further assistance see the Finding Data Guide.
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TwitterThe Geoecology database is a compilation of environmental data for the period 1941 to 1981. The Geoecology database contains selected data on terrain and soils, water resources, forestry, vegetation, agriculture, land use, wildlife, air quality, climate, natural areas, and endangered species. Data on selected human population characteristics are also included to complement the environmental files. Data represent the conterminous United States at the county level. These historical data are provided as a source of 1970s baseline environmental conditions for the United States.
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TwitterThis dataset contains a list of products that carry the Design for the Environment (DfE) label. This mark enables consumers to quickly identify and choose products that can help protect the environment and are safer for families. When you see the DfE logo on a product it means that the DfE scientific review team has screened each ingredient for potential human health and environmental effects and that-based on currently available information, EPA predictive models, and expert judgment-the product contains only those ingredients that pose the least concern among chemicals in their class. Product manufacturers who become DfE partners, and earn the right to display the DfE logo on recognized products, have invested heavily in research, development and reformulation to ensure that their ingredients and finished product line up on the green end of the health and environmental spectrum while maintaining or improving product performance. EPA's Design for the Environment Program (DfE) has allowed use of their logo on over 2500 products. These products are formulated from the safest possible ingredients and have reduced the use of "chemicals of concern" by hundreds of millions of pounds.
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TwitterThis dataset serves as a lookup table to determine if environmental records exist in a Chicago Department of Public Health (CDPH) environmental dataset for a given address.
Data fields requiring description are detailed below.
MAPPED LOCATION: Contains the address, city, state and latitude/longitude coordinates of the facility. In instances where the facility address is a range, the lower number (the value in the “Street Number From” column) is used. For example, for the range address 1000-1005 S Wabash Ave, the Mapped Location would be 1000 S Wabash Ave. The latitude/longitude coordinate is determined through the Chicago Open Data Portal’s geocoding process. Addresses that fail to geocode are assigned the coordinates 41.88415000022252°, -87.63241000012124°.This coordinate is located approximately just south of the intersection of W Randolph and N LaSalle.
COMPLAINTS: A ‘Y’ indicates that one or more records exist in the CDPH Environmental Complaints dataset.
NESHAPS & DEMOLITON NOTICES: A ‘Y’ indicates that one or more records exist in the CDPH Asbestos and Demolition Notification dataset.
ENFORCEMENT: A ‘Y’ indicates that one or more records exist in the CDPH Environmental Enforcement dataset.
INSPECTIONS: A ‘Y’ indicates that one or more records exist in the CDPH Environmental Inspections dataset.
PERMITS: A ‘Y’ indicates that one or more records exist in the CDPH Environmental Permits dataset.
TANKS: A ‘Y’ indicates that one or more records exist in the CDPH Storage Tanks dataset. Each 'Y' is a clickable link that will download the corresponding records in CSV format.
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TwitterBGS have collected environmental radioactivity data for various purposes over several decades. This is being drawn together to produce a database of baseline gamma radioactivity and radon. Data includes the relevant portions of airborne and ground gamma spectrometer surveys, mineral exploration, baseline geochemistry and environmental radiometric surveys along with lithogeochemical and borehole log data. It is predominantly a specialist subset of other existing BGS databases. Incomplete UK coverage.
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TwitterTOXNET is a group of databases hosted by the National Library of Medicine containing factual information related to the toxicity and other hazards of chemicals. They are structured around chemical records.
There are four basic groupings of TOXNET databases. Within each of these
groupings are one or more databases. The first grouping is Toxicology Data
including factual information on toxicity and other hazards of chemicals. The
databases included in Toxicology Databases are the following four - Hazardous
Substances Data Bank (HSDB) providing broad scope in human and animal toxicity,
safety and handling, environmental fate, and more. Scientifically
peer-reviewed; the Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) providing Data
from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in support of human health risk
assessment. It, focuses on identifying hazards and assessing the connection
between dose and response; Chemical Carcinogenesis Research Information System
(CCRIS) providing carcinogenicity, mutagenicity, tumor promotion, and tumor
inhibition data provided by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) and GENE-TOX
providing peer-reviewed mutagenicity test data from the EPA.
The second grouping is Toxicology Literature. These TOXNET databases contain
bibliographic information with citations to the scientific literature. You can
use this information to locate the article in a journal. Many provide
hyperlinks to Medical Subject Headings (MESH) and other keywords. The
databases included in Toxicology Literature are the following three - TOXLINE,
providing an extensive array of references to literature on biochemical,
pharmacological, physiological, and toxicological effects of drugs and other
chemicals; Environmental Mutagen Information Center (EMIC) providing current
and older literature on agents tested for genotoxic activity and Developmental
and Reproductive Toxicology (DART) and Environmental Teratology Information
Center (ETIC) providing current and older literature on developmental and
reproductive toxicology.
The third grouping is the Toxic Release Information which includes just The
Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) database created by the Environmental Protection
Agency and contains data on the estimated quantities of chemicals released to
the environment or transferred off-site for waste treatment. TRI also holds
information related to source reduction and recycling. Data for the most recent
and two prior reporting years is currently available. This particular TRI
database includes the years 1995 to 1999.
The fourth grouping is Chemical Information. Chemicals are identified in a
number of ways, including by name and structural diagram. Using a dictionary or
a thesaurus can help you find information for a particular substance. SIS
maintains several chemical online resources to help you determine the identity
of a substance and point you to files or resources of interest. There are three
databases within this grouping. The first is ChemIDplus providing Numerous
chemical synonyms, structures, regulatory list information, and links to other
databases containing information about the chemicals; HSDB Structures providing
2D and 3D structural information on the HSDB chemicals and NCI-3D providing 2D
and 3Dstructural information on compounds tested for anti-tumor activity
compiled by the National Cancer Institute.
The TOXNET Basic Search screens are intuitive and straightforward. Most screens
(except for the TRI database) allow you to place all query information in a
single input box. For example, you may be looking for a chemical name, a
particular author, a CAS Registry Number, or any type of concept term. You may
enter any combination of these into the single input box. In some databases,
you may also limit your search by author, title or dates.
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Twitterhttps://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontariohttps://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontario
This dataset consists of information from reports received by the Spills Action Centre (SAC). They are generated and completed by SAC following the initial report of a spill.
The data includes:
The data reflects the information as reflected in the report, following the incident.
All spills reported to SAC are recorded in the database, regardless of whether or not the Ministry provides field response.
Get more information on the Spills Action Centre.
*[SAC]: Spills Action Centre *[etc.]: et cetera *[e.g.]: for example
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TwitterThis map service contains GIS data from the EPA Office of Water 305(b) Assessed Waters Program. The information supporting this service resides in the Reach Address Database (RAD) which is part of the Watershed Assessment, Tracking & Environmental Results System (WATERS).The 305(b) program system provide assessed water data and assessed water features for river segments, lakes, and estuaries designated under Section 305(b) of the Clean Water Act. 305(b) waterbodies are coded onto NHDPlus v2.1 features creating area, point and linear events representing assessed and non-assessed waters. In addition to NHDPlus reach indexed data there may also be custom events (point, line, or area) that are not associated with NHDPlus and are in an EPA standard format that is compatible with EPA's Reach Address Database. These custom events are used to represent locations of 305(b) waterbodies that are not represented well in NHDPlus. To identify the spatial extent of waters listed under the 305(b) program attributed as being assessed in the ATTAINS database, these waters can be linked to the 305(b) information stored in the EPA's Assessment and TMDL Tracking and Implementation System (ATTAINS) for query and display. Use the Source_FeatureID field and Cycle_Year field to link indexed assessed waters to the EPA's ATTAINS Database. For complete metadata, please use EPA's Environmental Data Gateway (EDG): https://edg.epa.gov/metadata/catalog/search/resource/details.page?uuid=%7B81060F20-4F5C-42E2-BBC7-CD96E442B8FA%7D.
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TwitterThis Guide is designed to assist you with adding and viewing data on a map within the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water's Find Environmental Data (FED) geospatial data catalogue. This Guide assumes that you are familiar with locating data within FED. For further assistance see the Finding Data Guide.
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TwitterThis submission includes data files released in response to FOIA request #2025-EPA-04342 made in the Summer of 2025. The release also included source code that is currently archived at: https://github.com/Public-Environmental-Data-Partners/FLIGHT_foia_code Because the CSV files included in this release may well be useful to researchers without needing to go through the published interface, they are being archived here separately from the EPA code. Note that, in addition to the csv files received in response to the FOIA request, this repository contains facility detail xml files for 115,000+ unique facility_id/year combinations. FLIGHT data represents "Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Emissions Data from Large Facilities" only and "does not reflect total U.S. GHG emissions." The official FLIGHT site is: https://ghgdata.epa.gov/ghgp/main.do Various versions of EPA GHG data have been separately archived in multiple Dataverse entries. Try searching for GHG or go directly to this believed-to-be-comprehensive set of raw data files exported from the database: https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataset.xhtml?persistentId=doi:10.7910/DVN/6V0F7S If you have questions about the underlying data stored here, please contact the EPA directly. See: https://www.epa.gov/aboutepa/forms/contact-epa If you have questions or recommendations related to this metadata entry and extracted data, please contact the CAFE Data Management team at: climatecafe@bu.edu.
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Every year, the Ministry of the Environment Conservation and Parks publicly releases the Environmental Compliance Report on the Ontario Data Catalogue. In Ontario, all facilities with regulated wastewater discharges or air emissions under the Ontario Water Resources Act and the Environmental Protection Act must monitor and report any cases where approved operating limits have been exceeded. That information is compiled annually into the Environmental Compliance Report. Currently the latest three years are available directly below in Excel and can be viewed in CSV. Earlier years have been zipped up for ease of viewing and download. What is the report The report demonstrates how we are meeting our Made-in-Ontario Environment Plan commitment to hold polluters accountable for their actions. It includes information about steps taken by facilities to achieve compliance with environmental laws and information about ministry-led enforcement actions, including penalties and prosecutions. Keywords: private sewage, industrial sewage, environmental compliance, ecr
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TwitterThe U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) National Priorities List (NPL) Sites Point Data with CIESIN Modifications, Version 2 is a modified version of the 2014 EPA NPL list. It includes all the sites that are proposed, currently on, or deleted from the Final NPL as of February 27, 2014. CIESIN has fixed eleven of the original coordinates by correcting latitude or longitude coordinates. It contains the point locations, including the eleven corrections, for 1,747 U.S. hazardous waste sites on the National Priorities List (NPL) of EPA's Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Information System (CERCLIS) for the fifty states, Puerto Rico, and 4 other territorial areas plus the now independent Palau, Federated States of Micronesia. The sites in CERCLIS are also known as Superfund Sites. The NPL is intended primarily to guide the EPA in determining which sites warrant further investigation. To provide an easily accessible, corrected EPA data set of the geo-referenced locations displayed as points for all the National Priorities List (NPL) Superfund sites in the United States, Puerto Rico, and other territories.
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TwitterUsers can search legislation related to environmental health. Topics include: air quality, indoor air quality, public health, and toxic agents. BackgroundThe Environmental Health Statute Database is maintained by the National Conference of State Legislatures. This database allows users to track legislation related to environmental health. Topics include, but are not limited to: air quality, indoor air quality, lead, public health, and toxic agents. User FunctionalityUsers can search environmental health statutes by topic, citation, year, and keyword. Users can view detailed summaries of state legislation . Data NotesState-level statute information is available for 2000 to 2009. The website does not indicate when the database is updated.
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We conducted two literature searches to help guide the development of a conceptual model of a barrier island and shoreline system in response to cumulative effects of restoration projects. The first search targeted examples of cumulative effects assessments and/or existing conceptual models from which a system-specific conceptual model can be built. The second search targeted the identification of barrier island and shoreline environmental system components, drivers and stressors. There are two data sheets in this dataset; one set of records from each literature search. Each spreadsheet includes record information pulled directly from the Web of Science searches, such as title, authors, abstract, and publication source. We also screened the records for relevance to our needs and additional information contained in the titles and abstracts, including environmental system components (e.g. structure or function), specific drivers and stressors, and more.
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Data comprise biological and ecological half-life values for marine, freshwater, terrestrial and riparian organisms. The database includes 1908 biological half-life values for 52 elements across a range of wildlife groups (marine, freshwater, terrestrial and riparian). The compilation of values from a range of sources was conducted by an international working group under the auspices of an International Atomic Energy Agency programme. Full details about this dataset can be found at https://doi.org/10.5285/b95c2ea7-47d2-4816-b942-68779c59bc4d
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This data set represents information reported after June 30, 2022 to the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (CT DEEP), generally to the CT DEEP Dispatch Center, regarding releases of substances to the environment, generally through accidental spills. The update frequeny on this data set is about once a month.
For current information related to releases reported to CT DEEP from July 1, 2022 to the present, go to Incident Reports for Releases Reported to CT DEEP July 1, 2022 to present at: https://connecticut.hazconnect.com/listincidentpublic.aspx. For a dataset related to releases reported to CT DEEP from July 1, 1996 to June 30, 2022 refer to the CT Open Data dataset: https://data.ct.gov/Environment-and-Natural-Resources/Spill-Incidents-from-January-1-1996-to-June-30-202/wr2a-rnsg
This dataset is a snapshot of data from the live system that is updated periodically to provide to public users the download capabilities offered from the CT Open Data platform. Connecticut General Statutes Section 22a-450 requires anyone who causes any discharge, spillage, uncontrolled loss, seepage or filtration of oil or petroleum or chemical liquids or solid, liquid or gaseous products, or hazardous wastes which poses a potential threat to human health or the environment to report that release to the CT DEEP. Reports of releases from other persons are also included in this dataset.
Examples of what may be included in a spill incident record includes: Administrative information (unique spill case number), Spill date/time, Location.,Spill source and cause, Material(s) and material type spilled.
Data limitations and factors to consider when using this data: This data is limited to information about a spill incident as it was known at the time it was reported to CT DEEP. Although some data reflects updated information after the time of the initial notification, CT DEEP idoes not field check and verify all reported information. Therefore, information later determined to be incomplete or inaccurate may exist in this data set. There may also be spelling errors or other unintentionally inaccurate data that was transcribed in the spill incident report.
This dataset is a subset of records and information that may be available about releases that have occurred at specific locations. This dataset does not replace a full review of files publicly available either on-line and/or at CT DEEP’s Records Center.
For a complete review of agency records for this or other agency programs, you can perform your own search in our DEEP public file room (https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/About/Environmental-Quality-Records-Records-Center-File-Room) located at 79 Elm Street, Hartford CT or at our DEEP Online Search Portal at: https://filings.deep.ct.gov/DEEPDocumentSearchPortal/Home
If errors are found or there are questions about the data, please contact the program unit using the following email address: DEEP.SpillsDocs@ct.gov
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TwitterHSDB is a toxicology data file on the National Library of Medicine's (NLM) Toxicology Data Network (TOXNET). It focuses on the toxicology of potentially hazardous chemicals. It is enhanced with information on human exposure, industrial hygiene, emergency handling procedures, environmental fate, regulatory requirements, and related areas. All data are referenced and derived from a core set of books, government documents, technical reports and selected primary journal literature. HSDB is peer-reviewed by the Scientific Review Panel (SRB) a committee of experts in the major subject areas within the data bank's scope. HSDB is organized into individual chemical records, and contains over 4500 such records.
Users can search by chemical or other name, chemical name fragment, Chemical
Abstracts Service Registry Number (RN), and/or subject terms. Search results
can easily be viewed, printed or downloaded. Search results are displayed in
relevancy ranked order. Users may select to display exact term matches,
complete records, or any combination of data from the groupings listed in the
keyword section.
Users can easily conduct their HSDB search strategy against other databases:
Chemical Carcinogenesis Research Information System, Integrated Information
System, and GENE-TOX.
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TwitterThe Great Lakes Environmental Database (GLENDA) houses environmental data collected by EPA Great Lakes National Program Office (GLNPO) programs that sample water, aquatic life, sediments, and air to assess the health of the Great Lakes ecosystem. GLENDA is available to the public on the EPA Central Data Exchange (CDX). A CDX account is required, which anyone may create. GLENDA offers “Ready to Download Data Files” prepared by GLNPO or a “Query Data” interface that allows users to select from predefined parameters to create a customized query. Query results can be downloaded in .csv format. GLNPO programs providing data in GLENDA include the Great Lakes Water Quality Survey and Great Lakes Biology Monitoring Program (1983-present, biannual monitoring throughout the Great Lakes to assess water quality, chemical, nutrient, and physical parameters, and biota such as plankton and benthic invertebrates), the Great Lakes Fish Monitoring and Surveillance Program (1977-present, annual analysis of top predator fish composites to assess historic and emerging persistent, bioaccumulative, or toxic chemical contaminants), the Cooperative Science and Monitoring Initiative (2002-present, intensive water quality and biology sampling of one lake per year focusing on key challenges and data gaps), the Great Lakes Integrated Atmospheric Deposition Network (1990-present, monitoring Great Lakes air and precipitation for persistent toxic chemicals), the Lake Michigan Mass Balance Study (1993-1996, analyzed the atmosphere, tributaries, sediments, water column, and biota of Lake Michigan for nutrients, atrazine, PCBs, trans-nonachlor, and mercury modelling), and the Great Lakes Legacy Act (1996-present, evaluations of sediment contamination in Areas of Concern). GLENDA is updated frequently with new data.