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TwitterThe Climbing Walls are located within Q'emiln Park and the Post Falls Community Forest in Post Falls, Idaho. Look for the Kootenai Klimbers message center at the westerly end of Q'emiln and you are within reach of your first climb. Or take advantage of the numerous hiking trails available in the Post Falls Community Forest to take you to your next climb. Trails are accessible from the Trailhead parking area off of W. Riverview Dr.Please be respectful to our parks - Pack It In, Pack It Out.The pictures can be opened in new windows with a right click and the routes themselves are embedded and a single click opens in a new window. The red boxes themselves are map extents for the feature being described.
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TwitterThe data release for the geologic terranes of the Hailey 1 x 2 degrees quadrangle and the western part of the Idaho Falls 1 x 2 degrees quadrangle, south-central Idaho is a Geologic Map Schema (GeMS)-compliant version that updates the GIS files for the geologic map published in U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Bulletin 2064-A (Worl and Johnson, 1995). The updated digital data present the attribute tables and geospatial features (lines and polygons) in the format that meets GeMS requirements. This data release presents the geologic map as shown on the plate and captured in geospatial data for the published map. Minor errors, such as mistakes in line decoration or differences between the digital data and the map image, are corrected in this version. The database represents the geology for the 6.1 million-acre, geologically complex Hailey quadrangle and the western part of the Idaho Falls quadrangle, at a publication scale of 1:250,000. The map covers primarily Blaine, Camas, Custer and Elmore Counties, but also includes minor parts of Ada, Butte, Gooding, Lincoln, and Minidoka Counties. These GIS data supersede those in the interpretive report: Worl, R.G. and Johnson, K.M., 1995, Geology and mineral deposits of the Hailey 1 degree x 2 degrees quadrangle and the western part of the Idaho Falls 1 degree x 2 degrees quadrangle, south-central Idaho - an overview: U.S. Geological Survey, Bulletin 2064-A, scale 1:250,000, https://pubs.usgs.gov/bul/b2064-a/.
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TwitterThe downloadable ZIP file contains an Esri shapefile. This is a bathymetric data set of Coeur d'Alene Lake, Coeur d'Alene River, St. Joe River, and Spokane River. This data was derived from bathymetric contour lines created by Parametrix, Golder and USGS. The contour lines were interpreted by the ArcGIS using the "Topo to Raster" tool to produce raster surfaces (i.e. Digital Elevation Model (DEM)). For most of the project area the contour lines had a one-foot increment. The only exception to this was when USGS data was used for areas around the Lateral Lakes along the Coeur d'Alene River. Five-foot contour lines were then generated from the DEM. Contour attribute is displayed in feet above sea level.The original data sets used for the basis of this project were created for various studies of Coeur d'Alene Lake. Primarily, in relation to the re licensing of the Post Falls dam. This dataset was created to try to avoid many of the edge matching issues that arose around the original Parametrix data set. This data set will also be used to generate future contour lines of the lake and rivers.These data were contributed to INSIDE Idaho at the University of Idaho Library in 2004.
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TwitterThere are three geothermal moratorium areas in the State: Boise Front, Twin Falls and Banbury Hot Springs. IDWR issued a five-year moratorium for the Boise Front Low Temperature Geothermal Resource Ground Water Management Area on June 10, 1988. The moratorium prohibits "further development or additional use pursuant to undeveloped or partially developed permits" until the permit holders provides information to the Department that addresses three issues: aquifer depletion, pumping lift, and temperature declines. The Boise Front moratorium was extended an additional five years in 1993, 1998, 2003, 2008 and 2014, with the next review scheduled for 2019. The Idaho Department of Water Resources issued a five-year moratorium on geothermal development on July 24, 1987 for a portion of the Twin Falls Ground Water Management Area. The moratorium ceased further diversions "under all existing permits", caused all applications for thermal water to be "held without action" unless the application was included in an agreement dated July 22, 1987, and made provisions for the Department to respond if development outside the moratorium area affects the users within it. The Twin Falls moratorium was extended an additional five years in 1992, 1997, and 2002, with the next review scheduled for 2007.
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Twitterhttps://open.niagarafalls.ca/pages/terms-of-usehttps://open.niagarafalls.ca/pages/terms-of-use
This spatial data set contains Statistics Canada 2021 Census information for Class of Worker Including Job Permanency by census tract. For more information please visit the Statistics Canada Census Dictionary: https://www12.statcan.gc.ca/census-recensement/2021/ref/dict/index-eng.cfmIt is recommended to use the Field Dictionary in conjunction with this data: Click Here
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TwitterThe Climbing Walls are located within Q'emiln Park and the Post Falls Community Forest in Post Falls, Idaho. Look for the Kootenai Klimbers message center at the westerly end of Q'emiln and you are within reach of your first climb. Or take advantage of the numerous hiking trails available in the Post Falls Community Forest to take you to your next climb. Trails are accessible from the Trailhead parking area off of W. Riverview Dr.Please be respectful to our parks - Pack It In, Pack It Out.The pictures can be opened in new windows with a right click and the routes themselves are embedded and a single click opens in a new window. The red boxes themselves are map extents for the feature being described.