54 datasets found
  1. d

    Landcover Raster Data (2010) – 6in Resolution

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.cityofnewyork.us
    • +2more
    Updated Sep 2, 2023
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    data.cityofnewyork.us (2023). Landcover Raster Data (2010) – 6in Resolution [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/landcover-raster-data-2010-6in-resolution
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 2, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    data.cityofnewyork.us
    Description

    6 inch resolution raster image of New York City, classified by landcover type. High resolution land cover data set for New York City. This is the 6 inch version of the high-resolution land cover dataset for New York City. Seven land cover classes were mapped: (1) tree canopy, (2) grass/shrub, (3) bare earth, (4) water, (5) buildings, (6) roads, and (7) other paved surfaces. The minimum mapping unit for the delineation of features was set at 3 square feet. The primary sources used to derive this land cover layer were the 2010 LiDAR and the 2008 4-band orthoimagery. Ancillary data sources included GIS data (city boundary, building footprints, water, parking lots, roads, railroads, railroad structures, ballfields) provided by New York City (all ancillary datasets except railroads); UVM Spatial Analysis Laboratory manually created railroad polygons from manual interpretation of 2008 4-band orthoimagery. The tree canopy class was considered current as of 2010; the remaining land-cover classes were considered current as of 2008. Object-Based Image Analysis (OBIA) techniques were employed to extract land cover information using the best available remotely sensed and vector GIS datasets. OBIA systems work by grouping pixels into meaningful objects based on their spectral and spatial properties, while taking into account boundaries imposed by existing vector datasets. Within the OBIA environment a rule-based expert system was designed to effectively mimic the process of manual image analysis by incorporating the elements of image interpretation (color/tone, texture, pattern, location, size, and shape) into the classification process. A series of morphological procedures were employed to insure that the end product is both accurate and cartographically pleasing. More than 35,000 corrections were made to the classification. Overall accuracy was 96%. This dataset was developed as part of the Urban Tree Canopy (UTC) Assessment for New York City. As such, it represents a 'top down' mapping perspective in which tree canopy over hanging other features is assigned to the tree canopy class. At the time of its creation this dataset represents the most detailed and accurate land cover dataset for the area. This project was funded by National Urban and Community Forestry Advisory Council (NUCFAC) and the National Science Fundation (NSF), although it is not specifically endorsed by either agency. The methods used were developed by the University of Vermont Spatial Analysis Laboratory, in collaboration with the New York City Urban Field Station, with funding from the USDA Forest Service.

  2. a

    VT Data - 2016 Base Land Cover Raster

    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Jul 15, 2019
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    VT Center for Geographic Information (2019). VT Data - 2016 Base Land Cover Raster [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/documents/175199f8feab4343a1d6455a5a2cd37d
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 15, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    VT Center for Geographic Information
    License

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

    Description

    (Link to Metadata) High resolution land cover dataset for Vermont. Eight land cover classes were mapped: (1) tree canopy, (2) grass/shrub, (3) bare earth, (4) water, (5) buildings, (6) roads, (7) other paved surfaces,and (8) railroads. The primary sources used to derive this land cover layer were 2013-2017 LiDAR data and 2016 NAIP imagery. Ancillary data sources included GIS data provided by the State of Vermont or created by the UVM Spatial Analysis Laboratory. Object-based image analysis techniques (OBIA) were employed to extract land cover information using the best available remotely sensed and vector GIS datasets. OBIA systems work by grouping pixels into meaningful objects based on their spectral and spatial properties, while taking into account boundaries imposed by existing vector datasets. Within the OBIA environment a rule-based expert system was designed to effectively mimic the process of manual image analysis by incorporating the elements of image interpretation (color/tone, texture, pattern, location, size, and shape) into the classification process. A series of morphological procedures were employed to insure that the end product is both accurate and cartographically pleasing. Following the automated OBIA mapping a detailed manual review of the dataset was carried out at a scale of 1:3000 and all observable errors were corrected.

  3. d

    Land Cover Raster Data (2017) – 6in Resolution

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.cityofnewyork.us
    • +2more
    Updated Sep 2, 2023
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    data.cityofnewyork.us (2023). Land Cover Raster Data (2017) – 6in Resolution [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/land-cover-raster-data-2017-6in-resolution
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 2, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    data.cityofnewyork.us
    Description

    A 6-in resolution 8-class land cover dataset derived from the 2017 Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) data capture. This dataset was developed as part of an updated urban tree canopy assessment and therefore represents a ''top-down" mapping perspective in which tree canopy overhanging features is assigned to the tree canopy class. The eight land cover classes mapped were: (1) Tree Canopy, (2) Grass\Shrubs, (3) Bare Soil, (4) Water, (5) Buildings, (6) Roads, (7) Other Impervious, and (8) Railroads. The primary sources used to derive this land cover layer were 2017 LiDAR (1-ft post spacing) and 2016 4-band orthoimagery (0.5-ft resolution). Object based image analysis was used to automate land-cover features using LiDAR point clouds and derivatives, orthoimagery, and vector GIS datasets -- City Boundary (2017, NYC DoITT) Buildings (2017, NYC DoITT) Hydrography (2014, NYC DoITT) LiDAR Hydro Breaklines (2017, NYC DoITT) Transportation Structures (2014, NYC DoITT) Roadbed (2014, NYC DoITT) Road Centerlines (2014, NYC DoITT) Railroads (2014, NYC DoITT) Green Roofs (date unknown, NYC Parks) Parking Lots (2014, NYC DoITT) Parks (2016, NYC Parks) Sidewalks (2014, NYC DoITT) Synthetic Turf (2018, NYC Parks) Wetlands (2014, NYC Parks) Shoreline (2014, NYC DoITT) Plazas (2014, NYC DoITT) Utility Poles (2014, ConEdison via NYCEM) Athletic Facilities (2017, NYC Parks) For the purposes of classification, only vegetation > 8 ft were classed as Tree Canopy. Vegetation below 8 ft was classed as Grass/Shrub. To learn more about this dataset, visit the interactive "Understanding the 2017 New York City LiDAR Capture" Story Map -- https://maps.nyc.gov/lidar/2017/ Please see the following link for additional documentation on this dataset -- https://github.com/CityOfNewYork/nyc-geo-metadata/blob/master/Metadata/Metadata_LandCover.md

  4. g

    Georeferenced Population Datasets of Mexico (GEO-MEX): Raster Based GIS...

    • gimi9.com
    • data.nasa.gov
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    Georeferenced Population Datasets of Mexico (GEO-MEX): Raster Based GIS Coverage of Mexican Population [Dataset]. https://gimi9.com/dataset/data-gov_georeferenced-population-datasets-of-mexico-geo-mex-raster-based-gis-coverage-of-mexican-p/
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    Area covered
    Mexico
    Description

    The Raster Based GIS Coverage of Mexican Population is a gridded coverage (1 x 1 km) of Mexican population. The data were converted from vector into raster. The population figures were derived based on available point data (the population of known localities - 30,000 in all). Cell values were derived using a weighted moving average function (Burrough, 1986), and then calculated based on known population by state. The result from this conversion is a coverage whose population data is based on square grid cells rather than a series of vectors. This data set is produced by the Columbia University Center for International Earth Science Information Network (CIESIN) in collaboration with the Instituto Nacional de Estadistica Geografia e Informatica (INEGI).

  5. Urban Green Raster Germany 2018

    • zenodo.org
    • explore.openaire.eu
    • +1more
    zip
    Updated Feb 28, 2022
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    Tobias Krüger; Tobias Krüger; Lisa Eichler; Lisa Eichler; Gotthard Meinel; Gotthard Meinel; Julia Tenikl; Hannes Taubenböck; Hannes Taubenböck; Michael Wurm; Michael Wurm; Julia Tenikl (2022). Urban Green Raster Germany 2018 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.26084/ioerfdz-r10-urbgrn2018
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    zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 28, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    Zenodohttp://zenodo.org/
    Authors
    Tobias Krüger; Tobias Krüger; Lisa Eichler; Lisa Eichler; Gotthard Meinel; Gotthard Meinel; Julia Tenikl; Hannes Taubenböck; Hannes Taubenböck; Michael Wurm; Michael Wurm; Julia Tenikl
    Area covered
    Germany
    Description

    Abstract

    The Urban Green Raster Germany is a land cover classification for Germany that addresses in particular the urban vegetation areas. The raster dataset covers the terrestrial national territory of Germany and has a spatial resolution of 10 meters. The dataset is based on a fully automated classification of Sentinel-2 satellite data from a full 2018 vegetation period using reference data from the European LUCAS land use and land cover point dataset.
    The dataset identifies eight land cover classes. These include Built-up, Built-up with significant green share, Coniferous wood, Deciduous wood, Herbaceous vegetation (low perennial vegetation), Water, Open soil, Arable land (low seasonal vegetation).
    The land cover dataset provided here is offered as an integer raster in GeoTiff format. The assignment of the number coding to the corresponding land cover class is explained in the legend file.

    Data acquisition

    The data acquisition comprises two main processing steps: (1) Collection, processing, and automated classification of the multispectral Sentinel 2 satellite data with the “Land Cover DE method”, resulting in the raw land cover classification dataset, NDVI layer, and RF assignment frequency vector raster. (2) GIS-based postprocessing including discrimination of (densely) built-up and loosely built-up pixels according NDVI threshold, and creating water-body and arable-land masks from geo-topographical base-data (ATKIS Basic DLM) and reclassification of water and arable land pixels based on the assignment frequency.

    Data collection

    Satellite data were searched and downloaded from the Copernicus Open Access Hub (https://scihub.copernicus.eu/).

    The LUCAS reference and validation points were loaded from the Eurostat platform (https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/web/lucas/data/database).

    The processing of the satellite data was performed at the DLR data center in Oberpfaffenhofen.

    GIS-based post-processing of the automatic classification result was performed at IOER in Dresden.

    Value of the data

    The dataset can be used to quantify the amount of green areas within cities on a homogeneous data base [5].

    Thus it is possible to compare cities of different sizes regarding their greenery and with respect to their ratio of green and built-up areas [6].

    Built-up areas within cities can be discriminated regarding their built-up density (dense built-up vs. built-up with higher green share).

    Data description

    A Raster dataset in GeoTIFF format: The dataset is stored as an 8 bit integer raster with values ranging from 1 to 8 for the eight different land cover classes. The nomenclature of the coded values is as follows: 1 = Built-up, 2=open soil; 3=Coniferous wood, 4= Deciduous wood, 5=Arable land (low seasonal vegetation), 6=Herbaceous vegetation (low perennial vegetation), 7=Water, 8=Built-up with significant green share. Name of the file ugr2018_germany.tif. The dataset is zipped alongside with accompanying files: *.twf (geo-referencing world-file), *.ovr (Overlay file for quick data preview in GIS), *.clr (Color map file).

    A text file with the integer value assignment of the land cover classes. Name of the file: Legend_LC-classes.txt.

    Experimental design, materials and methods

    The first essential step to create the dataset is the automatic classification of a satellite image mosaic of all available Sentinel-2 images from May to September 2018 with a maximum cloud cover of 60 percent. Points from the 2018 LUCAS (Land use and land cover survey) dataset from Eurostat [1] were used as reference and validation data. Using Random Forest (RF) classifier [2], seven land use classes (Deciduous wood, Coniferous wood, Herbaceous vegetation (low perennial vegetation), Built-up, Open soil, Water, Arable land (low seasonal vegetation)) were first derived, which is methodologically in line with the procedure used to create the dataset "Land Cover DE - Sentinel-2 - Germany, 2015" [3]. The overall accuracy of the data is 93 % [4].

    Two downstream post-processing steps served to further qualify the product. The first step included the selective verification of pixels of the classes arable land and water. These are often misidentified by the classifier due to radiometric similarities with other land covers; in particular, radiometric signatures of water surfaces often resemble shadows or asphalt surfaces. Due to the heterogeneous inner-city structures, pixels are also frequently misclassified as cropland.

    To mitigate these errors, all pixels classified as water and arable land were matched with another data source. This consisted of binary land cover masks for these two land cover classes originating from the Monitor of Settlement and Open Space Development (IOER Monitor). For all water and cropland pixels that were outside of their respective masks, the frequencies of class assignments from the RF classifier were checked. If the assignment frequency to water or arable land was at least twice that to the subsequent class, the classification was preserved. Otherwise, the classification strength was considered too weak and the pixel was recoded to the land cover with the second largest assignment frequency.

    Furthermore, an additional land cover class "Built-up with significant vegetation share" was introduced. For this purpose, all pixels of the Built-up class were intersected with the NDVI of the satellite image mosaic and assigned to the new category if an NDVI threshold was exceeded in the pixel. The associated NDVI threshold was previously determined using highest resolution reference data of urban green structures in the cities of Dresden, Leipzig and Potsdam, which were first used to determine the true green fractions within the 10m Sentinel pixels, and based on this to determine an NDVI value that could be used as an indicator of a significant green fraction within the built-up pixel. However, due to the wide dispersion of green fraction values within the built-up areas, it is not possible to establish a universally valid green percentage value for the land cover class of Built-up with significant vegetation share. Thus, the class essentially serves to the visual differentiability of densely and loosely (i.e., vegetation-dominated) built-up areas.

    Acknowledgments

    This work was supported by the Federal Institute for Research on Building, Urban Affairs and Spatial Development (BBSR) [10.06.03.18.101].The provided data has been developed and created in the framework of the research project “Wie grün sind bundesdeutsche Städte?- Fernerkundliche Erfassung und stadträumlich-funktionale Differenzierung der Grünausstattung von Städten in Deutschland (Erfassung der urbanen Grünausstattung)“ (How green are German cities?- Remote sensing and urban-functional differentiation of the green infrastructure of cities in Germany (Urban Green Infrastructure Inventory)). Further persons involved in the project were: Fabian Dosch (funding administrator at BBSR), Stefan Fina (research partner, group leader at ILS Dortmund), Annett Frick, Kathrin Wagner (research partners at LUP Potsdam).

    References

    [1] Eurostat (2021): Land cover / land use statistics database LUCAS. URL: https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/web/lucas/data/database

    [2] L. Breiman (2001). Random forests, Mach. Learn., 45, pp. 5-32

    [3] M. Weigand, M. Wurm (2020). Land Cover DE - Sentinel-2—Germany, 2015 [Data set]. German Aerospace Center (DLR). doi: 10.15489/1CCMLAP3MN39

    [4] M. Weigand, J. Staab, M. Wurm, H. Taubenböck, (2020). Spatial and semantic effects of LUCAS samples on fully automated land use/land cover classification in high-resolution Sentinel-2 data. Int J Appl Earth Obs, 88, 102065. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jag.2020.102065

    [5] L. Eichler., T. Krüger, G. Meinel, G. (2020). Wie grün sind deutsche Städte? Indikatorgestützte fernerkundliche Erfassung des Stadtgrüns. AGIT Symposium 2020, 6, 306–315. doi: 10.14627/537698030

    [6] H. Taubenböck, M. Reiter, F. Dosch, T. Leichtle, M. Weigand, M. Wurm (2021). Which city is the greenest? A multi-dimensional deconstruction of city rankings. Comput Environ Urban Syst, 89, 101687. doi: 10.1016/j.compenvurbsys.2021.101687

  6. A

    2016 Land Cover

    • data.boston.gov
    zip
    Updated Jul 9, 2023
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    Boston Maps (2023). 2016 Land Cover [Dataset]. https://data.boston.gov/dataset/2016-land-cover
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    zip(146346406)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 9, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Boston Maps
    Description

    High resolution land cover dataset for City of Boston, MA. Seven land cover classes were mapped: (1) tree canopy, (2) grass/shrub, (3) bare earth, (4) water, (5) buildings, (6) roads, and (7) other paved surfaces. The primary sources used to derive this land cover layer were 2013 LiDAR data, 2014 Orthoimagery, and 2016 NAIP imagery. Ancillary data sources included GIS data provided by City of Boston, MA or created by the UVM Spatial Analysis Laboratory. Object-based image analysis techniques (OBIA) were employed to extract land cover information using the best available remotely sensed and vector GIS datasets. OBIA systems work by grouping pixels into meaningful objects based on their spectral and spatial properties, while taking into account boundaries imposed by existing vector datasets. Within the OBIA environment a rule-based expert system was designed to effectively mimic the process of manual image analysis by incorporating the elements of image interpretation (color/tone, texture, pattern, location, size, and shape) into the classification process. A series of morphological procedures were employed to insure that the end product is both accurate and cartographically pleasing. Following the automated OBIA mapping a detailed manual review of the dataset was carried out at a scale of 1:2500 and all observable errors were corrected.

    High resolution land cover dataset for City of Boston, MA. Seven land cover classes were mapped: (1) tree canopy, (2) grass/shrub, (3) bare earth, (4) water, (5) buildings, (6) roads, and (7) other paved surfaces. The primary sources used to derive this land cover layer were 2013 LiDAR data, 2014 Orthoimagery, and 2016 NAIP imagery. Ancillary data sources included GIS data provided by City of Boston, MA or created by the UVM Spatial Analysis Laboratory. Object-based image analysis techniques (OBIA) were employed to extract land cover information using the best available remotely sensed and vector GIS datasets. OBIA systems work by grouping pixels into meaningful objects based on their spectral and spatial properties, while taking into account boundaries imposed by existing vector datasets. Within the OBIA environment a rule-based expert system was designed to effectively mimic the process of manual image analysis by incorporating the elements of image interpretation (color/tone, texture, pattern, location, size, and shape) into the classification process. A series of morphological procedures were employed to insure that the end product is both accurate and cartographically pleasing. Following the automated OBIA mapping a detailed manual review of the dataset was carried out at a scale of 1:2500 and all observable errors were corrected.

    Credits: University of Vermont Spatial Analysis Laboratory in collaboration with the City of Boston, Trust for Public Lands, and City of Cambridge.

  7. d

    Bioregional_Assessment_Programme_Land use mapping - Queensland current

    • data.gov.au
    • cloud.csiss.gmu.edu
    • +1more
    zip
    Updated Aug 11, 2023
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    Bioregional Assessment Program (2023). Bioregional_Assessment_Programme_Land use mapping - Queensland current [Dataset]. https://data.gov.au/data/dataset/740d257f-b622-49c2-9745-be283239add3
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    zip(171642725)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 11, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Bioregional Assessment Program
    License

    Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Queensland
    Description

    Abstract

    This dataset and its metadata statement were supplied to the Bioregional Assessment Programme by a third party and are presented here as originally supplied.

    This dataset is a complete state-wide digital land use map of Queensland. The dataset is a product of the Queensland Land Use Mapping Program (QLUMP) and was produced by the Queensland Government. It presents the most current mapping of land use features for Queensland, including the land use mapping products from 1999, 2006 and 2009, in a single feature layer. This dataset was last updated July 2012. See additional information also.

    Purpose

    Indicates the current primary use or management objective of the land.

    Dataset History

    Source DataQueensland Government - Land use mapping (1999); Landsat TM and ETM imagery; Spot5 imagery; High resolution ortho photography through the Spatial Imagery Subscription Plan (SISP); Queensland Digital Cadastral Database (DCDB) (2009), Queensland Valuation and Sales Database (QVAS) (2009); Queensland Nature Refuges (2009); Queensland Estates (2009); Queensland Herbarium's Regional Ecosystem, Water Body and Wetlands datasets (2009); Statewide Landcover & Trees Study (SLATS) Queensland Dams and Waterbodies (2009) and land cover change data; scanned aerial photography (1999-2009).Additional verbal & written information on land uses & their locations was obtained from regional Queensland Government officers, Local Government Authorities, land owners & managers, private industry as well as from field observations & checking.Data captureA range of existing digital datasets containing land use information was collated from the Queensland Government spatial data inventory and prepared for use in a GIS using ArcGIS and ERDAS Imagine software.Processing steps To compile the 1999 baseline mapping, datasets containing baseline land cover (supplied by SLATS), Protected Areas, State Forest and Timber Reserves, plantations, coastal wetlands, reserves (from DCDB) and logged forests were interpreted in a spatial model to produce a preliminary land use raster image.The model incorporated a decision matrix which assigned each pixel a specific land use class according to a set of pre-determined rules.Individual catchments were clipped from the model output and enhanced with additional land use information interpreted primarily from Landsat TM and ETM imagery as well as scanned and hardcopy aerial photography (where available). The DCDB and other datasets containing land use information were used to help identify property and land use type boundaries. This process produced a draft land use raster.Verification of the draft land use dataset, particularly those with significant areas of intensive land uses, was undertaken by comparing mapped land use classes with observed land use classes in the field where possible. The final raster image was converted to a vector coverage in ARC/Info and GIS editing performed.The existing 1999 baseline (or later where available) land use dataset (vector) formed the basis for the 2006 and 2009 land use mapping. The 2006 & 2009 datasets were then updated primarily by interpretation of SPOT5 imagery, high-res orthophotography, scanned aerial photography and inclusion of expert local knowledge. This was performed in an ESRI ArcSDE geodatabase replication infrastructure, across some nine regional offices. The DCDB, QVAS, Estates, Queensland Herbarium wetlands and SLATS land cover change and waterbody datasets were used to assist in identification and delineation of property and land use type boundaries. Digitised areas of uniform land use type were assigned to land use classes according to ALUMC Version 7 (May 2010).This "current" land use mapping product presents a complete state-wide land use map of Queensland, after collating the most current land use datasets within a single mapping layer.An independent validation was undertaken to assess thematic (attribute) accuracy under the ALUM classification. Please refer to the orignal source data for the validation results.

    Dataset Citation

    Queensland Department of Science, Information Technology, Innovation and the Arts (2013) Bioregional_Assessment_Programme_Land use mapping - Queensland current. Bioregional Assessment Source Dataset. Viewed 21 December 2017, http://data.bioregionalassessments.gov.au/dataset/740d257f-b622-49c2-9745-be283239add3.

  8. f

    terraceDL: A geomorphology deep learning dataset of agricultural terraces in...

    • figshare.com
    bin
    Updated Mar 22, 2023
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    Aaron Maxwell (2023). terraceDL: A geomorphology deep learning dataset of agricultural terraces in Iowa, USA [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.22320373.v2
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    binAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 22, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    figshare
    Authors
    Aaron Maxwell
    License

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

    Area covered
    Iowa, United States
    Description

    scripts.zip

    arcgisTools.atbx: terrainDerivatives: make terrain derivatives from digital terrain model (Band 1 = TPI (50 m radius circle), Band 2 = square root of slope, Band 3 = TPI (annulus), Band 4 = hillshade, Band 5 = multidirectional hillshades, Band 6 = slopeshade). rasterizeFeatures: convert vector polygons to raster masks (1 = feature, 0 = background).

    makeChips.R: R function to break terrain derivatives and chips into image chips of a defined size. makeTerrainDerivatives.R: R function to generated 6-band terrain derivatives from digital terrain data (same as ArcGIS Pro tool). merge_logs.R: R script to merge training logs into a single file. predictToExtents.ipynb: Python notebook to use trained model to predict to new data. trainExperiments.ipynb: Python notebook used to train semantic segmentation models using PyTorch and the Segmentation Models package. assessmentExperiments.ipynb: Python code to generate assessment metrics using PyTorch and the torchmetrics library. graphs_results.R: R code to make graphs with ggplot2 to summarize results. makeChipsList.R: R code to generate lists of chips in a directory. makeMasks.R: R function to make raster masks from vector data (same as rasterizeFeatures ArcGIS Pro tool).

    terraceDL.zip

    dems: LiDAR DTM data partitioned into training, testing, and validation datasets based on HUC8 watershed boundaries. Original DTM data were provided by the Iowa BMP mapping project: https://www.gis.iastate.edu/BMPs. extents: extents of the training, testing, and validation areas as defined by HUC 8 watershed boundaries. vectors: vector features representing agricultural terraces and partitioned into separate training, testing, and validation datasets. Original digitized features were provided by the Iowa BMP Mapping Project: https://www.gis.iastate.edu/BMPs.

  9. Collection of global datasets for the study of floods, droughts and their...

    • zenodo.org
    • explore.openaire.eu
    bin
    Updated Mar 6, 2020
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    Sara Lindersson; Sara Lindersson; Luigia Brandimarte; Luigia Brandimarte; Johanna Mård; Johanna Mård; Giuliano Di Baldassarre; Giuliano Di Baldassarre (2020). Collection of global datasets for the study of floods, droughts and their interactions with human societies [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3608634
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    binAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 6, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Zenodohttp://zenodo.org/
    Authors
    Sara Lindersson; Sara Lindersson; Luigia Brandimarte; Luigia Brandimarte; Johanna Mård; Johanna Mård; Giuliano Di Baldassarre; Giuliano Di Baldassarre
    License

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

    Description

    This is a collection of 124 global and free datasets allowing for spatial (and temporal) analyses of floods, droughts and their interactions with human societies. We have structured the datasets into seven categories: hydrographic baseline, hydrological dynamics, hydrological extremes, land cover & agriculture, human presence, water management, and vulnerability. Please refer to Lindersson et al. (accepted february 2020 in WIREs Water) for further information about review methodology.

    The collection is a descriptive list, holding the following information for each dataset:

    • Category - as structured in Lindersson et al. (in preparation).
    • Sub-category- as structured in Lindersson et al. (in preparation).
    • Abbreviation - official or as specified in Lindersson et al. (in preparation).
    • Title - full title of dataset.
    • Product(s) - type of product(s) offered by the dataset.
    • Period - time period covered by the dataset, not defined for all datasets.
    • Temporal resolution - not defined for static datasets.
    • Angular spatial resolution - only defined for gridded datasets.
    • Metric spatial resolution - only defined for gridded datasets.
    • Map scale
    • Extent - geographic coverage of dataset given in latitude limits.
    • Description
    • Creating institute(s)
    • Data type - raster, vector or tabular.
    • File format
    • Primary EO type - specifies if the product primarily is based on remote sensing, ground-based data, or a hybrid between remote sensing and ground-based data.
    • Data sources - lists the data sources behind the dataset, to the extent this is feasible.
    • Data sources also in this table - data sources that are also included as datasets in this collection.
    • Intentionally compatible with - defines other datasets in this collection that the dataset is intentinoally compatible with.
    • Citation - dataset reference or credit.
    • Documentation - dataset documentation.
    • Web address - dataset access link.

    NOTE: Carefully consult the data usage licenses as given by the data providers, to assure that the exact permissions and restrictions are followed.

  10. Natural Earth Dataset for GRASS GIS

    • zenodo.org
    application/gzip, zip
    Updated Aug 1, 2020
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    Brendan Harmon; Brendan Harmon (2020). Natural Earth Dataset for GRASS GIS [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3968936
    Explore at:
    zip, application/gzipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 1, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Zenodohttp://zenodo.org/
    Authors
    Brendan Harmon; Brendan Harmon
    License

    ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Basic Global Dataset for GRASS GIS
    This geospatial dataset contains global raster and vector data from Natural Earth. The top level directory global-dataset is a GRASS GIS location for the World Geodetic System 1984 (WGS84) with EPSG code 4326. Inside the location there is the PERMANENT mapset, a license file, and readme file.

    Instructions
    Install GRASS GIS, extract this archive, and move the location into your GRASS GIS database directory. If you are new to GRASS GIS read the first time users guide.

    Data Source

    License
    This dataset is licensed under the ODC Public Domain Dedication and License 1.0 (PDDL) by Brendan Harmon.

  11. New Orleans Dataset for GRASS GIS

    • zenodo.org
    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    zip
    Updated Jan 24, 2020
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    Brendan Harmon; Brendan Harmon (2020). New Orleans Dataset for GRASS GIS [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3359642
    Explore at:
    zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 24, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Zenodohttp://zenodo.org/
    Authors
    Brendan Harmon; Brendan Harmon
    License

    ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    New Orleans
    Description

    New Orleans Dataset for GRASS GIS
    This geospatial dataset contains raster and vector data for New Orleans, Louisiana, USA. The top level directory new-orleans-dataset is a GRASS GIS location for the North American Datum of 1983 (NAD 83) / Louisiana South State Plane Feet with EPSG code 3452. Inside the location there are the PERMANENT mapset with citywide data, a vieux_carre mapset with data for the French Quarter, Python scripts for data processing, data records, a color table, a license file, and readme file.

    Instructions
    Install GRASS GIS, unzip this archive, and move the location into your GRASS GIS database directory. If you are new to GRASS GIS read the first time users guide.

    Data Sources

    License
    This dataset is licensed under the ODC Public Domain Dedication and License 1.0 (PDDL) by Brendan Harmon. The scripts are licensed under the GNU General Public License 3.0 by Brendan Harmon. The graphics are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-SA 4.0) by Brendan Harmon.

  12. d

    Philadelphia Land Cover Raster 2008 2011

    • search.dataone.org
    • hydroshare.org
    • +1more
    Updated Dec 5, 2021
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    University of Vermont Spatial Analysis Laboratory (2021). Philadelphia Land Cover Raster 2008 2011 [Dataset]. https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256%3A4d9a6d71bc93bae195f441721ea00ab69c2bf949d33e81e95efd51e02cc99bc8
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 5, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    Hydroshare
    Authors
    University of Vermont Spatial Analysis Laboratory
    Area covered
    Description

    High resolution land cover dataset for Philadelphia. Seven land cover classes were mapped: (1) tree canopy, (2) grass/shrub, (3) bare earth, (4) water, (5) buildings, (6) roads, and (7) other paved surfaces. The minimum mapping unit for the delineation of features was set at ten square feet. The primary sources used to derive this land cover layer were 2008 Orthophotography and 2008 LiDAR LAS data. Ancillary data sources included GIS data (building footprints, road polygons, and hydrography) provided by City of Philadelphia. This land cover dataset is considered current as of 2008. Object-based image analysis techniques (OBIA) were employed to extract land cover information using the best available remotely sensed and vector GIS datasets. OBIA systems work by grouping pixels into meaningful objects based on their spectral and spatial properties, while taking into account boundaries imposed by existing vector datasets. Within the OBIA environment a rule-based expert system was designed to effectively mimic the process of manual image analysis by incorporating the elements of image interpretation (color/tone, texture, pattern, location, size, and shape) into the classification process. A series of morphological procedures were employed to insure that the end product is both accurate and cartographically pleasing. No accuracy assessment was conducted, but the dataset was subject to a thorough manual quality control. More than 30700 corrections were made to the classification.

    This data is hosted at, and may be downloaded or accessed from PASDA, the Pennsylvania Spatial Data Access Geospatial Data Clearinghouse http://www.pasda.psu.edu/uci/DataSummary.aspx?dataset=138

  13. o

    Natural Earth Dataset for GRASS GIS

    • explore.openaire.eu
    Updated Apr 22, 2020
    + more versions
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    Brendan Harmon (2020). Natural Earth Dataset for GRASS GIS [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3762808
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Apr 22, 2020
    Authors
    Brendan Harmon
    Description

    Basic Global Dataset for GRASS GIS This geospatial dataset contains global raster and vector data. The top level directory global-dataset is a GRASS GIS location for the World Geodetic System 1984 (WGS84) with EPSG code 4326. Inside the location there is the PERMANENT mapset, a license file, and readme file. Instructions Install GRASS GIS, unzip this archive, and move the location into your GRASS GIS database directory. If you are new to GRASS GIS read the first time users guide. Data Source Natural Earth License This dataset is licensed under the ODC Public Domain Dedication and License 1.0 (PDDL) by Brendan Harmon.

  14. Z

    The Hills of Governor's Island Dataset for GRASS GIS

    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    • zenodo.org
    Updated Aug 25, 2021
    + more versions
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    Harmon, Brendan (2021). The Hills of Governor's Island Dataset for GRASS GIS [Dataset]. https://data.niaid.nih.gov/resources?id=zenodo_5248687
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 25, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Harmon, Brendan
    License

    ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Governors Island
    Description

    The Hills of Governor's Island Dataset for GRASS GIS This geospatial dataset contains raster and vector data for the Hills region of Governor's Island, New York City, USA. The top level directory governors_island_hills_for_grass is a GRASS GIS location for NAD_1983_StatePlane_New_York_Long_Island_FIPS_3104_Feet in US Surveyor's Feet with EPSG code 2263. Inside the location there is the PERMANENT mapset, a license file, data record, readme file, workspace, color table, category rules, and scripts for data processing. This dataset was created for the course GIS for Designers.

    Instructions Install GRASS GIS, unzip this archive, and move the location into your GRASS GIS database directory. If you are new to GRASS GIS read the first time users guide.

    Data Sources

    https://orthos.dhses.ny.gov/

    https://data.cityofnewyork.us/

    Maps

    Orthophotographs from 2012, 2014, 2016, 2018, and 2020

    Digital elevation model from 2017

    Digital surface models from 2014 and 2017

    Landcover from 2014

    License This dataset is licensed under the ODC Public Domain Dedication and License 1.0 (PDDL) by Brendan Harmon.

  15. A

    Image

    • data.amerigeoss.org
    csv, esri rest +2
    Updated Jul 5, 2017
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    AmeriGEO ArcGIS (2017). Image [Dataset]. https://data.amerigeoss.org/de/dataset/image
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    html, esri rest, csv, geojsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 5, 2017
    Dataset provided by
    AmeriGEO ArcGIS
    Description
    Map Information

    This nowCOAST time-enabled map service provides maps of NOAA/National Weather Service RIDGE2 mosaics of base reflectivity images across the Continental United States (CONUS) as well as Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Guam and Alaska with a 2 kilometer (1.25 mile) horizontal resolution. The mosaics are compiled by combining regional base reflectivity radar data obtained from 158 Weather Surveillance Radar 1988 Doppler (WSR-88D) also known as NEXt-generation RADar (NEXRAD) sites across the country operated by the NWS and the Dept. of Defense and also from data from Terminal Doppler Weather Radars (TDWR) at major airports. The colors on the map represent the strength of the energy reflected back toward the radar. The reflected intensities (echoes) are measured in dBZ (decibels of z). The color scale is very similar to the one used by the NWS RIDGE2 map viewer. The radar data itself is updated by the NWS every 10 minutes during non-precipitation mode, but every 4-6 minutes during precipitation mode. To ensure nowCOAST is displaying the most recent data possible, the latest mosaics are downloaded every 5 minutes. For more detailed information about the update schedule, see: http://new.nowcoast.noaa.gov/help/#section=updateschedule

    Background Information

    Reflectivity is related to the power, or intensity, of the reflected radiation that is sensed by the radar antenna. Reflectivity is expressed on a logarithmic scale in units called dBZ. The "dB" in the dBz scale is logarithmic and is unit less, but is used only to express a ratio. The "z" is the ratio of the density of water drops (measured in millimeters, raised to the 6th power) in each cubic meter (mm^6/m^3). When the "z" is large (many drops in a cubic meter), the reflected power is large. A small "z" means little returned energy. In fact, "z" can be less than 1 mm^6/m^3 and since it is logarithmic, dBz values will become negative, as often in the case when the radar is in clear air mode and indicated by earth tone colors. dBZ values are related to the intensity of rainfall. The higher the dBZ, the stronger the rain rate. A value of 20 dBZ is typically the point at which light rain begins. The values of 60 to 65 dBZ is about the level where 3/4 inch hail can occur. However, a value of 60 to 65 dBZ does not mean that severe weather is occurring at that location. The best reflectivity is lowest (1/2 degree elevation angle) reflectivity scan from the radar. The source of the base reflectivity mosaics is the NWS Southern Region Radar Integrated Display with Geospatial Elements (RIDGE2).

    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:

    1. 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.
    2. 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.
    3. 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
  16. a

    USA Protected Areas

    • cgs-topics-lincolninstitute.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Nov 17, 2021
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    LincolnHub (2021). USA Protected Areas [Dataset]. https://cgs-topics-lincolninstitute.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/usa-protected-areas-1
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 17, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    LincolnHub
    Area covered
    United States,
    Description

    In the United States, areas that are protected from development and managed for biodiversity conservation include Wilderness Areas, National Parks, National Wildlife Refuges, and Wild & Scenic Rivers. Understanding the geographic distribution of these protected areas and their level of protection is an important part of landscape-scale planning. The Protected Areas Database of the United States classifies lands into four GAP Status classes. This layer displays the two highest levels of protection GAP Status 1 and 2. These two classes are commonly referred to as protected areas.Dataset SummaryPhenomenon Mapped: Areas protected from development and managed to maintain biodiversity (GAP Status 1 and 2)Units: MetersCell Size: 30.92208102 metersSource Type: DiscretePixel Type: 8-bit unsigned integerData Coordinate System: WGS 1984Mosaic Projection: Web Mercator Auxiliary SphereExtent: 50 United States plus Puerto Rico, the US Virgin Islands, the Northern Mariana Islands and other Pacific Ocean Islands.Source: USGS National Gap Analysis Program PAD-US version 2.1Publication Date: September 2020ArcGIS Server URL: https://landscape10.arcgis.com/arcgis/This layer displays protected areas from the Protected Areas Database of the United States version 2.1 created by the USGS National Gap Analysis Program. This layer displays GAP Status 1, areas managed for biodiversity where natural disturbances are allowed to proceed or are mimicked by management, and GAP Status 2, areas managed for biodiversity where natural disturbance is suppressed. The source data for this layer are available here. A feature layer published from this dataset is also available. The polygon vector layer was converted to raster layers using the Polygon to Raster Tool using the National Elevation Dataset 1 arc second product as a snap raster.The service behind this layer was published with 8 functions allowing the user to select different views of the service. Other layers created from this service using functions include:USA Protected from Land Cover ConversionUSA Unprotected AreasUSA Protected Areas - Gap Status 1-4USA Protected Areas - Gap Status 1USA Protected Areas - Gap Status 2USA Protected Areas - Gap Status 3USA Protected Areas - Gap Status 4What can you do with this Layer? This layer is suitable for both visualization and analysis across the ArcGIS system. This layer can be combined with your data and other layers from the ArcGIS Living Atlas of the World in ArcGIS Online and ArcGIS Pro to create powerful web maps that can be used alone or in a story map or other application.Because this layer is part of the ArcGIS Living Atlas of the World it is easy to add to your map:In ArcGIS Online, you can add this layer to a map by selecting Add then Browse Living Atlas Layers. A window will open. Type "Protected Areas" in the search box and browse to the layer. Select the layer then click Add to Map.In ArcGIS Pro, open a map and select Add Data from the Map Tab. Select Data at the top of the drop down menu. The Add Data dialog box will open on the left side of the box, expand Portal if necessary, then select Living Atlas. Type "Protected Areas" in the search box, browse to the layer then click OK.In ArcGIS Pro you can use the built-in raster functions to create custom extracts of the data. Imagery layers provide fast, powerful inputs to geoprocessing tools, models, or Python scripts in Pro.The ArcGIS Living Atlas of the World provides an easy way to explore many other beautiful and authoritative maps on hundreds of topics like this one.

  17. GRASS GIS North Carolina Dataset

    • data.wu.ac.at
    Updated Oct 10, 2013
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    Open Geospatial Data (2013). GRASS GIS North Carolina Dataset [Dataset]. https://data.wu.ac.at/schema/datahub_io/YjBkN2MyNjAtMzVkNC00MmFiLTllM2QtYzFmNGRiOWJjMmYw
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 10, 2013
    Dataset provided by
    Open Geospatial Consortiumhttps://www.ogc.org/
    License

    http://www.opendefinition.org/licenses/cc-by-sahttp://www.opendefinition.org/licenses/cc-by-sa

    Description

    We developed a completely new free geospatial dataset and substituted all Spearfish (SD) examples in the previous editions with this new, much richer North Carolina (NC, USA) data set. This data set is a comprehensive collection of raster, vector and imagery data covering parts of North Carolina (NC), USA (map), prepared from public data sources provided by the North Carolina state and local government agencies and Global Land Cover Facility (GLCF).

    This data is packaged as a GRASS location as well as SHAPE/GeoTIFF/KML/ArcGRID files. See also http://www.grassbook.org/data_menu3rd.php for download.

  18. w

    Land Cover Statewide Ecopia Data 2021 2022 3ft Raster

    • geo.wa.gov
    • data-wutc.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Oct 25, 2023
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    Washington State Geospatial Portal (2023). Land Cover Statewide Ecopia Data 2021 2022 3ft Raster [Dataset]. https://geo.wa.gov/datasets/land-cover-statewide-ecopia-data-2021-2022-3ft-raster/about
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 25, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Washington State Geospatial Portal
    Area covered
    Description

    Statewide Ecopia 3 foot Land Cover (2021-2022)This raster land cover data is based off of high-resolution statewide imagery from 2021-2022. It was used by Ecopia to extract and digitize the entire state into 7 different land cover classes. Download Notes:This service can be entered into ArcGIS Pro where "Download Rasters" can be used to download approximately 20 square miles at a time. (Rt. click layer in TOC > Data > Download Rasters)Alternatively, the entire statewide 3ft dataset is available as a zipped download from here (includes colormap file): Ecopia_Statewide_3ft_Raster_TilesClasses available at bottom of this pages.Data SpecificationImagery Used for Extraction: Pixel resolution: 15 cm (6")Camera sensor: Hexagon Pushbroom (Content Mapper)Date of capture: 06/25/2021 - 08/14/2022Date of Vector Extraction: June 2023Extraction Methodology:Ecopia uses proprietary extraction and modeling software to process raw images into high-resolution land cover classifications.Quality Measurements:Measure Name - Threshold across Impervious Polygons:False Negatives <= 5% All PolygonsFalse Positives <= 5% All PolygonsValid Interpretation >= 95% All PolygonsMinimum Area 100% All PolygonsValid Geometry 100% All PolygonsMeasure Name - Threshold across Natural Polygons:False Negatives <=5% All PolygonsFalse Positives <=5% All PolygonsValid Interpretation >=90% All PolygonsMinimum Area 100% All PolygonsValid Geometry 100% All PolygonsLand Cover Classes:UnclassifiedImperviousImpervious, covered by treesShrub/low vegetationTree/forest/high vegetationOpen waterRailroadVegetation (Canopy Mapping)Tree canopy will be captured as a unique polygon layer. It can therefore overlap impervious layers.High vegetation is distinguished from low vegetation based on crown, texture, and derived height models. Leveraging stereo imagery produces results using 3D elevation models used to aid the distinction of vegetation categories. Distinguishing low from high vegetation is based on a 5m threshold, but this is not always feasible, especially in areas where heavy canopy prevents a visualization of the ground. In these circumstances, high vegetation will be given the priority over low vegetation. For more information visit: www.ecopiatech.comClasses:0: No data - Null, clear1: Unclassified2: Impervious3: Impervious, Covered by Tree Canopy6: Shrub/Low Vegetation7: Tree/Forest/High Vegetation8: Open Water12: Railroad

  19. d

    Australia - Present Major Vegetation Groups - NVIS Version 4.1 (Albers 100m...

    • data.gov.au
    • researchdata.edu.au
    • +1more
    zip
    Updated Apr 13, 2022
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    Bioregional Assessment Program (2022). Australia - Present Major Vegetation Groups - NVIS Version 4.1 (Albers 100m analysis product) [Dataset]. https://data.gov.au/data/dataset/57c8ee5c-43e5-4e9c-9e41-fd5012536374
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    zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 13, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Bioregional Assessment Program
    License

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

    Area covered
    Australia
    Description

    Abstract

    This dataset and its metadata statement were supplied to the Bioregional Assessment Programme by a third party and are presented here as originally supplied.

    Resource contains an ArcGIS file geodatabase raster for the National Vegetation Information System (NVIS) Major Vegetation Groups - Australia-wide, present extent (FGDB_NVIS4_1_AUST_MVG_EXT).

    Related datasets are also included: FGDB_NVIS4_1_KEY_LAYERS_EXT - ArcGIS File Geodatabase Feature Class of the Key Datasets that make up NVIS Version 4.1 - Australia wide; and FGDB_NVIS4_1_LUT_KEY_LAYERS - Lookup table for Dataset Key Layers.

    This raster dataset provides the latest summary information (November 2012) on Australia's present (extant) native vegetation. It is in Albers Equal Area projection with a 100 m x 100 m (1 Ha) cell size. A comparable Estimated Pre-1750 (pre-european, pre-clearing) raster dataset is available: - NVIS4_1_AUST_MVG_PRE_ALB. State and Territory vegetation mapping agencies supplied a new version of the National Vegetation Information System (NVIS) in 2009-2011. Some agencies did not supply new data for this version but approved re-use of Version 3.1 data. Summaries were derived from the best available data in the NVIS extant theme as at June 2012. This product is derived from a compilation of data collected at different scales on different dates by different organisations. Please refer to the separate key map showing scales of the input datasets. Gaps in the NVIS database were filled by non-NVIS data, notably parts of South Australia and small areas of New South Wales such as the Curlewis area. The data represent on-ground dates of up to 2006 in Queensland, 2001 to 2005 in South Australia (depending on the region) and 2004/5 in other jurisdictions, except NSW. NVIS data was partially updated in NSW with 2001-09 data, with extensive areas of 1997 data remaining from the earlier version of NVIS. Major Vegetation Groups were identified to summarise the type and distribution of Australia's native vegetation. The classification contains different mixes of plant species within the canopy, shrub or ground layers, but are structurally similar and are often dominated by a single genus. In a mapping sense, the groups reflect the dominant vegetation occurring in a map unit where there are a mix of several vegetation types. Subdominant vegetation groups which may also be present in the map unit are not shown. For example, the dominant vegetation in an area may be mapped as dominated by eucalypt open forest, although it contains pockets of rainforest, shrubland and grassland vegetation as subdominants. The (related) Major Vegetation Subgroups represent more detail about the understorey and floristics of the Major Vegetation Groups and are available as separate raster datasets: - NVIS4_1_AUST_MVS_EXT_ALB - NVIS4_1_AUST_MVS_PRE_ALB A number of other non-vegetation and non-native vegetation land cover types are also represented as Major Vegetation Groups. These are provided for cartographic purposes, but should not be used for analyses. For further background and other NVIS products, please see the links on http://www.environment.gov.au/erin/nvis/index.html.

    The current NVIS data products are available from http://www.environment.gov.au/land/native-vegetation/national-vegetation-information-system.

    Purpose

    For use in Bioregional Assessment land classification analyses

    Dataset History

    NVIS Version 4.1

    The input vegetation data were provided from over 100 individual projects representing the majority of Australia's regional vegetation mapping over the last 50 years. State and Territory custodians translated the vegetation descriptions from these datasets into a common attribute framework, the National Vegetation Information System (ESCAVI, 2003). Scales of input mapping ranged from 1:25,000 to 1:5,000,000. These were combined into an Australia-wide set of vector data. Non-terrestrial areas were mostly removed by the State and Territory custodians before supplying the data to the Environmental Resources Information Network (ERIN), Department of Sustainability Environment Water Population and Communities (DSEWPaC).

    Each NVIS vegetation description was written to the NVIS XML format file by the custodian, transferred to ERIN and loaded into the NVIS database at ERIN. A considerable number of quality checks were performed automatically by this system to ensure conformity to the NVIS attribute standards (ESCAVI, 2003) and consistency between levels of the NVIS Information Hierarchy within each description. Descriptions for non-vegetation and non-native vegetation mapping codes were transferred via CSV files.

    The NVIS vector (polygon) data for Australia comprised a series of jig-saw pieces, eachup to approx 500,000 polygons - the maximum tractable size for routine geoprocesssing. The spatial data was processed to conform to the NVIS spatial format (ESCAVI, 2003; other papers). Spatial processing and attribute additions were done mostly in ESRI File Geodatabases. Topology and minor geometric corrections were also performed at this stage. These datasets were then loaded into ESRI Spatial Database Engine as per the ERIN standard. NVIS attributes were then populated using Oracle database tables provided by custodians, mostly using PL/SQL Developer or in ArcGIS using the field calculator (where simple).

    Each spatial dataset was joined to and checked against a lookup table for the relevant State/Territory to ensure that all mapping codes in the dominant vegetation type of each polygon (NVISDSC1) had a valid lookup description, including an allocated MVG. Minor vegetation components of each map unit (NVISDSC2-6) were not checked, but could be considered mostly complete.

    Each NVIS vegetation description was allocated to a Major Vegetation Group (MVG) by manual interpretation at ERIN. The Australian Natural Resources Atlas (http://www.anra.gov.au/topics/vegetation/pubs/native_vegetation/vegfsheet.html) provides detailed descriptions of most Major Vegetation Groups. Three new MVGs were created for version 4.1 to better represent open woodland formations and forests (in the NT) with no further data available. NVIS vegetation descriptions were reallocated into these classes, if appropriate:

    • Unclassified Forest

    • Other Open Woodlands

    • Mallee Open Woodlands and Sparse Mallee Shublands

    (Thus there are a total of 33 MVGs existing as at June 2012). Data values defined as cleared or non-native by data custodians were attributed specific MVG values such as 25 - Cleared or non native, 27 - naturally bare, 28 - seas & estuaries, and 99 - Unknown.

    As part of the process to fill gaps in NVIS, the descriptive data from non-NVIS sources was also referenced in the NVIS database, but with blank vegetation descriptions. In general. the gap-fill data comprised (a) fine scale (1:250K or better) State/Territory vegetation maps for which NVIS descriptions were unavailable and (b) coarse-scale (1:1M) maps from Commonwealth and other sources. MVGs were then allocated to each description from the available desciptions in accompanying publications and other sources.

    Parts of New South Wales, South Australia, QLD and the ACT have extensive areas of vector "NoData", thus appearing as an inland sea. The No Data areas were dealt with differently by state. In the ACT and SA, the vector data was 'gap-filled' and attributed using satellite imagery as a guide prior to rasterising. Most of these areas comprised a mixture of MVG 24 (inland water) and 25 (cleared), and in some case 99 (Unknown). The NSW & QLD 'No Data' areas were filled using a raster mask to fill the 'holes'. These areas were attributed with MVG 24, 26 (water & unclassified veg), MVG 25 (cleared); or MVG 99 Unknown/no data, where these areas were a mixture of unknown proportions.

    Each spatial dataset with joined lookup table (including MVG_NUMBER linked to NVISDSC1) was exported to a File Geodatabase as a feature class. These were reprojected into Albers Equal Area projection (Central_Meridian: 132.000000, Standard_Parallel_1: -18.000000, Standard_Parallel_2: -36.000000, Linear Unit: Meter (1.000000), Datum GDA94, other parameters 0).

    Each feature class was then rasterised to a 100m raster with extents to a multiple of 1000 m, to ensure alignment. In some instances, areas of 'NoData' had to be modelled in raster. For example, in NSW where non-native areas (cleared, water bodies etc) have not been mapped. The rasters were then merged into a 'state wide' raster. State rasters were then merged into this 'Australia wide' raster dataset.

    November 2012 Corrections

    Closer inspection of the original 4.1 MVG Extant raster dataset highlighted some issues with the raster creation process which meant that raster pixels in some areas did not align as intended. These were corrected, and the new properly aligned rasters released in November 2012.

    Dataset Citation

    Department of the Environment (2012) Australia - Present Major Vegetation Groups - NVIS Version 4.1 (Albers 100m analysis product). Bioregional Assessment Source Dataset. Viewed 10 July 2017, http://data.bioregionalassessments.gov.au/dataset/57c8ee5c-43e5-4e9c-9e41-fd5012536374.

  20. d

    Protected Areas Database of the United States (PAD-US) 2.1 Spatial Analysis...

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.usgs.gov
    Updated Jul 6, 2024
    + more versions
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    U.S. Geological Survey (2024). Protected Areas Database of the United States (PAD-US) 2.1 Spatial Analysis and Statistics [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/protected-areas-database-of-the-united-states-pad-us-2-1-spatial-analysis-and-statistics
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 6, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    U.S. Geological Survey
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Spatial analysis and statistical summaries of the Protected Areas Database of the United States (PAD-US) provide land managers and decision makers with a general assessment of management intent for biodiversity protection, natural resource management, and recreation access across the nation. This data release presents results from statistical summaries of the PAD-US 2.1 protection status for various land unit boundaries (Protected Areas Database of the United States (PAD-US) Summary Statistics by GAP Status Code) as well as summaries of public access status (Public Access Statistics), provided in Microsoft Excel readable workbooks, the vector GIS analysis files and scripts used to complete the summaries, and raster GIS analysis files for combination with other raster data. The PAD-US 2.1 Combined Fee, Designation, Easement feature class in the full inventory (with Military Lands and Tribal Areas from the Proclamation and Other Planning Boundaries feature class) was modified to prioritize and remove overlapping management designations, limiting overestimation in protection status or public access statistics and to support user needs for vector and raster analysis data. Analysis files were clipped to the Census State boundary file to define the extent and fill in areas (largely private land) outside the PAD-US, providing a common denominator for statistical summaries.

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data.cityofnewyork.us (2023). Landcover Raster Data (2010) – 6in Resolution [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/landcover-raster-data-2010-6in-resolution

Landcover Raster Data (2010) – 6in Resolution

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2 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
Dataset updated
Sep 2, 2023
Dataset provided by
data.cityofnewyork.us
Description

6 inch resolution raster image of New York City, classified by landcover type. High resolution land cover data set for New York City. This is the 6 inch version of the high-resolution land cover dataset for New York City. Seven land cover classes were mapped: (1) tree canopy, (2) grass/shrub, (3) bare earth, (4) water, (5) buildings, (6) roads, and (7) other paved surfaces. The minimum mapping unit for the delineation of features was set at 3 square feet. The primary sources used to derive this land cover layer were the 2010 LiDAR and the 2008 4-band orthoimagery. Ancillary data sources included GIS data (city boundary, building footprints, water, parking lots, roads, railroads, railroad structures, ballfields) provided by New York City (all ancillary datasets except railroads); UVM Spatial Analysis Laboratory manually created railroad polygons from manual interpretation of 2008 4-band orthoimagery. The tree canopy class was considered current as of 2010; the remaining land-cover classes were considered current as of 2008. Object-Based Image Analysis (OBIA) techniques were employed to extract land cover information using the best available remotely sensed and vector GIS datasets. OBIA systems work by grouping pixels into meaningful objects based on their spectral and spatial properties, while taking into account boundaries imposed by existing vector datasets. Within the OBIA environment a rule-based expert system was designed to effectively mimic the process of manual image analysis by incorporating the elements of image interpretation (color/tone, texture, pattern, location, size, and shape) into the classification process. A series of morphological procedures were employed to insure that the end product is both accurate and cartographically pleasing. More than 35,000 corrections were made to the classification. Overall accuracy was 96%. This dataset was developed as part of the Urban Tree Canopy (UTC) Assessment for New York City. As such, it represents a 'top down' mapping perspective in which tree canopy over hanging other features is assigned to the tree canopy class. At the time of its creation this dataset represents the most detailed and accurate land cover dataset for the area. This project was funded by National Urban and Community Forestry Advisory Council (NUCFAC) and the National Science Fundation (NSF), although it is not specifically endorsed by either agency. The methods used were developed by the University of Vermont Spatial Analysis Laboratory, in collaboration with the New York City Urban Field Station, with funding from the USDA Forest Service.

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