36 datasets found
  1. d

    Military Bases

    • catalog.data.gov
    • datasets.ai
    • +4more
    Updated Nov 19, 2024
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Energy, Installations, and Environment (Point of Contact) (2024). Military Bases [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/military-bases1
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Nov 19, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Energy, Installations, and Environment (Point of Contact)
    Description

    The Military Bases dataset was last updated on October 23, 2024 and are defined by Fiscal Year 2023 data, from the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Energy, Installations, and Environment and is part of the U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT)/Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) National Transportation Atlas Database (NTAD). The dataset depicts the authoritative locations of the most commonly known Department of Defense (DoD) sites, installations, ranges, and training areas world-wide. These sites encompass land which is federally owned or otherwise managed. This dataset was created from source data provided by the four Military Service Component headquarters and was compiled by the Defense Installation Spatial Data Infrastructure (DISDI) Program within the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Energy, Installations, and Environment. Only sites reported in the BSR or released in a map supplementing the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act of 2018 (FIRRMA) Real Estate Regulation (31 CFR Part 802) were considered for inclusion. This list does not necessarily represent a comprehensive collection of all Department of Defense facilities. For inventory purposes, installations are comprised of sites, where a site is defined as a specific geographic location of federally owned or managed land and is assigned to military installation. DoD installations are commonly referred to as a base, camp, post, station, yard, center, homeport facility for any ship, or other activity under the jurisdiction, custody, control of the DoD. While every attempt has been made to provide the best available data quality, this data set is intended for use at mapping scales between 1:50,000 and 1:3,000,000. For this reason, boundaries in this data set may not perfectly align with DoD site boundaries depicted in other federal data sources. Maps produced at a scale of 1:50,000 or smaller which otherwise comply with National Map Accuracy Standards, will remain compliant when this data is incorporated. Boundary data is most suitable for larger scale maps; point locations are better suited for mapping scales between 1:250,000 and 1:3,000,000. If a site is part of a Joint Base (effective/designated on 1 October, 2010) as established under the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure process, it is attributed with the name of the Joint Base. All sites comprising a Joint Base are also attributed to the responsible DoD Component, which is not necessarily the pre-2005 Component responsible for the site.

  2. w

    Military Bases (National)

    • data.wu.ac.at
    html
    Updated Apr 11, 2017
    + more versions
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Department of Transportation (2017). Military Bases (National) [Dataset]. https://data.wu.ac.at/schema/data_gov/MjI2MGExZTAtZDYyNC00YTVkLWEyY2EtY2VmYjk3ZTM4Yjk4
    Explore at:
    htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 11, 2017
    Dataset provided by
    Department of Transportation
    License

    U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    4c6a00120096ca290aa2339b3da3a4f6924ef213
    Description

    The dataset depicts the authoritative boundaries of the most commonly known Department of Defense (DoD) sites, installations, ranges, and training areas in the United States and Territories (NTAD). These sites encompass land which is federally owned or otherwise managed. This dataset was created from source data provided by the four Military Service Component headquarters and was compiled by the Defense Installation Spatial Data Infrastructure (DISDI) Program within the Office of the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Installations and Environment, Business Enterprise Integration Directorate. Sites were selected from the 2010 Base Structure Report (BSR), a summary of the DoD Real Property Inventory. This list does not necessarily represent a comprehensive collection of all Department of Defense facilities, and only those in the fifty United States and US Territories were considered for inclusion. For inventory purposes, installations are comprised of sites, where a site is defined as a specific geographic location of federally owned or managed land and is assigned to military installation. DoD installations are commonly referred to as a base, camp, post, station, yard, center, homeport facility for any ship, or other activity under the jurisdiction, custody, control of the DoD.

  3. Military Installations, Ranges, and Training Areas

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.globalchange.gov
    • +3more
    Updated Feb 24, 2021
    + more versions
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Department of Defense (2021). Military Installations, Ranges, and Training Areas [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/military-installations-ranges-and-training-areas
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Feb 24, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    United States Department of Defensehttp://www.defense.gov/
    Description

    This dataset, released by DoD, contains geographic information for major installations, ranges, and training areas in the United States and its territories. This release integrates site information about DoD installations, training ranges, and land assets in a format which can be immediately put to work in commercial geospatial information systems. Homeland Security/Homeland Defense, law enforcement, and readiness planners will benefit from immediate access to DoD site location data during emergencies. Land use planning and renewable energy planning will also benefit from use of this data. Users are advised that the point and boundary location datasets are intended for planning purposes only, and do not represent the legal or surveyed land parcel boundaries.

  4. United States US: Military Expenditure

    • ceicdata.com
    Updated May 15, 2009
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    CEICdata.com (2009). United States US: Military Expenditure [Dataset]. https://www.ceicdata.com/en/united-states/defense-and-official-development-assistance/us-military-expenditure
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    May 15, 2009
    Dataset provided by
    CEIC Data
    License

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

    Time period covered
    Sep 1, 2005 - Sep 1, 2016
    Area covered
    United States
    Variables measured
    Operating Statement
    Description

    United States US: Military Expenditure data was reported at 609.758 USD bn in 2017. This records an increase from the previous number of 600.106 USD bn for 2016. United States US: Military Expenditure data is updated yearly, averaging 277.591 USD bn from Sep 1960 (Median) to 2017, with 58 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 711.338 USD bn in 2011 and a record low of 45.380 USD bn in 1960. United States US: Military Expenditure data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by World Bank. The data is categorized under Global Database’s United States – Table US.World Bank.WDI: Defense and Official Development Assistance. Military expenditures data from SIPRI are derived from the NATO definition, which includes all current and capital expenditures on the armed forces, including peacekeeping forces; defense ministries and other government agencies engaged in defense projects; paramilitary forces, if these are judged to be trained and equipped for military operations; and military space activities. Such expenditures include military and civil personnel, including retirement pensions of military personnel and social services for personnel; operation and maintenance; procurement; military research and development; and military aid (in the military expenditures of the donor country). Excluded are civil defense and current expenditures for previous military activities, such as for veterans' benefits, demobilization, conversion, and destruction of weapons. This definition cannot be applied for all countries, however, since that would require much more detailed information than is available about what is included in military budgets and off-budget military expenditure items. (For example, military budgets might or might not cover civil defense, reserves and auxiliary forces, police and paramilitary forces, dual-purpose forces such as military and civilian police, military grants in kind, pensions for military personnel, and social security contributions paid by one part of government to another.); ; Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), Yearbook: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security.; ; Data for some countries are based on partial or uncertain data or rough estimates. For additional details please refer to the military expenditure database on the SIPRI website: https://sipri.org/databases/milex

  5. TIGER/Line Shapefile, 2022, Nation, U.S., Topological Faces-Military...

    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated Jan 27, 2024
    + more versions
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    U.S. Department of Commerce, U.S. Census Bureau, Geography Division, Spatial Data Collection and Products Branch (Point of Contact) (2024). TIGER/Line Shapefile, 2022, Nation, U.S., Topological Faces-Military Installation Relationship File [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/tiger-line-shapefile-2022-nation-u-s-topological-faces-military-installation-relationship-file
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jan 27, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    United States Census Bureauhttp://census.gov/
    United States Department of Commercehttp://www.commerce.gov/
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    The TIGER/Line shapefiles and related database files (.dbf) are an extract of selected geographic and cartographic information from the U.S. Census Bureau's Master Address File / Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing (MAF/TIGER) Database (MTDB). The MTDB represents a seamless national file with no overlaps or gaps between parts, however, each TIGER/Line shapefile is designed to stand alone as an independent data set, or they can be combined to cover the entire nation. The Topological Faces / Military Installation Relationship File (FACESMIL.dbf) contains a record for each face / military installation relationship. Face refers to the areal (polygon) topological primitives that make up MTDB. A face is bounded by one or more edges; its boundary includes only the edges that separate it from other faces, not any interior edges contained within the area of the face. The face to which a record in the Topological Faces / Military Installation Relationship File (FACESMIL.dbf) applies can be determined by linking to the Topological Faces Shapefile (FACES.shp) on the permanent topological face identifier (TFID) attribute. The military installation to which a record in the Topological Faces / Military Installation Relationship File (FACESMIL.dbf) applies can be determined by linking to the Military Installation Shapefile (MIL.shp) on the military installation identifier (AREAID) attribute. A face may be part of multiple military installations. A military installation may consist of multiple faces.

  6. U

    United States US: Military Expenditure: % of GDP

    • ceicdata.com
    Updated Feb 1, 2001
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    CEICdata.com (2001). United States US: Military Expenditure: % of GDP [Dataset]. https://www.ceicdata.com/en/united-states/defense-and-official-development-assistance/us-military-expenditure--of-gdp
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Feb 1, 2001
    Dataset provided by
    CEICdata.com
    License

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

    Time period covered
    Sep 1, 2005 - Sep 1, 2016
    Area covered
    United States
    Variables measured
    Operating Statement
    Description

    United States US: Military Expenditure: % of GDP data was reported at 3.149 % in 2017. This records a decrease from the previous number of 3.222 % for 2016. United States US: Military Expenditure: % of GDP data is updated yearly, averaging 4.864 % from Sep 1960 (Median) to 2017, with 58 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 9.063 % in 1967 and a record low of 2.908 % in 1999. United States US: Military Expenditure: % of GDP data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by World Bank. The data is categorized under Global Database’s United States – Table US.World Bank.WDI: Defense and Official Development Assistance. Military expenditures data from SIPRI are derived from the NATO definition, which includes all current and capital expenditures on the armed forces, including peacekeeping forces; defense ministries and other government agencies engaged in defense projects; paramilitary forces, if these are judged to be trained and equipped for military operations; and military space activities. Such expenditures include military and civil personnel, including retirement pensions of military personnel and social services for personnel; operation and maintenance; procurement; military research and development; and military aid (in the military expenditures of the donor country). Excluded are civil defense and current expenditures for previous military activities, such as for veterans' benefits, demobilization, conversion, and destruction of weapons. This definition cannot be applied for all countries, however, since that would require much more detailed information than is available about what is included in military budgets and off-budget military expenditure items. (For example, military budgets might or might not cover civil defense, reserves and auxiliary forces, police and paramilitary forces, dual-purpose forces such as military and civilian police, military grants in kind, pensions for military personnel, and social security contributions paid by one part of government to another.); ; Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), Yearbook: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security.; Weighted average; Data for some countries are based on partial or uncertain data or rough estimates.

  7. T

    United States Military Expenditure

    • tradingeconomics.com
    • fr.tradingeconomics.com
    • +13more
    csv, excel, json, xml
    Updated May 6, 2025
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    TRADING ECONOMICS (2025). United States Military Expenditure [Dataset]. https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/military-expenditure
    Explore at:
    excel, xml, json, csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 6, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    TRADING ECONOMICS
    License

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

    Time period covered
    Dec 31, 1949 - Dec 31, 2024
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Military Expenditure in the United States increased to 997309 USD Million in 2024 from 916014.70 USD Million in 2023. United States Military Expenditure - values, historical data, forecasts and news - updated on July of 2025.

  8. M

    U.S. Military Size

    • macrotrends.net
    csv
    Updated Jun 30, 2025
    + more versions
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    MACROTRENDS (2025). U.S. Military Size [Dataset]. https://www.macrotrends.net/global-metrics/countries/usa/united-states/military-army-size
    Explore at:
    csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 30, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    MACROTRENDS
    License

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

    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 1985 - Dec 31, 2020
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Historical chart and dataset showing U.S. military size by year from 1985 to 2020.

  9. T

    United States Imports of Other Military Equipment

    • tradingeconomics.com
    csv, excel, json, xml
    Updated Jun 6, 2017
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    TRADING ECONOMICS (2017). United States Imports of Other Military Equipment [Dataset]. https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/imports-of-other-military-equipment
    Explore at:
    csv, excel, json, xmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 6, 2017
    Dataset authored and provided by
    TRADING ECONOMICS
    License

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

    Time period covered
    Jan 31, 1989 - Feb 29, 2024
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Imports of Other Military Equipment in the United States decreased to 208.04 USD Million in February from 214.36 USD Million in January of 2024. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for the United States Imports of Other Military Equipment.

  10. o

    Military Bases

    • public.opendatasoft.com
    csv, excel, geojson +1
    Updated May 21, 2019
    + more versions
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    (2019). Military Bases [Dataset]. https://public.opendatasoft.com/explore/dataset/military-bases/
    Explore at:
    json, csv, geojson, excelAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 21, 2019
    License

    https://www.usa.gov/government-workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works

    Description

    The Military Bases dataset is as of May 21, 2019, and is part of the U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT)/Bureau of Transportation Statistics's (BTS's) National Transportation Atlas Database (NTAD). The dataset depicts the authoritative boundaries of the most commonly known Department of Defense (DoD) sites, installations, ranges, and training areas in the United States and Territories. These sites encompass land which is federally owned or otherwise managed. This dataset was created from source data provided by the four Military Service Component headquarters and was compiled by the Defense Installation Spatial Data Infrastructure (DISDI) Program within the Office of the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Installations and Environment, Business Enterprise Integration Directorate. Sites were selected from the 2010 Base Structure Report (BSR), a summary of the DoD Real Property Inventory. This list does not necessarily represent a comprehensive collection of all Department of Defense facilities, and only those in the fifty United States and US Territories were considered for inclusion. For inventory purposes, installations are comprised of sites, where a site is defined as a specific geographic location of federally owned or managed land and is assigned to military installation. DoD installations are commonly referred to as a base, camp, post, station, yard, center, homeport facility for any ship, or other activity under the jurisdiction, custody, control of the DoD.

  11. K

    US Military Bases

    • koordinates.com
    csv, dwg, geodatabase +6
    Updated Oct 1, 2002
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics (2002). US Military Bases [Dataset]. https://koordinates.com/layer/749-us-military-bases/
    Explore at:
    geopackage / sqlite, pdf, geodatabase, kml, shapefile, csv, dwg, mapinfo mif, mapinfo tabAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 1, 2002
    Dataset authored and provided by
    U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics
    License

    https://koordinates.com/license/attribution-3-0/https://koordinates.com/license/attribution-3-0/

    Area covered
    Description

    The United States Military Installations database contains the boundaries and location information for important military installations in the United States and Puerto Rico. The database includes records for 405 military installations.

    Purpose

    To provide graphic representation, location and attribute data for analysis, modeling and simulation, and studies. CLOSURE, REALIGN, and BRAC columns are from the office of Economic Adjustment and OSD websites at http://www.oea.gov , https://www.denix.osd.mil .

  12. h

    us-army-fm-instruct

    • huggingface.co
    Updated May 29, 2025
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Evan Armstrong (2025). us-army-fm-instruct [Dataset]. https://huggingface.co/datasets/Heralax/us-army-fm-instruct
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    May 29, 2025
    Authors
    Evan Armstrong
    License

    Apache License, v2.0https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This is a multiturn instruct tuning dataset with 2,333,924 trainable tokens, created with Augmentoolkit, covering the material in the majority of the US Army Field Manuals that are publicly available. Unlike many previous Augmentoolkit datasets, the questions and answers here are without fluff and are more "to the point". This "sharper" data is intended to help the LLM with recalling facts. There are three main datasets included here: "vanilla", "negative" and "long".

    Vanilla data is simple… See the full description on the dataset page: https://huggingface.co/datasets/Heralax/us-army-fm-instruct.

  13. p

    Military Bases in United States - 6,289 Verified Listings Database

    • poidata.io
    csv, excel, json
    Updated Jul 11, 2025
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Poidata.io (2025). Military Bases in United States - 6,289 Verified Listings Database [Dataset]. https://www.poidata.io/report/military-base/united-states
    Explore at:
    csv, excel, jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 11, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Poidata.io
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Comprehensive dataset of 6,289 Military bases in United States as of July, 2025. Includes verified contact information (email, phone), geocoded addresses, customer ratings, reviews, business categories, and operational details. Perfect for market research, lead generation, competitive analysis, and business intelligence. Download a complimentary sample to evaluate data quality and completeness.

  14. d

    US Veteran & Military Data | 26MM Records

    • datarade.ai
    Updated Nov 15, 2024
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    McGRAW (2024). US Veteran & Military Data | 26MM Records [Dataset]. https://datarade.ai/data-products/mcgraw-us-veteran-military-data-26mm-records-mcgraw
    Explore at:
    .xml, .csv, .xls, .sql, .txtAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 15, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    McGRAW
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Access a market-leading database of 18 million verified military veterans, backed by our money-back quality guarantee. Our veteran mailing lists are meticulously updated and verified every month to ensure accuracy. Understanding that every campaign is unique, we provide a comprehensive range of demographic and psychographic filters to help you target the exact veteran audience you need.

    Whether you aim to offer benefits, home loans, educational opportunities, or specialized services, our data ensures your message reaches the right audience, enabling you to connect effectively with both active and non-active military members. Discover how our targeted data solutions can enhance your engagement and drive success for your initiatives.

    Here are some of the customizable segments you can create with our filters:

    • Veteran Ethnicities Available
    • Senior Veterans (65+)
    • Affluent Veterans
    • Veterans with Advanced Degrees
    • Veteran's Hobbies
    • Disabled Veterans
    • Families with two or more veterans in the household

    Our military veterans email campaign offers targeted outreach to qualified veteran leads with a guaranteed open rate, ensuring your message reaches a receptive audience. After the campaign, you can opt to receive a list of veterans who opened your email, providing a valuable pool of warm leads for follow-up. If you prefer to manage your own campaign, we also offer highly accurate veteran email lists, complete with unlimited usage rights for ongoing marketing efforts.

    Additionally, you can extend your reach by using the same veteran email list for targeted Facebook ads, leveraging the power of multi-channel marketing. For a more tangible approach, our veterans mailing list allows you to engage veterans directly through direct mail, offering an uninterrupted opportunity to capture their attention. To maximize impact, we recommend synchronizing direct mail with a complementary digital ad campaign, enhancing your overall return on investment. With our active military database, you can connect with military personnel both on and off base.

  15. Data from: America's Women Veterans: Military Service History and VA Benefit...

    • catalog.data.gov
    • datahub.va.gov
    • +2more
    Updated Apr 17, 2021
    + more versions
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Department of Veterans Affairs (2021). America's Women Veterans: Military Service History and VA Benefit Utilization Statistics [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/americas-women-veterans-military-service-history-and-va-benefit-utilization-statistics
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Apr 17, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    United States Department of Veterans Affairshttp://va.gov/
    Description

    This comprehensive report chronicles the history of women in the military and as Veterans, profiles the characteristics of women Veterans in 2009, illustrates how women Veterans in 2009 utilized some of the major benefits and services offered by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), and discusses the future of women Veterans in relation to VA. The goal of this report is to gain an understanding of who our women Veterans are, how their military service affects their post-military lives, and how they can be better served based on these insights.

  16. d

    Department of Defense Numbers for Traumatic Brain Injury

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.wu.ac.at
    Updated Nov 29, 2020
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Department of Defense Inspector General (2020). Department of Defense Numbers for Traumatic Brain Injury [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/department-of-defense-numbers-for-traumatic-brain-injury
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Nov 29, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Department of Defense Inspector General
    Description

    This information is designed to provide service members, their families, veterans, the general public, and other concerned citizens with the most comprehensive and accurate figures available regarding diagnosed cases of TBI within the U.S. military. Information is collected from electronic medical records and analyzed by the Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center in cooperation with the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center. Numbers for the current year will be updated on a quarterly basis. Other data will be updated annually. At this time, the MHS is unable to provide information regarding cause of injury or location because that information is not available in most medical records. The numbers represent actual medical diagnoses of TBI within the U.S. Military. Other, larger numbers routinely reported in the media must be considered inaccurate because they do not reflect actual medical diagnoses. Many of these larger numbers are developed utilizing sources such as the Post Deployment Health Assessment (PDHA) or Post Deployment Health Reassessment (PDHRA). However, these documents are assessment tools with TBI screening questions and are not diagnostic tools.

  17. Military Installations, Ranges and Training Areas (MIRTA)

    • geospatial-usace.opendata.arcgis.com
    • hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Oct 8, 2020
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    usace_crrel_als (2020). Military Installations, Ranges and Training Areas (MIRTA) [Dataset]. https://geospatial-usace.opendata.arcgis.com/maps/fc0f38c5a19a46dbacd92f2fb823ef8c
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 8, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    United States Army Corps of Engineershttp://www.usace.army.mil/
    Authors
    usace_crrel_als
    Area covered
    Description

    The dataset depicts the authoritative locations of the most commonly known Department of Defense (DoD) sites, installations, ranges, and training areas in the United States and Territories. These sites encompass land which is federally owned or otherwise managed. This dataset was created from source data provided by the four Military Service Component headquarters and was compiled by the Defense Installation Spatial Data Infrastructure (DISDI) Program within the Office of the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Installations and Environment, Business Enterprise Integration Directorate. Sites were selected from the 2009 Base Structure Report (BSR), a summary of the DoD Real Property Inventory. This list does not necessarily represent a comprehensive collection of all Department of Defense facilities, and only those in the fifty United States and US Territories were considered for inclusion. For inventory purposes, installations are comprised of sites, where a site is defined as a specific geographic location of federally owned or managed land and is assigned to military installation. DoD installations are commonly referred to as a base, camp, post, station, yard, center, homeport facility for any ship, or other activity under the jurisdiction, custody, control of the DoD.

  18. s

    US Public Schools

    • data.smartidf.services
    • public.opendatasoft.com
    csv, excel, geojson +1
    Updated Jan 6, 2023
    + more versions
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    (2023). US Public Schools [Dataset]. https://data.smartidf.services/explore/dataset/us-public-schools/
    Explore at:
    geojson, excel, json, csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 6, 2023
    License

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_domainhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_domain

    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    This Public Schools feature dataset is composed of all Public elementary and secondary education facilities in the United States as defined by the Common Core of Data (CCD, https://nces.ed.gov/ccd/ ), National Center for Education Statistics (NCES, https://nces.ed.gov ), US Department of Education for the 2017-2018 school year. This includes all Kindergarten through 12th grade schools as tracked by the Common Core of Data. Included in this dataset are military schools in US territories and referenced in the city field with an APO or FPO address. DOD schools represented in the NCES data that are outside of the United States or US territories have been omitted. This feature class contains all MEDS/MEDS+ as approved by NGA. Complete field and attribute information is available in the ”Entities and Attributes” metadata section. Geographical coverage is depicted in the thumbnail above and detailed in the Place Keyword section of the metadata. This release includes the addition of 3065 new records, modifications to the spatial location and/or attribution of 99,287 records, and removal of 2996 records not present in the NCES CCD data.

  19. d

    Replication Data for: A Wiki-based Dataset of Military Operations with Novel...

    • dataone.org
    Updated Nov 8, 2023
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Interactions, International (2023). Replication Data for: A Wiki-based Dataset of Military Operations with Novel Strategic Technologies (MONSTr) [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/83WWEN
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Nov 8, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Harvard Dataverse
    Authors
    Interactions, International
    Description

    Research on strategies and force employment in modern warfare is prolific, but siloed. While some examine boots on the ground, others focus on aerial bombing or unpiloted platforms. Consequently, most studies focus on the effects of one approach, seldom considering it in lieu of or conjunction with others. Furthermore, there is less knowledge on the origins and implementations of these strategic choices analyzed in isolation. The primary reason for these gaps lies with data limitations. This paper introduces a comprehensive dataset on the universe of United States military operations from 1989-2021 from a single source: Wikipedia. Using automated extraction techniques on its two structured knowledge databases−Wikidata and DBpedia−we uncover information about individual operations within nearly every post-1989 military intervention described in existing academic datasets. The data we introduce offers unprecedented coverage and granularity that enables analysis of myriad factors associated with when, where, and how the United States employs military force. We describe the data collection process, demonstrate its contents and validity, and discuss its potential applications to existing theories about force employment and strategy in war.

  20. p

    Military Airports in United States - 69 Verified Listings Database

    • poidata.io
    csv, excel, json
    Updated Jul 7, 2025
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Poidata.io (2025). Military Airports in United States - 69 Verified Listings Database [Dataset]. https://www.poidata.io/report/military-airport/united-states
    Explore at:
    csv, excel, jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 7, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Poidata.io
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Comprehensive dataset of 69 Military airports in United States as of July, 2025. Includes verified contact information (email, phone), geocoded addresses, customer ratings, reviews, business categories, and operational details. Perfect for market research, lead generation, competitive analysis, and business intelligence. Download a complimentary sample to evaluate data quality and completeness.

Share
FacebookFacebook
TwitterTwitter
Email
Click to copy link
Link copied
Close
Cite
Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Energy, Installations, and Environment (Point of Contact) (2024). Military Bases [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/military-bases1

Military Bases

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Nov 19, 2024
Dataset provided by
Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Energy, Installations, and Environment (Point of Contact)
Description

The Military Bases dataset was last updated on October 23, 2024 and are defined by Fiscal Year 2023 data, from the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Energy, Installations, and Environment and is part of the U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT)/Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) National Transportation Atlas Database (NTAD). The dataset depicts the authoritative locations of the most commonly known Department of Defense (DoD) sites, installations, ranges, and training areas world-wide. These sites encompass land which is federally owned or otherwise managed. This dataset was created from source data provided by the four Military Service Component headquarters and was compiled by the Defense Installation Spatial Data Infrastructure (DISDI) Program within the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Energy, Installations, and Environment. Only sites reported in the BSR or released in a map supplementing the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act of 2018 (FIRRMA) Real Estate Regulation (31 CFR Part 802) were considered for inclusion. This list does not necessarily represent a comprehensive collection of all Department of Defense facilities. For inventory purposes, installations are comprised of sites, where a site is defined as a specific geographic location of federally owned or managed land and is assigned to military installation. DoD installations are commonly referred to as a base, camp, post, station, yard, center, homeport facility for any ship, or other activity under the jurisdiction, custody, control of the DoD. While every attempt has been made to provide the best available data quality, this data set is intended for use at mapping scales between 1:50,000 and 1:3,000,000. For this reason, boundaries in this data set may not perfectly align with DoD site boundaries depicted in other federal data sources. Maps produced at a scale of 1:50,000 or smaller which otherwise comply with National Map Accuracy Standards, will remain compliant when this data is incorporated. Boundary data is most suitable for larger scale maps; point locations are better suited for mapping scales between 1:250,000 and 1:3,000,000. If a site is part of a Joint Base (effective/designated on 1 October, 2010) as established under the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure process, it is attributed with the name of the Joint Base. All sites comprising a Joint Base are also attributed to the responsible DoD Component, which is not necessarily the pre-2005 Component responsible for the site.

Search
Clear search
Close search
Google apps
Main menu