The 9-1-1 emergency response system is established in Huron County. Huron County GIS facilitates the management and maintenance of our established municipal addressing system. Each individual property in Huron County is identified with a distinctive property identification number. The addressing system consists of the municipality name, road name, and address (number). The assigned rural number represents the approximate distance from the baselines and bearing from our municipal baselines (Highway No. 4 and Highway No. 8). The address ranges for each rural block appear on the road sign at each intersection. North and east sides of roadways are even numbers and the west and south sides of the roadways are odd numbers. Rural numbers in Huron County have 5 digits. Urban addressing retained historical numerical addressing in most cases. Address numbers for each property in the County, with a structure, are clearly visible either on the front of the building or on a blade at the end of a driveway.
Please contact the County of Huron Corporate Services IT/GIS Department if you have any questions at (519)-524-8394 ext. 3278 or 911@huroncounty.ca.
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Download .zipMaps and data associated with oil-and-gas wells represent one of the largest datasets at the Ohio Department of Natural Resources. This GIS data layer contains all the locatable oil-and-gas wells in Ohio. The feature is derived from coordinates obtained from the Division of Oil and Gas Resources Management (DOGRM) oil and gas well database – Risk Based Data Management System (RBDMS). The RBDMS database has a long history and is a comprehensive collection of well data from historic pre-1980 paper well records (digitized by the Division of Geological Survey (DGS)) to post-1980 DOGRM database solutions.Since 1860, it is estimated that more than 267,000 oil-and-gas wells have been drilled in Ohio. The compressed file also includes a feature used to connect the surface location to the bottom location of a well that has been drilled directionally or horizontally. This feature is NOT the actual wellbore path, it is simply a graphical representation indicating the relationship between the two well points.Contact Information:GIS Support, ODNR GIS ServicesOhio Department of Natural ResourcesDivision of Oil & Gas ResourcesOil and Gas Resources Management2045 Morse Road Bldg F-2Columbus, OH, 43229-6693Telephone: 614-265-6462Email: gis.support@dnr.ohio.gov
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Download .zipThe Ohio Wetlands Inventory is based on analysis of satellite data by Bruce R. Motsch and Gary M. Schaal and is intended solely as an indicator of wetland sites for which field review should be conducted. The satellite data reflect conditions during the specific year and season the data was acquired and all wetlands may not be indicated. Statistics generated from the inventory are intended solely as an approximation.
The Ohio Wetlands Inventory for Huron County was produced from April 1987 Landsat Thematic mapper data (cell size 30 meters by 30 meters) using ERDAS Image processing software. The raster data has been converted to ARC/INFO format and exported to an interchange file.
The data was originally georeferenced to UTM zone 17 coordinates NAD 27 and is also available in this coordinate system in ERDAS Imagine format.
The class of woods on hydric soils, wet meadow and farmed wetland fall on hydric soils when digital soils data is available for the county.
Original coverage data was converted from the .e00 file to a more standard ESRI shapefile(s) in November 2014.Contact Information:GIS Support, ODNR GIS ServicesOhio Department of Natural ResourcesReal Estate & Land ManagementReal Estate and Lands Management2045 Morse Rd, Bldg I-2Columbus, OH, 43229Telephone: 614-265-6462Email: gis.support@dnr.ohio.gov
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Download .zipA potentiometric surface map is a contour map that represents the top of the ground water surface in an aquifer. The contour lines illustrate the potentiometric surface much like the contour lines of a topographic map represent a visual model of the ground surface. A potentiometric surface map is very similar to a water table map in that both show the horizontal direction and gradient of ground water flow.Contact Information:GIS Support, ODNR GIS ServicesOhio Department of Natural ResourcesDivision of Geological Survey2045 Morse Rd, Bldg I-2Columbus, OH, 43229Telephone: 614-265-6693Email: gis.support@dnr.ohio.gov
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Download .zipThis coverage was extracted from the 1994 statewide land cover inventory of Ohio produced by Bruce R. Motsch and Gary M. Schaal of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
The land cover inventory for the State of Ohio was produced by the digital image processing of Landsat Thematic Mapper Data. The Thematic Mapper is a multi-spectral scanner that collects electromagnetic radiation reflected from the earth's surface in the visible, near infrared and mid-infrared wavelength bands. The resolution of the Thematic Mapper data is a 30 meter by 30 meter cell. The computer analysis of the data isolates unique spectral classes that relate to land cover characteristics.
The land cover inventory was produced from Thematic Mapper data acquired in September and October 1994. The data was classified into the general land cover categories of urban, agriculture/open urban areas, shrub/scrub, wooded, open water, non-forested wetlands and barren.
The land cover information reflects the conditions of the satellite data during the specific year and season the data was acquired. The Thematic Mapper data was processed using ERDAS image processing software. The data was originally created in raster format and georeferenced to Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) zone 17 coordinates NAD27. The data can be combined with other georeferenced digital data layers.
The data is also available in its original ERDAS image format.
Original coverage data was converted from the .e00 file to a more standard ESRI shapefile(s) in November 2014.Contact Information:GIS Support, ODNR GIS ServicesOhio Department of Natural ResourcesReal Estate & Land ManagementReal Estate and Lands Management2045 Morse Rd, Bldg I-2Columbus, OH, 43229Telephone: 614-265-6462Email: gis.support@dnr.ohio.gov
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License information was derived automatically
Download .zipThis coverage represents an interpretation of land use and land cover types done from aerial photography by Bruce Motsch, Remote Sensing Unit, Division of Soil and Water Conservation. For an explanation of categories see Ohio Land Use/ Cover Classifications System, Misc. Report 17 available upon request, or at http://apps.ohiodnr.gov/geodata/documents/Ohio_LULC_Misc_Report17.pdf . This publication is keyed to the four digit code found in the OCAPCODE item name code description.
This coverage was digitized from Land Use/ Land Cover drafted onto USGS quadrangle maps utilizing a run length encoding technique sampling along horizontal lines which represent the midline of cells with a height of 250 feet . The measurement increment along these horizontal lines was one decafoot (10 feet) the quadrangle files were then merged into a county file which was subsequently converted to ARC / INFO format.
The user should bear in mind that this coverage is only an approximation of the Land Use / Land Cover as drafted. Blue line copies of the original Land Use / Land Cover interpretation can be provided for a nominal charge.
Additional details on the digitizing process are available on request.
Original coverage data was converted from the .e00 file to a more standard ESRI shapefile(s) in November 2014.Contact Information:GIS Support, ODNR GIS ServicesOhio Department of Natural ResourcesReal Estate & Land ManagementReal Estate and Lands Management2045 Morse Rd, Bldg I-2Columbus, OH, 43229Telephone: 614-265-6462Email: gis.support@dnr.ohio.gov
2006 Imagery of Huron County gathered from the SWOOP 2006 program.
To use this image service in your map navigate to the “API” tab and copy the appropriate URL into your map document. Downloadable imagery is not available at this time.
Information regarding aggregate deposits as identified by the Ministry of Northern Development and Mines through the Aggregate Resource Inventory Papers (ARIP) and have been combined with constraint information determined by Huron County. Primary Mineral Aggregate Deposits are areas in which a major resource is known to exist and should be considered as part of the aggregate supply of the area. These deposits are of the highest quality and quantity within the area.Secondary Mineral Aggregate Deposits are deposits of secondary importance which may contain significant amounts of sand and gravel. Although these deposits are not considered to be the best resources in the County, they contain large quantities of sand and gravel and are an important part of the aggregate supply for the area.Ontario Geological Survey 2004. Aggregate resources inventory of Huron County; Ontario Geological Survey, Aggregate Resources Inventory Paper 177, 78p.
Former municipal ward boundaries within Huron County (ASHFIELD, HOWICK, TURNBERRY, WEST WAWANOSH, EAST WAWANOSH, MORRIS, COLBORNE, GREY, HULLETT, GODERICH, McKILLOP, TUCKERSMITH, STANLEY, HAY, USBORNE, STEPHEN)
BY USING THIS WEBSITE OR THE CONTENT THEREIN, YOU AGREE TO THE TERMS OF USE. The trail/path dataset shows existing and proposed trails and paths in Oakland County and neighboring communities. The coverage was compiled from several sources including the community master plans, multi-jurisdictional trail councils/commissions, the State of Michigan, Oakland County Parks and Recreation, and the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority. Hard copy sources include listings, maps and 2010 orthophotography. The scale of the data collection varies by community. The road centerline dataset was used to designate the safety path if a specific side of the road was not mentioned. The key attributes include: names of the major trails, agency that maintains the pathway, type of pathway, and various activities that are allowed on the pathway.
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The 9-1-1 emergency response system is established in Huron County. Huron County GIS facilitates the management and maintenance of our established municipal addressing system. Each individual property in Huron County is identified with a distinctive property identification number. The addressing system consists of the municipality name, road name, and address (number). The assigned rural number represents the approximate distance from the baselines and bearing from our municipal baselines (Highway No. 4 and Highway No. 8). The address ranges for each rural block appear on the road sign at each intersection. North and east sides of roadways are even numbers and the west and south sides of the roadways are odd numbers. Rural numbers in Huron County have 5 digits. Urban addressing retained historical numerical addressing in most cases. Address numbers for each property in the County, with a structure, are clearly visible either on the front of the building or on a blade at the end of a driveway.
Please contact the County of Huron Corporate Services IT/GIS Department if you have any questions at (519)-524-8394 ext. 3278 or 911@huroncounty.ca.