https://www.idaho-demographics.com/terms_and_conditionshttps://www.idaho-demographics.com/terms_and_conditions
A dataset listing Idaho cities by population for 2024.
https://www.idaho-demographics.com/terms_and_conditionshttps://www.idaho-demographics.com/terms_and_conditions
A dataset listing Idaho counties by population for 2024.
The Silver City mule deer winter east of Silver City, Idaho, along Sinker Creek and west of Idaho State Highway 78 (Figure 1). This herd generally spends the summer at higher elevations in Game Management Unit (GMU) 40 south and west of the historic mining towns of Silver City, Idaho, and De Lamar, Idaho. Migration distances averaged 17 mi (27 km), but some migrations were considerably longer (>40 mi) and spilled into GMU 41, as far south as the basin of Little Jacks Creek. The Silver City mule deer herd shares summer ranges in the Owyhee Mountains with several distinct mule deer herds, which winter in eastern Oregon. Summer habitats comprise mixed-conifer forest, aspen, and some mountain mahogany-woodland communities, whereas their migration and winter range habitats comprise a mix of Wyoming big sagebrush steppe, invasive annual grasses, and juniper woodland. Seasonal migrations near Silver City, Idaho, span Federal, State, and private land ownership. The area includes important mineral reserves and potential renewable energy sources, and provides abundant recreational opportunities, so mitigating adverse effects from these land uses may be an important consideration for environmental planning.
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
This map depicts the location of trees planted by community members for the City of Boise's City of Trees Challenge, an initiative created by the City of Boise to plant 100,000 over the next decade.The City of Boise is leading a new movement for community recovery and climate resiliency – we’ve set a big goal – and we need your help to make it happen.Together, over the next decade we will plant one tree for every household in the city, that’s 100,000 trees!We also challenge our community to sponsor one seedling for every person in the city in our forests across the state of Idaho.The city is collaborating with the Treasure Valley Canopy Network and The Nature Conservancy Idaho Chapter to engage Boise residents. The canopy network will help the city involve the local green industry to build economic recovery and resilience, while leveraging non-profit organizations locally and around the world to support this tree planting effort.For more information, visit cityofboise.org/departments/parks-and-recreation/city-of-trees-challenge
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
This is a polygon data set depicting the current comprehensive planning areas for Boise City. A comprehensive planning area is defined in Chapter 4-1, page 171, of Blueprint Boise, the current Boise City Comprehensive Plan as, "On the largest scale, the entire area (area of impact) for which the City has authority to prepare comprehensive plans. On a smaller scale, planning area refers to the various sub-areas (i.e. West Bench, Central Bench, Southwest, etc,) which the City has defined as making up the larger planning area. These sub-areas are defined by physical barriers and/or the character of existing developments within them, and may each have specific planning objectives and policies articulated in the Comprehensive Plan." Each polygon in this data set is a specific smaller scale (sub-area) planning area. Collectively, the polygons represent the geography for the Boise City large scale comprehensive planning area.This data set is a critical component of the official Land Use Map within the Boise City Comprehensive Plan. It is used to identify specific areas within Boise City and the Boise Area of Impact to which specific land use designations and policies are applied. The data set is used to assist Boise City staff to identify specific planning areas and manage the growth of those areas to be consistent with the policies and intentions set out in the Boise City Comprehensive Plan.The dataset is generally coincident with the Boise Area of Impact; and is updated through City Council approval when the Boise Area of Impact changes. The data is current to the date the data set was published.For more information, please visit City of Boise Planning & Development.
https://opendata.cityofboise.org/datasets/7a28b70948cd4a1490f76e623448cb1f_0/license.jsonhttps://opendata.cityofboise.org/datasets/7a28b70948cd4a1490f76e623448cb1f_0/license.json
This is a point data set representing all streetlight locations within Boise Area of Impact, including lights owned by the city and by Idaho Power. A streetlight is a light, usually mounted on a pole, and constituting one of a series of lights spaced at intervals along a public street or highway. This data set was developed by City of Boise Public Works Department in the early 1990’s and is currently maintained by the DIS Division of Boise City Public Works under the direction of the City of Boise Streetlight Coordinator.
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
This is a polygon data set that depicts the locations of easements and vacations of easements granted to the City of Boise. An easement is a legal right to make use of land owned by another party, for a specific and limited purpose as specified within an easement description. An easement vacation is a legal declaration to relinquish to the parcel owner the easement that was formerly granted. Easements are attained by the City of Boise in the following ways: 1)through right-of-way vacation from Ada County Highway District where the City of Boise retains rights to build and maintain utility structures across the area vacated within the vacation description; 2)a Boise City Council resolution where a grantor gives the City the right to build and maintain sanitary sewer, geothermal, drainage or pressure irrigation across their property; 3)as a grant of easement or grant deed recorded at Ada County; and 4) as a note on a subdivision final plat that a specific lot, portion of a lot or lots is shown to have an easement across it (them) and may or may not include dimensions of the easement. All easements in this data set are within the Boise City Area of Impact. This data set is maintained by Boise City Public Works GIS staff. Features in this data set are derived from available computer aided drafting CAD drawings, paper map documents and legal descriptions that define easement locations. Easements have been granted to the City of Boise since about 1900 to the present. Documentation of easements prior to 1970 is incomplete; therefore most of the easements in this data set will be from 1970 to the present. The data is updated continuously. It is current to the date it was published.
This map depicts USGS-derived level 3 (basin) hydrologic units for Idaho along with major hydrographic features, cities, and roads.
U.S. Populated Place Areas represents populated place areas that include census designated places, consolidated cities, and incorporated places in the United States identified by the U.S. Bureau of the Census.To download this layer as a layer package for use in ArcGIS desktop applications, please refer to USA Census Populated Places Areas.
This map depicts USGS-derived level 3 (basin) hydrologic units for Idaho along with major hydrographic features, cities, and roads.
U.S. Census Populated Place Areas represents the 2020 U.S. Census populated place areas of the United States that include incorporated places, cities, and census designated places identified by the U.S. Census Bureau.This layer is updated annually. The geography is sourced from U.S. Census Bureau 2020 TIGER FGDB (National Sub-State) and edited using TIGER Hydrography to add a detailed coastline for cartographic purposes. Attribute fields include 2020 total population from the U.S. Census Public Law 94 data. The Population Class field values represent population ranges as follows:Population from 0 - 249Population from 250 - 499Population from 500 - 999Population from 1,000 - 2,499Population from 2,500 - 9,999Population from 10,000 - 49,999Population from 50,000 - 99,999Population from 100,000 - 249,999Population from 250,000 - 499,999Population 500,000 and overThis ready-to-use layer can be used in ArcGIS Pro and in ArcGIS Online and its configurable apps, dashboards, StoryMaps, custom apps, and mobile apps. The data can also be exported for offline workflows. Cite the 'U.S. Census Bureau' when using this data.
Important Note: This item is in mature support as of July 2021. A new version of this item is available for your use. Esri recommends updating your maps and apps to use the new version.This layer presents country boundaries; first-order (State/Province) internal administrative boundaries and names for most countries. The map was developed by Esri using administrative and city data from Esri; Garmin basemap layers for the world; HERE data for North America, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, South America and Central America, India, most of the Middle East and Asia, and Africa. Data for select areas of Africa and Pacific Island nations from ~1:288k to ~1:4k (~1:1k in select areas) was sourced from OpenStreetMap contributors. Specific country list and documentation of Esri's process for including OSM data is available to view.Select data for the World Boundaries and Places Map is provided by the GIS community. For details on the users who contributed data for this map via the Community Maps Program, view the list of Contributors for the World Boundaries and Places Map. This map is designed for use with maps with darker backgrounds, such as the World Imagery service. An alternate version of this service is also available, the World Boundaries and Places Alternate service, which is designed for overlaying on basemaps with lighter backgrounds, such as the World Shaded Relief service.
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https://www.idaho-demographics.com/terms_and_conditionshttps://www.idaho-demographics.com/terms_and_conditions
A dataset listing Idaho cities by population for 2024.