The geospatial data presented here as ArcGIS layers denote landcover/landuse classifications to support field sampling efforts that occurred within the Cache Creek Settling Basin (CCSB) from 2010-2019. Manual photointerpretation of a National Agriculture Imagery Program (NAIP) dataset collected in 2012 was used to characterize landcover/landuse categories (hereafter habitat classes). Initially 9 categories were assigned based on vegetation structure (Vegtype1). These were then parsed into two levels of habitat classes that were chosen for their representativeness and use for statistical analyses of field sampling. At the coarsest level (Landcover 1), five habitat classes were assigned: Agriculture, Riparian, Floodplain, Open Water, and Road. At the more refined level (Landcover 2), ten habitat classes were nested within these five categories. Agriculture was not further refined within Landcover 2, as little consistency was expected between years as fields rotated between corn, pumpkin, tomatoes, and other row crops. Riparian habitat, marked by large canopy trees (such as Populus fremontii (cottonwood)) neighboring stream channels, also was not further refined. Floodplain habitat was separated into two categories: Mixed NonWoody (which included both Mowed and Barren habitats) and Mixed Woody. This separation of the floodplain habitat class (Landcover1) into Woody and NonWoody was performed with a 100 m2 moving window analysis in ArcGIS, where habitats were designated as either ≥50% shrub or tree cover (Woody) or <50%, and thus dominated by herbaceous vegetation cover (NonWoody). Open Water habitat was refined to consider both agricultural Canal (created) and Stream (natural) habitats. Road habitat was refined to separate Levee Roads (which included both the drivable portion and the apron on either side) and Interior roads, which were less managed. The map was tested for errors of omission and commission on the initial 9 categories during November 2014. Random points (n=100) were predetermined, and a total of 80 were selected for field verification. Type 1 (false positive) and Type 2 (false negative) errors were assessed. The survey indicated several corrections necessary in the final version of the map. 1) We noted the presence of woody species in “NonWoody” habitats, especially Baccharus salicilifolia (mulefat). Habitats were thus classified as “Woody” only with ≥50% presence of canopy species (e.g. tamarisk, black willow) 2) Riparian sites were over-characterized, and thus constrained back to “near stream channels only”. Walnut (Juglans spp) and willow stands alongside fields and irrigation canals were changed to Mixed Woody Floodplain. Fine tuning the final habitat distributions was thus based on field reconnaissance, scalar needs for classifying field data (sediment, water, bird, and fish collections), and validation of data categories using species observations from scientist field notes. Calibration was made using point data from the random survey and scientist field notes, to remove all sources of error and reach accuracy of 100%. The coverage “CCSB_Habitat_2012” is provided as an ARCGIS shapefile based on a suite of 7 interconnected ARCGIS files coded with the suffixes: cpg, dbf, sbn, sbx, shp, shx, and prj. Each file provides a component of the coverage (such as database or projection) and all files are necessary to open the “CCSB_Habitat_2012.shp” file with full functionality. CCSB_Basin_Map.png represents the CCSB study area color coded by the four primary habitat types identified in this study.
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
This cached map service provides access to the Kentucky Topographic Map Series (KyTopo) images in a seamless manner. The underlying data will be updated on a periodic basis. This Web Mercator-based service is intended for use in a web mapping framework.
With our display services, you can use Lantmäteriet’s maps in your own systems or applications. The display services can be combined with our other geodata services. The service provides access to a topographic web map that is customised for screen viewing. The map information is displayed with a harmonised cartography between the scales. The service is very similar in terms of content to the service Topographic Webmap Viewing but has higher performance and slightly less timeliness. The information is updated at different intervals depending on the information type and scale level. Scale ranges up to 1:20,000 are updated at least daily. Scale ranges above 1:20,000 are updated at least quarterly.
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
Parcel ownership and address information, parcel valuation information and basic information about the land and structure(s) associated with a given tax assessment account are maintained by SDAT and incorporated with parcel boundaries and other ancillary information maintained by the Montgomery County Planning Department.For more information about the fields and attributes in the dataset, see the data dictionary.For more information, contact: GIS Manager Information Technology & Innovation (ITI) Montgomery County Planning Department, MNCPPC T: 301-650-5620
This map shows the USGS (United States Geologic Survey), NWIS (National Water Inventory System) Hydrologic Data Sites for Cache County, Utah. The scope and purpose of NWIS is defined on the web site: http://water.usgs.gov/public/pubs/FS/FS-027-98/
This service is a cached overlay of a cartographic representation of the National Hydrography Dataset (NHD). The NHD is a comprehensive set of digital geospatial data that encodes information about naturally occurring and constructed bodies of surface water, paths through which water flows, related features such as stream gages and dams, and additional hydrologic information. It is available nationwide in a 1:24,000-scale seamless dataset, referred to as high resolution NHD. The NHD supports many applications, such as making maps, geocoding observations, flow modeling, data maintenance and stewardship. For additional information, go to http://nhd.usgs.gov. Additional datasets are used for small-scale hydrography representation as well, including medium resolution NHDPlus published by EPA; USGS Small-Scale hydrography; and bathymetry from ETOPO1 Global Relief, provided by NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information, U.S. Coastal Relief Model.
https://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontariohttps://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontario
The topographic data includes constructed and natural features that make up Ontario’s landscape.
The cache provides limited data from areas outside Ontario’s boundaries, such as the United States and adjacent provinces and territories.
Technical information Two versions of the LIO Topographic Data Cache are available:
The traditional raster version is available for a variety of GIS applications and is updated annually. The vector version is suitable for online web map applications as well as modern GIS software and is updated twice a year. Contributing data layers may have different maintenance and update cycles.
Some cache layers have been processed in a way that makes it easier for them to be displayed in a mapping product. Other layers are unchanged from the authoritative data.
The cartographic symbology used in the data cache is intentionally muted to allow users to showcase their data.The LIO Vector Topographic Data Cache is created from many source datasets as described in the LIO Topographic Data Cache user guide. If you are interested in obtaining this authoritative data, you can download it from the Ontario GeoHub.
Additional Documentation
LIO Topographic Data Cache - User Guide (DOCX)
LIO Vector Topographic Data Cache - Tile Layer
Status
On going: Data is continually being updated
Maintenance and Update Frequency
Biannually: data is updated twice each year
Contact
Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources - Geospatial Ontario, geospatial@ontario.ca
Land and Property Information (LPI’s) Cached map service is a rasterised topographic maps covering NSW. This service contains a selection of standard Topographic maps from the 1:100,000; 1:50,000 …Show full descriptionLand and Property Information (LPI’s) Cached map service is a rasterised topographic maps covering NSW. This service contains a selection of standard Topographic maps from the 1:100,000; 1:50,000 and 1:25,000 series produced between 1970 and 1997. Where coverage exists at multiple scales the largest scale map is displayed. It compromises the “collars off” tiff images for the current (1:100000, 1:50000 and 1:25000) Topo maps, and replaces the “1970-1997” series shown in the old six viewer.
Link to the ScienceBase Item Summary page for the item described by this metadata record. Service Protocol: Link to the ScienceBase Item Summary page for the item described by this metadata record. Application Profile: Web Browser. Link Function: information
This is a vector layer of Ile Cache island's base map. The GIS layer was originally created by the GIS section in the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resource and Transport (MENRT). The layer has been re-edited since then by the Centre for GIS.
description: This map was produced by the Division of Realty to depict landownership at Cache River National Wildlife Refuge. It was generated from rectified aerial photography, cadastral surveys and recorded documents.; abstract: This map was produced by the Division of Realty to depict landownership at Cache River National Wildlife Refuge. It was generated from rectified aerial photography, cadastral surveys and recorded documents.
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
License information was derived automatically
The National Hydrography Dataset (NHD) is a comprehensive set of digital spatial data that encodes information about naturally occurring and constructed bodies of surface water (lakes, ponds, and reservoirs), paths through which water flows (canals, ditches, streams, and rivers), and related entities such as point features (springs, wells, stream gages, and dams). The information encoded about these features includes classification and other characteristics, delineation, geographic name, position and related measures, a "reach code" through which other information can be related to the NHD, and the direction of water flow. The network of reach codes delineating water and transported material flow allows users to trace movement in upstream and downstream directions. In addition to this geographic information, the dataset contains metadata that supports the exchange of future updates and improvements to the data. The NHD is available nationwide in two seamless datasets, one based on 1:24,000-scale maps and referred to as high resolution NHD, and the other based on 1:100,000-scale maps and referred to as medium resolution NHD. Additional selected areas in the United States are available based on larger scales, such as 1:5,000-scale or greater, and referred to as local resolution NHD. The NHD supports many applications, such as making maps, geocoding observations, flow modeling, data maintenance and stewardship. For additional information, go to https://nhd.usgs.gov.
This Land Cover-Land Use Tile Cache may be used for fast display in ArcGIS Online, ArcGIS Desktop, and other applications that can consume tile services.The statewide dataset contains a combination of land cover mapping from 2016 aerial imagery and land use derived from standardized assessor parcel information for Massachusetts. The data layer is the result of a cooperative project between MassGIS and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) Office of Coastal Management (OCM). Funding was provided by the Mass. Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs.
This land cover/land use dataset does not conform to the classification schemes or polygon delineation of previous land use data from MassGIS (1951-1999; 2005).In this hosted tile cache layer, all impervious polygons are symbolized by their generalized use code; all non-impervious land cover polygons are symbolized by their land cover category. The idea behind this method is to use both cover and use codes to provide a truer picture of how land is being used: parcel use codes may indicate allowed or assessed, not actual use; land cover alone (especially impervious) does not indicate actual use.
See the full datalayer description for more details.Also available are a Map Service and a Feature Service. They provide attribute query, although they will not display as quickly as the tile cache at smaller (zoomed out) scales.Add the Land Cover-Land Use Legend Map Service to an ArcGIS Online map along with this tile service to have a legend appear.
Milwaukee County cadastral map (cached) - data refreshed Jan, Mar, May, Jul, Sep, NovOther related layers available:Milwaukee County Parcels with Property Information
Milwaukee County Owned Parcels
Milwaukee County Cadastral DatasetOptional replacements for the Cadastral Cached service:County Vector Basemap – With Parcel Outlines
County Vector Basemap – Without Parcel Outlines
ESRI Vector Basemaps (Community Maps) cadastral layers (cached)
This map shows specific water-quality items and hydrologic data site information which come from QWDATA (Water Quality) and GWSI (Ground Water Information System). Both QWDATA and GWSI are subsystems of NWIS (National Water Inventory System)of the USGS (United States Geologic Survey). This map is for Cache County, Utah. The scope and purpose of NWIS is defined on the web site: http://water.usgs.gov/public/pubs/FS/FS-027-98/
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
The LIO Topographic Data Cache is a collection of topographic data, that has been preprocessed for fast, seamless display at predefined scales. The topographic data includes constructed and natural features that make up Ontario’s landscape. The cache provides limited data from areas outside Ontario’s boundaries, such as the United States and adjacent provinces and territories. Technical information Two versions of the LIO Topographic Data Cache are available: 1. The traditional raster version is available for a variety of GIS applications and is updated annually. 2. The vector version is suitable for online web map applications as well as modern GIS software and is updated twice a year. Contributing data layers may have different maintenance and update cycles. Some cache layers have been processed in a way that makes it easier for them to be displayed in a mapping product. Other layers are unchanged from the authoritative data. The cartographic symbology used in the data cache is intentionally muted to allow users to showcase their data. The LIO Topographic Data Cache is created from many source datasets, which are described in the LIO Topographic Data Cache user guide. If you are interested in getting this authoritative data, you can download it from the Ontario GeoHub. For instructions on getting a copy of either version of the cache for use in mapping applications, visit the Ontario GeoHub.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Yukon Base Map that is cached for optimized performance. It represents all Yukon topographic map content and is distributed by Geomatics Yukon at the Yukon government. It is created using the Canvec base data and is in the Yukon Albers equal area projection. The web service is updated as required.
http://inspire.ec.europa.eu/metadata-codelist/ConditionsApplyingToAccessAndUse/noConditionsApplyhttp://inspire.ec.europa.eu/metadata-codelist/ConditionsApplyingToAccessAndUse/noConditionsApply
Tjenesten inneholder topografiske kart i målestokken 1:500 til 1:10M. Tjenesten inneholder kartdata, fbk og vbase data, men ikke matrikkel data. Matrikkel data kan bli funnet i en egen wms-tjeneste kalt Matrikkel Enkel WMS
The Elevation Contours tile cache service displays at large scales contour lines at 3-meter intervals created from Digital Terrain Model (DTM) data points collected during the production of the 1:5,000 Black and White Digital Orthophoto images. See https://www.mass.gov/info-details/massgis-data-elevation-contours-15000 for more details.At smaller scales the service displays contour lines at 30-foot intervals originally developed at a scale of 1:250,000 and distributed by the U.S. Geological Survey. Please see https://www.mass.gov/info-details/massgis-data-elevation-contours-1250000 for more details.For both datasets, the index contours are labeled in feet above sea level.
This service is a cached overlay of a cartographic representation of the National Hydrography Dataset (NHD). The NHD is a comprehensive set of digital geospatial data that encodes information about naturally occurring and constructed bodies of surface water, paths through which water flows, related features such as stream gages and dams, and additional hydrologic information. It is available nationwide in a 1:24,000-scale seamless dataset, referred to as high resolution NHD. The NHD supports many applications, such as making maps, geocoding observations, flow modeling, data maintenance and stewardship. For additional information, go to http://nhd.usgs.gov. Additional datasets are used for small-scale hydrography representation as well, including medium resolution NHDPlus published by EPA; USGS Small-Scale hydrography; and bathymetry from ETOPO1 Global Relief, provided by NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information, U.S. Coastal Relief Model.
The geospatial data presented here as ArcGIS layers denote landcover/landuse classifications to support field sampling efforts that occurred within the Cache Creek Settling Basin (CCSB) from 2010-2019. Manual photointerpretation of a National Agriculture Imagery Program (NAIP) dataset collected in 2012 was used to characterize landcover/landuse categories (hereafter habitat classes). Initially 9 categories were assigned based on vegetation structure (Vegtype1). These were then parsed into two levels of habitat classes that were chosen for their representativeness and use for statistical analyses of field sampling. At the coarsest level (Landcover 1), five habitat classes were assigned: Agriculture, Riparian, Floodplain, Open Water, and Road. At the more refined level (Landcover 2), ten habitat classes were nested within these five categories. Agriculture was not further refined within Landcover 2, as little consistency was expected between years as fields rotated between corn, pumpkin, tomatoes, and other row crops. Riparian habitat, marked by large canopy trees (such as Populus fremontii (cottonwood)) neighboring stream channels, also was not further refined. Floodplain habitat was separated into two categories: Mixed NonWoody (which included both Mowed and Barren habitats) and Mixed Woody. This separation of the floodplain habitat class (Landcover1) into Woody and NonWoody was performed with a 100 m2 moving window analysis in ArcGIS, where habitats were designated as either ≥50% shrub or tree cover (Woody) or <50%, and thus dominated by herbaceous vegetation cover (NonWoody). Open Water habitat was refined to consider both agricultural Canal (created) and Stream (natural) habitats. Road habitat was refined to separate Levee Roads (which included both the drivable portion and the apron on either side) and Interior roads, which were less managed. The map was tested for errors of omission and commission on the initial 9 categories during November 2014. Random points (n=100) were predetermined, and a total of 80 were selected for field verification. Type 1 (false positive) and Type 2 (false negative) errors were assessed. The survey indicated several corrections necessary in the final version of the map. 1) We noted the presence of woody species in “NonWoody” habitats, especially Baccharus salicilifolia (mulefat). Habitats were thus classified as “Woody” only with ≥50% presence of canopy species (e.g. tamarisk, black willow) 2) Riparian sites were over-characterized, and thus constrained back to “near stream channels only”. Walnut (Juglans spp) and willow stands alongside fields and irrigation canals were changed to Mixed Woody Floodplain. Fine tuning the final habitat distributions was thus based on field reconnaissance, scalar needs for classifying field data (sediment, water, bird, and fish collections), and validation of data categories using species observations from scientist field notes. Calibration was made using point data from the random survey and scientist field notes, to remove all sources of error and reach accuracy of 100%. The coverage “CCSB_Habitat_2012” is provided as an ARCGIS shapefile based on a suite of 7 interconnected ARCGIS files coded with the suffixes: cpg, dbf, sbn, sbx, shp, shx, and prj. Each file provides a component of the coverage (such as database or projection) and all files are necessary to open the “CCSB_Habitat_2012.shp” file with full functionality. CCSB_Basin_Map.png represents the CCSB study area color coded by the four primary habitat types identified in this study.