93 datasets found
  1. o

    Wilderness Areas in the United States

    • geohub.oregon.gov
    • opendata.rcmrd.org
    Updated Feb 1, 2024
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    State of Oregon (2024). Wilderness Areas in the United States [Dataset]. https://geohub.oregon.gov/maps/01ebe5d5738d4833b543a24181a887ba
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 1, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    State of Oregon
    Area covered
    United States,
    Description

    Wilderness areas are federally-owned public lands managed by the federal government through four agencies, the Bureau of Land Management, Fish and Wildlife Service, Forest Service, and National Park Service. When the National Wilderness Preservation System started in 1964, only 54 wilderness areas were included. Since then, the system has grown nearly every year to include more than 800. The time component of this service is based on the year in which the wilderness was originally designated (additions may have occurred in subsequent years). Overall, however, only about 5% of the entire United States—an area slightly larger than the state of California— is protected as wilderness. Because Alaska contains just over half of America's wilderness, only about 2.7% of the contiguous United States—an area about the size of Minnesota—is protected as wilderness. To learn more about wilderness areas, visit Wilderness Connect, the authoritative source for wilderness information online. Wilderness Connect also publishes two other map resources:An interactive wilderness map allows visitors to search for and explore all wilderness areas in the United States. Fact-filled storymaps on the benefits of wilderness illustrate how wilderness protects values including clean water, wildlife habitat, nearby recreation, cultural sites and more.

    Although wilderness areas are federally-owned, some areas contain non-federal parcels within their boundaries. Non-federal lands within some wilderness areas are included as part of this feature dataset as a separate layer. Termed inholdings or edgeholdings, these lands are privately-owned or owned by local governments, state governments or Indigenous Nations. Hundreds of inholdings and edgeholdings exist across the wilderness system. Generally, however, they are small compared to the size of the wilderness itself. Since the rules and regulations that apply to wilderness areas do not apply to these non-federally-owned parcels, it is important for wilderness visitors to know their location to avoid trespassing where access is not allowed. The owners of inholdings and edgeholdings can develop these parcels (as long as developments do not affect the character of the surrounding wilderness lands) and they retain special and limited access to them, sometimes, but not always, by motorized means.

  2. National Wilderness Areas (Feature Layer)

    • catalog.data.gov
    • agdatacommons.nal.usda.gov
    • +5more
    Updated Apr 21, 2025
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    U.S. Forest Service (2025). National Wilderness Areas (Feature Layer) [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/national-wilderness-areas-feature-layer-edfae
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 21, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Servicehttp://fs.fed.us/
    Description

    A parcel of Forest Service land congressionally designated as wilderness such as National Wilderness Area. Click this link for full metadata description: Metadata

  3. g

    Data from: Wilderness areas

    • geohub.lio.gov.on.ca
    • hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Jan 1, 1980
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    Land Information Ontario (1980). Wilderness areas [Dataset]. https://geohub.lio.gov.on.ca/documents/lio::wilderness-areas/about
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 1, 1980
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Land Information Ontario
    License

    https://lio.maps.arcgis.com/sharing/rest/content/items/badb097e306b4d3b8becb3dba3ee5807/datahttps://lio.maps.arcgis.com/sharing/rest/content/items/badb097e306b4d3b8becb3dba3ee5807/data

    Area covered
    Description

    A spatial data class containing the official boundaries of the Wilderness Areas. A Wilderness Area is an area regulated under the Wilderness Areas Act which states that these areas are set aside "...for the preservation of the area as nearly as may be in its natural state in which research and educational activities may be carried on, for the protection of the flora and fauna, for the improvement of the area, having regard to its historical, aesthetic, scientific or recreational value..."They may be embedded in other protected areas. They range in size and have values from historical to natural heritage but they have no formal class system or management planning

    Additional DocumentationWilderness Area - Data Description (PDF)Wilderness Area - Documentation (Word)

    Status

    Completed: production of the data has been completed

    Maintenance and Update Frequency

    Irregular: data is updated in intervals that are uneven in duration

    Contact

    Bonnie Henson, Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry bonnie.henson@ontario.ca

    The data referenced here is licensed Electronic Intellectual Property of the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry and is provided for professional, non-commercial use only.

  4. w

    VT Wilderness Areas

    • data.wu.ac.at
    • geodata.vermont.gov
    • +4more
    Updated Apr 26, 2018
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    Vermont Center for Geographic Information (2018). VT Wilderness Areas [Dataset]. https://data.wu.ac.at/schema/data_gov/YjMwOTBlMWMtNzVjNy00ODE4LWExY2ItMTJiOTMxNTkyYTcy
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    application/vnd.ogc.wms_xml, application/vnd.geo+json, json, kml, csv, zip, htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 26, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    Vermont Center for Geographic Information
    Area covered
    ce3336a2507d55731a99f5816c0464bf65dcca6a
    Description

    (Link to Metadata) A parcel of Forest Service land congressionally designated as wilderness such as National Wilderness Area.

  5. j

    Wilderness Area

    • gis.jacksoncountyor.gov
    • arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Sep 8, 2015
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    Jackson County GIS (2015). Wilderness Area [Dataset]. https://gis.jacksoncountyor.gov/maps/wilderness-area
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 8, 2015
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Jackson County GIS
    Area covered
    Description

    This data set consists of National Wilderness Preservation System areas around Jackson County. The data set was created by extracting these wilderness areas from the National Atlas map layer: Federal Lands and Indian Reservations of the United States. This is a revised version of the October, 2003 data set.

  6. Wilderness Areas Managed by the Forest Service Class I Focus

    • usfs.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Jul 26, 2024
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    U.S. Forest Service (2024). Wilderness Areas Managed by the Forest Service Class I Focus [Dataset]. https://usfs.hub.arcgis.com/maps/21f1a0b556e34608a544e57fd82e84a4
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 26, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Servicehttp://fs.fed.us/
    Authors
    U.S. Forest Service
    Area covered
    Description

    This map features Class I Wilderness Areas managed by the Forest Service. The pop-up for each Class I Wilderness Area takes users to the corresponding Wilderness page on the... Air Resource Management Program website featuring 1) data sources and monitoring networks, 2) resource concern thresholds for several air quality related values (AQRVs), and 3) natural background visibility summary tables.Wilderness Connect website featuring descriptions, maps, photos, and more.USDA is an equal opportunity provider, employer, and lender.

  7. BLM AZ Wilderness Area (Polygon)

    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated Nov 20, 2024
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    Bureau of Land Management (2024). BLM AZ Wilderness Area (Polygon) [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/blm-az-wilderness-area-polygon
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 20, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Bureau of Land Managementhttp://www.blm.gov/
    Description

    This dataset includes the polygon features representing the spatial extent and boundaries of the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) National Landscape Conservation System (NLCS) Wilderness Areas (WLD), Wilderness Study Areas (WSA), and Other Related Lands with wilderness characteristics (LWC) or managed for wilderness characteristics (MWC).The data standard for these boundaries will assist in the management of all eleven designations within the NLCS. Particularly, NLCS data pertains to the following BLM groups and their purposes: Land Use Planners, GIS Specialists, NLCS team leads, BLM managers, and public stakeholder groups.As early as 1926, the earliest advocates of wilderness preservation had acknowledged the beauty and important ecological values of the desert lands under the BLM’s administration as candidates for wilderness protection. In 1964, Congress established the National Wilderness Preservation System and designated the first Wilderness Areas in passing the Wilderness Act. The uniquely American idea of wilderness has become an increasingly significant tool to ensure long-term protection of natural landscapes. Wilderness protects the habitat of numerous wildlife species and serves as a biodiversity bank for many species of plants and animals. Wilderness is also a source of clean water.The Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 directed the BLM to inventory and study its roadless areas for wilderness characteristics. Here identified areas became WSAs. The establishment of a WSA served to identify areas for Congress to consider for addition to the National Wilderness Preservation System. To be designated as a WSA, an area must have the following characteristics: Size - roadless areas of at least 5,000 acres of public lands or of a manageable size; Naturalness - generally appears to have been affected primarily by the forces of nature; Opportunities - provides outstanding opportunities for solitude or primitive and unconfined types of recreation. In addition, WSAs often have special qualities such as ecological, geological, educational, historical, scientific and scenic values.In June 2000, the BLM responded to growing concern over the loss of open space by creating the NLCS. The NLCS brings into a single system some of the BLM's premier designations. The Wilderness Areas, WSAs, and Other Related Lands represent three of these eleven premier designations. By putting these lands into an organized system, the BLM hopes to increase public awareness of these areas' scientific, cultural, educational, ecological and other values.The BLM's management of all public lands included data within the NLCS is guided by the Federal Land Policy and Management Act (FLPMA). FLPMA ensures that many of BLM's traditional activities such as grazing and hunting, continue on the lands within the NLCS, provided these activities are consistent with the overall purpose of the area.A Wilderness is a special place where the earth and its community of life are essentially undisturbed; they retain a primeval character, without permanent improvements and generally appear to have been affected primarily by the forces of nature. BLM NLCS Other Related Lands are lands not in Wilderness or WSAs that have been determined to have wilderness character through inventory or land use planning. These lands fall into one of two categories. The first category are lands with "wilderness value and characteristics". These are inventoried areas not in Wilderness or WSAs that have been determined to meet the size, naturalness, and the outstanding solitude and/or the outstanding primitive and unconfined recreation criteria. The second category are "wilderness characteristic protection areas". These are former lands with "wilderness value and characteristics" where a plan decision has been made to protect them.To be designated as a WSA, an area must have the following characteristics: Size - roadless areas of at least 5,000 acres of public lands or of a manageable size; Naturalness - generally appears to have been affected primarily by the forces of nature; Opportunities - provides outstanding opportunities for solitude or primitive and unconfined types of recreation. In addition, WSAs often have special qualities such as ecological, geological, educational, historical, scientific and scenic values.There were forty-seven Wilderness Areas established under the Arizona Wilderness Act of 1984 and Arizona Desert Wilderness Act of 1990. These Acts require the BLM to file boundary legal descriptions and maps to Congress for each Wilderness Area. The standards, format, and language for the legal descriptions and boundary maps were developed during regular meetings of the NLCS Coordinator, GIS specialists and the Cadastral Surveyors. Guidance was provided from congressionally-required map and legal boundary descriptions detailed in the NLCS Designation Manual 6120 (March, 2010). All Arizona BLM Wilderness Area boundary legal descriptions and maps have been transmitted to Congress and certified by the Chief of Cadastral Survey and Arizona State Director. There should be no changes to Wilderness Boundary GIS data. Boundary changes can only be made through an amendment to the legal description and this would need to be sent back to Congress.

  8. t

    Map layer Wilderness Areas NRW

    • service.tib.eu
    Updated Feb 4, 2025
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    (2025). Map layer Wilderness Areas NRW [Dataset]. https://service.tib.eu/ldmservice/dataset/govdata_e88cad37-6e28-47d4-ab56-9ecacff99c1e
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 4, 2025
    Area covered
    North Rhine-Westphalia
    Description

    The map layer Wilderness Areas North Rhine-Westphalia covers the wilderness development areas in the state forest of North Rhine-Westphalia, which have been designated in North Rhine-Westphalia since 2011. These beech and oak old wood stocks were determined by the State Office for Nature, Environment and Consumer Protection (LANUV NRW) and the State Forest and Wood Plant NRW on the basis of a technically derived concept. Forestry is no longer used in the wilderness development areas and natural developments are permitted. In this way, international and national requirements are met and a contribution is made to increasing biodiversity. The service includes a good 300 individual areas – so-called wilderness biotopes – which are spread over around 100 wilderness development areas, usually FFH and/or nature reserves. In total, about 7,800 hectares of state forest will be taken out of forestry use. In addition, other unused forest areas such as the process protection zone of the Eifel National Park and two larger areas taken out of use by a private nature conservation association or a private forest owner are listed in the map layer.

  9. o

    Non-Federal Lands within Wilderness

    • geohub.oregon.gov
    • datasets.ai
    • +3more
    Updated Jan 31, 2024
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    State of Oregon (2024). Non-Federal Lands within Wilderness [Dataset]. https://geohub.oregon.gov/datasets/oregon-geo::non-federal-lands-within-wilderness
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 31, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    State of Oregon
    Area covered
    Description

    Wilderness areas are federally-owned public lands managed by the federal government through four agencies, the Bureau of Land Management, Fish and Wildlife Service, Forest Service, and National Park Service. When the National Wilderness Preservation System started in 1964, only 54 wilderness areas were included. Since then, the system has grown nearly every year to include more than 800. The time component of this service is based on the year in which the wilderness was originally designated (additions may have occurred in subsequent years). Overall, however, only about 5% of the entire United States—an area slightly larger than the state of California— is protected as wilderness. Because Alaska contains just over half of America's wilderness, only about 2.7% of the contiguous United States—an area about the size of Minnesota—is protected as wilderness. To learn more about wilderness areas, visit Wilderness Connect, the authoritative source for wilderness information online. Wilderness Connect also publishes two other map resources:An interactive wilderness map allows visitors to search for and explore all wilderness areas in the United States. Fact-filled storymaps on the benefits of wilderness illustrate how wilderness protects values including clean water, wildlife habitat, nearby recreation, cultural sites and more.

    Although wilderness areas are federally-owned, some areas contain non-federal parcels within their boundaries. Non-federal lands within some wilderness areas are included as part of this feature dataset as a separate layer. Termed inholdings or edgeholdings, these lands are privately-owned or owned by local governments, state governments or Indigenous Nations. Hundreds of inholdings and edgeholdings exist across the wilderness system. Generally, however, they are small compared to the size of the wilderness itself. Since the rules and regulations that apply to wilderness areas do not apply to these non-federally-owned parcels, it is important for wilderness visitors to know their location to avoid trespassing where access is not allowed. The owners of inholdings and edgeholdings can develop these parcels (as long as developments do not affect the character of the surrounding wilderness lands) and they retain special and limited access to them, sometimes, but not always, by motorized means.

  10. d

    National Wilderness Preservation System of the United States - Direct...

    • datadiscoverystudio.org
    shapefile
    Updated Jun 1, 2006
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    National Atlas of the United States (2006). National Wilderness Preservation System of the United States - Direct Download [Dataset]. http://datadiscoverystudio.org/geoportal/rest/metadata/item/fdae8a75b0f7410d9c6fada71fadfd9a/html
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    shapefileAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 1, 2006
    Dataset authored and provided by
    National Atlas of the United States
    Area covered
    United States,
    Description

    This map layer consists of National Wilderness Preservation System areas of 640 acres or more, in the United States, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The map layer was created by extracting these wilderness areas from the National Atlas map layer: Federal Lands of the United States. This is a replacement for the December 2005 map layer.

  11. a

    Utah Wilderness Areas

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • opendata.gis.utah.gov
    • +1more
    Updated Dec 15, 2020
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    Utah Automated Geographic Reference Center (AGRC) (2020). Utah Wilderness Areas [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/utah::utah-wilderness-areas
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 15, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Utah Automated Geographic Reference Center (AGRC)
    License

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

    Area covered
    Description

    This data represents BLM and USFS wilderness areas of Utah. Wilderness areas from the BLM National Lands Conservation System (NLCS) were merged with U.S. Forest Service wilderness areas in the National Wilderness Preservation System, preserving the polygon geometry and the name attributes only. The complete BLM and USFS data can be found at:https://www.blm.gov/services/geospatial/GISData/utahhttps://data-usfs.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/national-wilderness-areas-feature-layer

  12. u

    Bureau of Land Management - New Mexico State Office

    • gstore.unm.edu
    csv, geojson, gml +5
    + more versions
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    Earth Data Analysis Center, Bureau of Land Management - New Mexico State Office [Dataset]. http://gstore.unm.edu/apps/rgis/datasets/53bcf418-d1c2-47d7-900f-aa2116155ae3/metadata/FGDC-STD-001-1998.html
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    kml(5), xls(5), geojson(5), shp(5), json(5), zip(1), gml(5), csv(5)Available download formats
    Dataset provided by
    Earth Data Analysis Center
    Time period covered
    Dec 10, 2008
    Area covered
    New Mexico, Rio Arriba County (35039), West Bounding Coordinate -108.195970085452 East Bounding Coordinate -106.887021323185 North Bounding Coordinate 36.3821995387753 South Bounding Coordinate 34.5748265884313
    Description

    This dataset is meant to depict wilderness areas within the state of New Mexico managed by the Bureau of Land Management These wilderness areas are officially designated by the U.S. Congress. Data was collected by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM), New Mexico State Office.

  13. t

    Non-Federal Lands within Wilderness

    • prod.testopendata.com
    Updated May 26, 2023
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    Esri GIS Education (2023). Non-Federal Lands within Wilderness [Dataset]. https://prod.testopendata.com/maps/Education::non-federal-lands-within-wilderness
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    Dataset updated
    May 26, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Esri GIS Education
    Area covered
    Description

    A wilderness is a legally protected, biologically intact place where natural biodiversity exists, and a government, or other entity, prevents people from building. In the United States, these areas are protected by the Wilderness Act passed by the U.S. Congress in 1964. This act defines wilderness as an area with, “outstanding opportunities for solitude or a primitive and unconfined type of recreation.” The act created wilderness areas within other federal lands such as national parks and forests. It prohibits the use of motorized equipment (e.g., snowmobiles, four wheelers, dirt bikes) in these places, and those found in violation of this law can receive a fine of $500 U.S. dollars or six months in jail. Since the Wilderness Act passed, the U.S. Congress has passed more than 100 additional laws classifying new areas as wilderness or strengthening protections for these places.The government of the United States has legally protected more than 800 wilderness areas totaling nearly 452,799 square kilometers (174,826 square miles). The smallest wilderness area is Pelican Island Wilderness in the state of Florida. It is approximately 0.022 square-kilometers (0.009 square miles). The largest wilderness, by comparison, is Wrangell-Saint Elias Wilderness in the state of Alaska which is about 38,170 square kilometers (14,738 square miles).Wilderness places have numerous benefits. They protect and provide habitats for a large variety of species, maintain clean sources of water and air, allow for the scientific study of places with limited interference from people, preserve unique geologic formations, and allow for recreation for the public. Many small towns near wilderness areas see an increase in economic opportunities as people visit and enjoy these spaces. They also often protect places of cultural significance such as the petroglyphs and pictographs of early civilizations, sacred indigenous sites, and remnants of the colonization of North America by European settlers. Despite their clear value to society, wilderness places are experiencing a variety of threats including climate change, fire, invasive species, overuse, pollution, technology, and a general lack of awareness from the public. This map layer was created by Wilderness Connect, a partnership between the Wilderness Institute at the University of Montana, the Arthur Carhart National Wilderness Training Center, and the Aldo Leopold Wilderness Research Institute. It includes federal wilderness areas categorized by the managing federal agency. Explore the map and find the wilderness area closest to you.

    You can help protect wilderness areas by raising awareness about them and the issues threatening their well-being. When you visit a wilderness area practice Leave No Trace and consider contacting the land manager so see about volunteering while you are there. Finally, explore ways you can reduce your environmental impact from home to reduce global threats such as climate change.

  14. d

    Data from: Temporally inter-comparable maps of terrestrial wilderness and...

    • datadryad.org
    zip
    Updated Dec 7, 2018
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    James Allan; Oscar Venter; James E. M. Watson (2018). Temporally inter-comparable maps of terrestrial wilderness and the Last of the Wild [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.124fp
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    zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 7, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    Dryad
    Authors
    James Allan; Oscar Venter; James E. M. Watson
    Time period covered
    2018
    Description

    Wilderness_maps_R.1We present the most up-to-date temporally inter-comparable maps of global terrestrial wilderness areas and the Last of the Wild. These are in .shp format, and were created in ArcGIS.

  15. d

    BLM NLCS Wilderness Areas and Wilderness Study Areas.

    • datadiscoverystudio.org
    • data.wu.ac.at
    zip
    Updated May 21, 2018
    + more versions
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    (2018). BLM NLCS Wilderness Areas and Wilderness Study Areas. [Dataset]. http://datadiscoverystudio.org/geoportal/rest/metadata/item/44eb05f63f0546a199b5f3e901544cc2/html
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    zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 21, 2018
    Description

    description: Feature Dataset for the BLM Wilderness Areas, BLM Wilderness Study Areas, and BLM Other Related Lands data covered by the National Landscape Conservation System (NLCS) Data Standard. In particular, this feature dataset includes the polygon features representing the spatial extent and boundaries of the BLM National Landscape Conservation System (NLCS) Wilderness Areas and Wilderness Study Areas. A Wilderness is a special place where the earth and its community of life are essentially undisturbed; they retain a primeval character, without permanent improvements and generally appear to have been affected primarily by the forces of nature. In 1964, Congress established the National Wilderness Preservation System and designated the first Wilderness Areas in passing the Wilderness Act. The uniquely American idea of wilderness has become an increasingly significant tool to ensure long-term protection of natural landscapes. Wilderness protects the habitat of numerous wildlife species and serves as a biodiversity bank for many species of plants and animals. Wilderness is also a source of clean water. The Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 directed the Bureau to inventory and study its roadless areas for wilderness characteristics. To be designated as a Wilderness Study Area, an area has to have the following characteristics: Size - roadless areas of at least 5,000 acres of public lands or of a manageable size; Naturalness - generally appears to have been affected primarily by the forces of nature; Opportunities - provides outstanding opportunities for solitude or primitive and unconfined types of recreation. In addition, Wilderness Study Areas often have special qualities such as ecological, geological, educational, historical, scientific and scenic values. BLM National Landscape Conservation System (NLCS) Other Related Lands are lands not in Wilderness or Wilderness Study Areas that have been determined to have wilderness character through inventory or land use planning. These lands fall into one of two categories. The first category are lands with "wildernes value and characteristics". These are inventoried areas not in Wilderness or Wilderness Study Areas that have been determined to meet the size, naturalness, and the outstanding solitude and/or the outstanding primitive and unconfined recreation criteria. The second category are "wilderness characteristic protection areas". These are former lands with "wildernes value and characteristics" where a plan decision has been made to protect them. This dataset is a subset of the official national dataset, containing features and attributes intended for public release and has been optimized for online map service performance. The Implementation Guide represents the official national dataset from which this dataset was derived.; abstract: Feature Dataset for the BLM Wilderness Areas, BLM Wilderness Study Areas, and BLM Other Related Lands data covered by the National Landscape Conservation System (NLCS) Data Standard. In particular, this feature dataset includes the polygon features representing the spatial extent and boundaries of the BLM National Landscape Conservation System (NLCS) Wilderness Areas and Wilderness Study Areas. A Wilderness is a special place where the earth and its community of life are essentially undisturbed; they retain a primeval character, without permanent improvements and generally appear to have been affected primarily by the forces of nature. In 1964, Congress established the National Wilderness Preservation System and designated the first Wilderness Areas in passing the Wilderness Act. The uniquely American idea of wilderness has become an increasingly significant tool to ensure long-term protection of natural landscapes. Wilderness protects the habitat of numerous wildlife species and serves as a biodiversity bank for many species of plants and animals. Wilderness is also a source of clean water. The Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 directed the Bureau to inventory and study its roadless areas for wilderness characteristics. To be designated as a Wilderness Study Area, an area has to have the following characteristics: Size - roadless areas of at least 5,000 acres of public lands or of a manageable size; Naturalness - generally appears to have been affected primarily by the forces of nature; Opportunities - provides outstanding opportunities for solitude or primitive and unconfined types of recreation. In addition, Wilderness Study Areas often have special qualities such as ecological, geological, educational, historical, scientific and scenic values. BLM National Landscape Conservation System (NLCS) Other Related Lands are lands not in Wilderness or Wilderness Study Areas that have been determined to have wilderness character through inventory or land use planning. These lands fall into one of two categories. The first category are lands with "wildernes value and characteristics". These are inventoried areas not in Wilderness or Wilderness Study Areas that have been determined to meet the size, naturalness, and the outstanding solitude and/or the outstanding primitive and unconfined recreation criteria. The second category are "wilderness characteristic protection areas". These are former lands with "wildernes value and characteristics" where a plan decision has been made to protect them. This dataset is a subset of the official national dataset, containing features and attributes intended for public release and has been optimized for online map service performance. The Implementation Guide represents the official national dataset from which this dataset was derived.

  16. W

    Wilderness

    • cloud.csiss.gmu.edu
    • data.amerigeoss.org
    • +1more
    tar, txt
    Updated Aug 8, 2019
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    Energy Data Exchange (2019). Wilderness [Dataset]. https://cloud.csiss.gmu.edu/uddi/el/dataset/wilderness
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    txt(20733), tar(3307520)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 8, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    Energy Data Exchange
    License

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

    Description

    Abstract: This map layer consists of National Wilderness Preservation System areas of 640 acres or more, in the United States, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The map layer was created by extracting these wilderness areas from the National Atlas map layer: Federal Lands of the United States. This is a replacement for the December 2004, map layer. Purpose: These data are intended for geographic display and analysis at the national level, and for large regional areas. The data should be displayed and analyzed at scales appropriate for 1:2,000,000-scale data. No responsibility is assumed by the National Atlas of the United States in the use of these data.

  17. w

    Nevada Great Basin Play Fairway Analysis Regional Data...

    • data.wu.ac.at
    mpk
    Updated Mar 6, 2018
    + more versions
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    HarvestMaster (2018). Nevada Great Basin Play Fairway Analysis Regional Data Master_NV_Play_Fairway_Modeling.mpk [Dataset]. https://data.wu.ac.at/schema/geothermaldata_org/NGUzYjBmNmItYTE3Ny00NDhmLWJiMDMtZGZlMjZhODFjOTZm
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    mpkAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 6, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    HarvestMaster
    Area covered
    e1d2107ec5c21c67f274757d246d695948829ca5
    Description

    This project focused on defining geothermal play fairways and development of a detailed geothermal potential map of a large transect across the Great Basin region (96,000 km2), with the primary objective of facilitating discovery of commercial-grade, blind geothermal fields (i.e. systems with no surface hot springs or fumaroles) and thereby accelerating geothermal development in this promising region. Data included in this submission consists of: structural settings (target areas, recency of faulting, slip and dilation potential, slip rates, quality), regional-scale strain rates, earthquake density and magnitude, gravity data, temperature at 3 km depth, permeability models, favorability models, degree of exploration and exploration opportunities, data from springs and wells, transmission lines and wilderness areas, and published maps and theses for the Nevada Play Fairway area. Map package of the ArcMap v. 10.1 MXD with all 2D and 3D data and model layers

  18. d

    30x30 Conserved Areas, Terrestrial (2022)

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.ca.gov
    • +5more
    Updated Mar 30, 2024
    + more versions
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    California Natural Resources Agency (2024). 30x30 Conserved Areas, Terrestrial (2022) [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/30x30-conserved-areas-terrestrial-2022-ac213
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 30, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    California Natural Resources Agency
    Description

    The Terrestrial 30x30 Conserved Areas map layer was developed by the CA Nature working group, providing a statewide perspective on areas managed for the protection or enhancement of biodiversity. Understanding the spatial distribution and extent of these durably protected and managed areas is a vital aspect of tracking and achieving the “30x30” goal of conserving 30% of California's lands and waters by 2030.Terrestrial and Freshwater Data• The California Protected Areas Database (CPAD), developed and managed by GreenInfo Network, is the most comprehensive collection of data on open space in California. CPAD data consists of Holdings, a single parcel or small group of parcels, such that the spatial features of CPAD correspond to ownership boundaries. • The California Conservation Easement Database (CCED), managed by GreenInfo Network, aggregates data on lands with easements. Conservation Easements are legally recorded interests in land in which a landholder sells or relinquishes certain development rights to their land in perpetuity. Easements are often used to ensure that lands remain as open space, either as working farm or ranch lands, or areas for biodiversity protection. Easement restrictions typically remain with the land through changes in ownership. • The Protected Areas Database of the United States (PAD-US), hosted by the United States Geological Survey (USGS), is developed in coordination with multiple federal, state, and non-governmental organization (NGO) partners. PAD-US, through the Gap Analysis Project (GAP), uses a numerical coding system in which GAP codes 1 and 2 correspond to management strategies with explicit emphasis on protection and enhancement of biodiversity. PAD-US is not specifically aligned to parcel boundaries and as such, boundaries represented within it may not align with other data sources. • Numerous datasets representing designated boundaries for entities such as National Parks and Monuments, Wild and Scenic Rivers, Wilderness Areas, and others, were downloaded from publicly available sources, typically hosted by the managing agency.Methodology1. CPAD and CCED represent the most accurate location and ownership information for parcels in California which contribute to the preservation of open space and cultural and biological resources.2. Superunits are collections of parcels (Holdings) within CPAD which share a name, manager, and access policy. Most Superunits are also managed with a generally consistent strategy for biodiversity conservation. Examples of Superunits include Yosemite National Park, Giant Sequoia National Monument, and Anza-Borrego Desert State Park. 3. Some Superunits, such as those owned and managed by the Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service, or National Park Service , are intersected by one or more designations, each of which may have a distinct management emphasis with regards to biodiversity. Examples of such designations are Wilderness Areas, Wild and Scenic Rivers, or National Monuments.4. CPAD Superunits and CCED easements were intersected with all designation boundary files to create the operative spatial units for conservation analysis, henceforth 'Conservation Units,' which make up the Terrestrial 30x30 Conserved Areas map layer. Each easement was functionally considered to be a Superunit. 5. Each Conservation Unit was intersected with the PAD-US dataset in order to determine the management emphasis with respect to biodiversity, i.e., the GAP code. Because PAD-US is national in scope and not specifically parcel aligned with California assessors' surveys, a direct spatial extraction of GAP codes from PAD-US would leave tens of thousands of GAP code data slivers within the 30x30 Conserved Areas map. Consequently, a generalizing approach was adopted, such that any Conservation Unit with greater than 80% areal overlap with a single GAP code was uniformly assigned that code. Additionally, the total area of GAP codes 1 and 2 were summed for the remaining uncoded Conservation Units. If this sum was greater than 80% of the unit area, the Conservation Unit was coded as GAP 2. 6. Subsequent to this stage of analysis, certain Conservation Units remained uncoded, either due to the lack of a single GAP code (or combined GAP codes 1&2) overlapping 80% of the area, or because the area was not sufficiently represented in the PAD-US dataset. 7. These uncoded Conservation Units were then broken down into their constituent, finer resolution Holdings, which were then analyzed according to the above workflow. 8. Areas remaining uncoded following the two-step process of coding at the Superunit and then Holding levels were assigned a GAP code of 4. This is consistent with the definition of GAP Code 4: areas unknown to have a biodiversity management focus. 9. Greater than 90% of all areas in the Terrestrial 30x30 Conserved Areas map layer were GAP coded at the level of CPAD Superunits intersected by designation boundaries, the coarsest land units of analysis. By adopting these coarser analytical units, the Terrestrial 30X30 Conserved Areas map layer avoids hundreds of thousands of spatial slivers that result from intersecting designations with smaller, more numerous parcel records. In most cases, individual parcels reflect the management scenario and GAP status of the umbrella Superunit and other spatially coincident designations.Tracking Conserved AreasThe total acreage of conserved areas will increase as California works towards its 30x30 goal. Some changes will be due to shifts in legal protection designations or management status of specific lands and waters. However, shifts may also result from new data representing improvements in our understanding of existing biodiversity conservation efforts. The California Nature Project is expected to generate a great deal of excitement regarding the state's trajectory towards achieving the 30x30 goal. We also expect it to spark discussion about how to shape that trajectory, and how to strategize and optimize outcomes. We encourage landowners, managers, and stakeholders to investigate how their lands are represented in the Terrestrial 30X30 Conserved Areas Map Layer. This can be accomplished by using the Conserved Areas Explorer web application, developed by the CA Nature working group. Users can zoom into the locations they understand best and share their expertise with us to improve the data representing the status of conservation efforts at these sites. The Conserved Areas Explorer presents a tremendous opportunity to strengthen our existing data infrastructure and the channels of communication between land stewards and data curators, encouraging the transfer of knowledge and improving the quality of data. CPAD, CCED, and PAD-US are built from the ground up. Data is derived from available parcel information and submissions from those who own and manage the land. So better data starts with you. Do boundary lines require updating? Is the GAP code inconsistent with a Holding’s conservation status? If land under your care can be better represented in the Terrestrial 30X30 Conserved Areas map layer, please use this link to initiate a review. The results of these reviews will inform updates to the California Protected Areas Database, California Conservation Easement Database, and PAD-US as appropriate for incorporation into future updates to CA Nature and tracking progress to 30x30.

  19. d

    Cedar Island National Wildlife Refuge Wilderness study area map and draft...

    • datadiscoverystudio.org
    Updated May 21, 2018
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    (2018). Cedar Island National Wildlife Refuge Wilderness study area map and draft testimony. [Dataset]. http://datadiscoverystudio.org/geoportal/rest/metadata/item/c73da81b0a4e4e6d96fcc977f4d79e86/html
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    Dataset updated
    May 21, 2018
    Description

    description: This document contains a map of the proposed wilderness area and a testimony regarding the proposed wilderness. The testimony states that several islands should be included in the National Wilderness Preservation System.; abstract: This document contains a map of the proposed wilderness area and a testimony regarding the proposed wilderness. The testimony states that several islands should be included in the National Wilderness Preservation System.

  20. National Wilderness Areas

    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Dec 27, 2015
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    U.S. Forest Service (2015). National Wilderness Areas [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/datasets/7e3c4708e76b42d9a60365ed4ab795d2
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 27, 2015
    Dataset provided by
    U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Servicehttp://fs.fed.us/
    Authors
    U.S. Forest Service
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    A map service depicting parcels of Forest Service land congressionally designated as wilderness such as National Wilderness Areas. This map service provides display, identification, and analysis tools for determining current boundary information for Forest Service managers, GIS Specialists, and others. The map service uses a File Geodatabase data source with Web Mercator projection.�Metadata and Downloads

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State of Oregon (2024). Wilderness Areas in the United States [Dataset]. https://geohub.oregon.gov/maps/01ebe5d5738d4833b543a24181a887ba

Wilderness Areas in the United States

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273 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
Dataset updated
Feb 1, 2024
Dataset authored and provided by
State of Oregon
Area covered
United States,
Description

Wilderness areas are federally-owned public lands managed by the federal government through four agencies, the Bureau of Land Management, Fish and Wildlife Service, Forest Service, and National Park Service. When the National Wilderness Preservation System started in 1964, only 54 wilderness areas were included. Since then, the system has grown nearly every year to include more than 800. The time component of this service is based on the year in which the wilderness was originally designated (additions may have occurred in subsequent years). Overall, however, only about 5% of the entire United States—an area slightly larger than the state of California— is protected as wilderness. Because Alaska contains just over half of America's wilderness, only about 2.7% of the contiguous United States—an area about the size of Minnesota—is protected as wilderness. To learn more about wilderness areas, visit Wilderness Connect, the authoritative source for wilderness information online. Wilderness Connect also publishes two other map resources:An interactive wilderness map allows visitors to search for and explore all wilderness areas in the United States. Fact-filled storymaps on the benefits of wilderness illustrate how wilderness protects values including clean water, wildlife habitat, nearby recreation, cultural sites and more.

Although wilderness areas are federally-owned, some areas contain non-federal parcels within their boundaries. Non-federal lands within some wilderness areas are included as part of this feature dataset as a separate layer. Termed inholdings or edgeholdings, these lands are privately-owned or owned by local governments, state governments or Indigenous Nations. Hundreds of inholdings and edgeholdings exist across the wilderness system. Generally, however, they are small compared to the size of the wilderness itself. Since the rules and regulations that apply to wilderness areas do not apply to these non-federally-owned parcels, it is important for wilderness visitors to know their location to avoid trespassing where access is not allowed. The owners of inholdings and edgeholdings can develop these parcels (as long as developments do not affect the character of the surrounding wilderness lands) and they retain special and limited access to them, sometimes, but not always, by motorized means.

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