The Carbon Storage Site Mapping Inquiry Tool (MapIT) database (formerly the Class VI Data Support Tool Geodatabase) consists of a geodatabase and data catalog of geologic, geophysical, structural, hydrologic, and contextual data, based on the data types described in the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Underground Injection Control (UIC) Class VI permit documentation. The database was aggregated from publicly available data across the USA from state and federal resources such as the US Geologic Survey, State Geologic Surveys, EPA, and the US DOE NETL Energy Data eXchange. The database is structured by categories including rock unit geology, boundaries, national CS datasets, geophysical data, faults and structural data, infrastructure, surface hydrology, groundwater, and more. The MapIT database serves only as a data exploration resource to support characterization of geologic carbon storage areas of interest and does not replace or replicate resources available from the EPA UIC Class VI program. Please review the official EPA UIC site to access resources related to the Class VI permitting process. The data described in the data catalog will be available in the Carbon Storage Site Mapping Inquiry Tool (MapIT) to be released in June 2024. Version 3 of the geodatabase and data catalog have been updated as of 5/17/2024. The database was published with a limited number of layers. The Catalog V3 contains many more resources than the geodatabase, documenting all layers that will be included in MapIT, and includes links to the original sources of the data. Within the catalog, in the final column, there is information about if the file is included in the geodatabase or not. Use the links provided in the catalog to download data directly from the original source if not included in the geodatabase. Four resources are included in this submission: 1. Geodatabase 2. ReadMe file 3. Catalog of data layers and additional data resources 4. Web link to a resource describing the motivation and reviewing the content of the geodatabase - DOE NETL Carbon Storage Site Mapping Inquiry Tool Database
The Carbon Storage Site Mapping Inquiry Tool (MapIT) is an online web mapping tool designed to help users discover available public-sourced data to facilitate data exploration in support of Underground Injection Control (UIC) Program Class VI Well Site permitting for the geologic sequestration of carbon dioxide. Modules within the tool curate data related to geology, faults, fractures, injection and confining zones, hydrologic information, groundwater, groundwater wells, geomechanical and petrophysical data, and geochemical data. User documentation on how to use the tool is also provided. Data have been collected from authoritative national, state, and local sources and made available in this tool. The data is also available as a data catalog and Esri Geodatabase at: https://edx.netl.doe.gov/dataset/mapit-database Disclaimer: MapIT serves only as a data exploration tool to support characterization of geologic carbon storage sites and does not replace or replicate the EPA GSDT tool for submitting a UIC Class VI permit. Please review the official EPA site to access the GSDT and other resources related to the Class VI permitting process. There is no guarantee of completeness or appropriateness for individual user’s requirements. Use of this tool is solely at the discretion of the user. See full Federal Disclaimer for further information (https://netl.doe.gov/home/disclaimer). This project was funded by the United States Department of Energy, National Energy Technology Laboratory, in part, through a site support contract. Neither the United States Government nor any agency thereof, nor any of their employees, nor the support contractor, nor any of their employees, makes any warranty, express or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights. Reference herein to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the United States Government or any agency thereof. The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the United States Government or any agency thereof.Link to NETL full disclaimer
https://whoisdatacenter.com/terms-of-use/https://whoisdatacenter.com/terms-of-use/
Explore the historical Whois records related to mapit.today (Domain). Get insights into ownership history and changes over time.
The primary goal of the ITS, GIS section is to establish a citywide infrastructure for managing spatial data and to support GIS planning, analysis, and design activities throughout city government. GIS is currently focusing on the following initiatives: enable departmental business applications with GIS technology; expand GIS tools to employee desktops; expand the availability and use of online maps; expand from an enterprise GIS to a societal GIS; and maintain and improve the existing GIS infrastructure.
Important Note: This beta item will retire in December 2025 and is no longer recommended for use.This web map presents a vector basemap of OpenStreetMap (OSM) data hosted by Esri. Esri created this vector tile basemap from the Daylight map distribution of OSM data, which is supported by Facebook and supplemented with additional data from Microsoft. This version of the map is rendered in a style similar to the Esri Topographic map. It includes vector contours and hillshade in the multi-source tile layer. OpenStreetMap (OSM) is an open collaborative project to create a free editable map of the world. Volunteers gather location data using GPS, local knowledge, and other free sources of information and upload it. The resulting free map can be viewed and downloaded from the OpenStreetMap site: www.OpenStreetMap.org. Esri is a supporter of the OSM project.
This layer is sourced from mapit.fortworthtexas.gov.
https://choosealicense.com/licenses/other/https://choosealicense.com/licenses/other/
Dataset Card for Map It Anywhere (MIA)
The Map It Anywhere (MIA) dataset contains map-prediction-ready data curated from public datasets.
Dataset Details
Dataset Description
The Map It Anywhere (MIA) dataset contains 1.2 million high quality first-person-view (FPV) and bird's eye view (BEV) map pairs covering 470 squared km, thereby facilitating future map prediction research on generalizability and robustness. The dataset is curated using the MIA data engine… See the full description on the dataset page: https://huggingface.co/datasets/cherieho/mia_dataset.
This is a collection of stories about how to use smart mapping styles in ArcGIS Online. Smart mapping is designed to give people confidence and power to quickly make maps that are visually stunning and useful.Smart Mapping is available in Map Viewer for ArcGIS Online and ArcGIS Enterprise users. It provides interactive data and map exploration to help users quickly create beautiful and informative maps
This component tile layer displays Ecological Land Units (ELU) and bathymetry fused with multi-directional hillshade and undersea relief at small to mid scales. It is designed for use as a component base layer in the National Geographic Style Map. It is not intended for stand-alone use. For more information on the ELU data, refer to this imagery layer. The details on the multi-directional hillshade are available at this imagery layer.
This layer is sourced from mapit.fortworthtexas.gov.
Topographic map on a scale of 1: 10,000 in the 1965 layout is a single-coloured, graphical map. It shows the shape and cover of the land (including water, vegetation, settlements, roads and a number of other objects). Topographical maps are the primary source of information about the geographical environment. Topographic map on a scale of 1: 10,000 in the 1965 layout is a single-coloured, graphical map. It shows the shape and cover of the land (including water, vegetation, settlements, roads and a number of other objects). Topographical maps are the primary source of information about the geographical environment. Topographic map on a scale of 1: 10,000 in the 1965 layout is a single-coloured, graphical map. It shows the shape and cover of the land (including water, vegetation, settlements, roads and a number of other objects). Topographical maps are the primary source of information about the geographical environment. Topographic map on a scale of 1: 10,000 in the 1965 layout is a single-coloured, graphical map. It shows the shape and cover of the land (including water, vegetation, settlements, roads and a number of other objects). Topographical maps are the primary source of information about the geographical environment.
Topographic map on a scale of 1: 10,000 in the 1965 layout is a single-coloured, graphical map. It shows the shape and cover of the land (including water, vegetation, settlements, roads and a number of other objects). Topographical maps are the primary source of information about the geographical environment. Topographic map on a scale of 1: 10,000 in the 1965 layout is a single-coloured, graphical map. It shows the shape and cover of the land (including water, vegetation, settlements, roads and a number of other objects). Topographical maps are the primary source of information about the geographical environment. Topographic map on a scale of 1: 10,000 in the 1965 layout is a single-coloured, graphical map. It shows the shape and cover of the land (including water, vegetation, settlements, roads and a number of other objects). Topographical maps are the primary source of information about the geographical environment. Topographic map on a scale of 1: 10,000 in the 1965 layout is a single-coloured, graphical map. It shows the shape and cover of the land (including water, vegetation, settlements, roads and a number of other objects). Topographical maps are the primary source of information about the geographical environment.
This web map provides detailed boundaries for the 2020 U.S. Census tracts of the United States, with attributes optimized for analysis.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
The data set is refreshed on a weekly basis on Fridays at 2:45 AM. The website will reflect the last time the data set was updated and the total count of rows. The grid on the “Data” tab will display the up to date data. However, in certain situations there is a delay in the refresh of the downloadable data file. Sometimes the downloadable file does not reflect the updates to the data in the portal. After a delay (duration has been variable; up to 30 minutes), the file will be updated on the server and then downloads will include the updated data.
Yarrrrrrrr maps are too crisp and clean! You need a hand-painted grubby tattered treasure map from antiquity to make yer point. Download this here style for ArrrrrrcGIS Pro and be off to makin dern-near realistic maps ready for an eager public (or set designerrrr).To be used in conjunction with these tattered paper assets, available here (seriously, it's a pretty important bit). Or you can use them with an assortment of paper textures, available in Living Atlas here.Also, there's two cool hand-inked looking north arrows in the style. You can see them in the sample maps above.Happy Mapping! John Nelson
Explore time-discrete statistical climate downscaling using regression tools and a Jupyter notebook with Python to automate temperature predictions and build a time-series mosaic. This has been created for the Learn ArcGIS lesson Downscale climate data with machine learning.This is an archived copy of the tutorial data and will no longer be updated. For an up-to-date version, available only in English, please see Regression Analysis: Building a Regression Model Using ArcGIS Pro, Regression Analysis: Performing Random Forest Regression Using ArcGIS Pro, and Downscaling a Prediction Model Using ArcGIS Notebooks and ArcGIS Pro.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
If there are any issues with the data in this map, service, or shp file please contact the Minneapolis GIS office.
This layer is sourced from mapit.fortworthtexas.gov.
This layer presents the urban areas in the United States derived from the urban areas layer of the Digital Chart of the World (DCW). It provides information about the locations, names, and populations of urbanized areas for conducting geographic analysis on national and large regional scales.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
If there are any issues with the data in this map, service, or shp file please contact the Minneapolis GIS office.
The Carbon Storage Site Mapping Inquiry Tool (MapIT) database (formerly the Class VI Data Support Tool Geodatabase) consists of a geodatabase and data catalog of geologic, geophysical, structural, hydrologic, and contextual data, based on the data types described in the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Underground Injection Control (UIC) Class VI permit documentation. The database was aggregated from publicly available data across the USA from state and federal resources such as the US Geologic Survey, State Geologic Surveys, EPA, and the US DOE NETL Energy Data eXchange. The database is structured by categories including rock unit geology, boundaries, national CS datasets, geophysical data, faults and structural data, infrastructure, surface hydrology, groundwater, and more. The MapIT database serves only as a data exploration resource to support characterization of geologic carbon storage areas of interest and does not replace or replicate resources available from the EPA UIC Class VI program. Please review the official EPA UIC site to access resources related to the Class VI permitting process. The data described in the data catalog will be available in the Carbon Storage Site Mapping Inquiry Tool (MapIT) to be released in June 2024. Version 3 of the geodatabase and data catalog have been updated as of 5/17/2024. The database was published with a limited number of layers. The Catalog V3 contains many more resources than the geodatabase, documenting all layers that will be included in MapIT, and includes links to the original sources of the data. Within the catalog, in the final column, there is information about if the file is included in the geodatabase or not. Use the links provided in the catalog to download data directly from the original source if not included in the geodatabase. Four resources are included in this submission: 1. Geodatabase 2. ReadMe file 3. Catalog of data layers and additional data resources 4. Web link to a resource describing the motivation and reviewing the content of the geodatabase - DOE NETL Carbon Storage Site Mapping Inquiry Tool Database