This is a web map for the National Trails National Historic Trail Viewer. The National Historic Trail Viewer is an interactive web mapping application allowing staff, partners and the public to view the nine designated National Historic Trails our office administers and the Route 66 Corridor. Please see National Trails Office - Regions 6, 7, 8 (U.S. National Park Service) (nps.gov) for more information.
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Snow Mountain National Park mountain trail map (eight main climbing routes)
National Park Service (NPS) trails in the District of Columbia.
description: The TrailNFS_Publish Layer is designed to provide information about National Forest System trail locations and characteristics to the public. When fully realized, it will describe trail locations, basic characteristics of the trail, and where and when various trail uses are prohibited, allowed and encouraged. Because the data readiness varies between Forests, each Forest will approve which level of attribute subset are published for that forest. Forests can provide no information or one of three attribute subsets describing trails. The attribute subsets include TrailNFS_Centerline which includes the location and trail name and number; TrailNFS_Basic which adds information about basic trail characteristics; and TrailNFS_Mgmt which adds information about where and when users are prohibited, allowed, and encouraged. When a Forest chooses to provide the highest attribute subset, TrailNFS_Mgmt, these attributes must be consistent with the Forest's published Motorized Vehicle Use Map (MVUM). Metadata for the individual Forest feature classes used to compile this feature class are available at data.fs.usda.gov/geodata/edw/dir_trails.php. Metadata; abstract: The TrailNFS_Publish Layer is designed to provide information about National Forest System trail locations and characteristics to the public. When fully realized, it will describe trail locations, basic characteristics of the trail, and where and when various trail uses are prohibited, allowed and encouraged. Because the data readiness varies between Forests, each Forest will approve which level of attribute subset are published for that forest. Forests can provide no information or one of three attribute subsets describing trails. The attribute subsets include TrailNFS_Centerline which includes the location and trail name and number; TrailNFS_Basic which adds information about basic trail characteristics; and TrailNFS_Mgmt which adds information about where and when users are prohibited, allowed, and encouraged. When a Forest chooses to provide the highest attribute subset, TrailNFS_Mgmt, these attributes must be consistent with the Forest's published Motorized Vehicle Use Map (MVUM). Metadata for the individual Forest feature classes used to compile this feature class are available at data.fs.usda.gov/geodata/edw/dir_trails.php. Metadata
This dataset contains the current trail network within Glacier National Park, Montana. These data represent the latest revision to official and mapped hiking trails in Glacier. The dataset is based on the initial USGS 7.5 minute topographic mapping that was published in 1968. However, beginning in 1997 Glacier National Park staff have re-mapped (and continue to improve the mapping of) much of Glacier's 700+ mile trail network using Global Positioning Systems (GPS) and high-resolution imagery. Specific data sources employed in mapping trail segments is documented in the source information contained in this metadata.
© Glacier National Park GIS Program
This layer is a component of Glacier National Park.
This map service provides layers covering a variety of different datasets and themes for Glacier National Park. It is meant to be consumed by internet mapping applications and for general reference. It is for internal NPS use only. Produced November 2014.
© Denver Service Center Planning Division, IMR Geographic Resources Division, Glacier National Park
These ESRI shape files are of National Park Service tract and boundary data that was created by the Land Resources Division. Tracts are numbered and created by the regional cartographic staff at the Land Resources Program Centers and are associated to the Land Status Maps. This data should be used to display properties that NPS owns and properties that NPS may have some type of interest such as scenic easements or right of ways.
This dataset contains lines representing the centerline of trail, path, and sidewalk features in National Capital Region National Park Service units. The dataset includes traditional recreation trails as well as sidewalks and paths. This is done to accommodate inclusion in the Park Tiles, the National Park Service basemap.As of October 2022, this is the primary NCR Regional Dataset for Trails, which feeds into the NPS National Dataset for Trails. This data can also be accessed via the National Park Service's National Dataset for Trails:National Park Service: Official Service-wide Datasets GroupNPS - Trails - Geographic Coordinate System (Map Service)NPS - Trails - Geographic Coordinate System (Feature Service)NPS - Trails - Web Mercator (Map Service)NPS - Trails - Web Mercator (Feature Service)The corresponding NPS DataStore on Integrated Resource Management Applications (IRMA) reference is Regional Datasets (Spatial Basedata), National Capital Region, National Park Service.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The feature class indicates the specific types of motorized vehicles allowed on the designated routes and their seasons of use. The feature class is designed to be consistent with the MVUM (Motor Vehicle Use Map). It is compiled from the GIS Data Dictionary data and Infra tabular data that the administrative units have prepared for the creation of their MVUMs. Only trails with the symbol value of 5-12, 16, 17 are Forest Service System trails and contain data concerning their availability for motorized use. This data is published and refreshed on a unit by unit basis as needed. Individual unit's data must be verified and proved consistent with the published MVUMs prior to publication in the EDW. Click this link for full metadata description: Metadata _This record was taken from the USDA Enterprise Data Inventory that feeds into the https://data.gov catalog. Data for this record includes the following resources: ISO-19139 metadata ArcGIS Hub Dataset ArcGIS GeoService OGC WMS CSV Shapefile GeoJSON KML For complete information, please visit https://data.gov.
This dataset represents the most current depiction of the Appalachian National Scenic Trail centerline. Locational information used to create this data set were obtained from both Global Positioning Systems (GPS) survey data collected between 1998-2001 and information digitized from USGS topographical maps and Appalachian Trail maps. This data set was developed to provide a depiction of the Appalachian National Scenic Trail in a usable and easily transferable format between parties so that it can correctly be represented on digital and printed maps; to assist staff members, agency partners, and trail-maintaining clubs with trail and land management duties; and to help local planning agencies, telecommunications companies, and other groups with planning activities, such as siting new developments that could have a substantial impact on the scenic quality of the Appalachian Trail. The Appalachian National Scenic Trail is a footpath of approximately 2,169 miles in length that traverses the Appalachian Mountains from Maine to Georgia. It passes through 14 states and approximately 241 jurisdictions, and links some 75 national and state parks and forests. Virtually every mile is within easy access of a major population center and some portion of the trail is within a day's drive of two-thirds of the U.S. population. The idea for an Appalachian Trail was conceived by forester Benton MacKaye in 1921. In 1925, the Appalachian Trail Conference, a private not-for-profit organization, was founded specifically to coordinate the development of the Appalachian Trail. Its mission today is to preserve, manage, and promote the Appalachian Trail. By 1937, an Appalachian Trail footpath was considered complete and open for all to enjoy. In 1968, Congress passed the National Scenic Trails Act that created a system of national scenic trails, starting with the Appalachian Trail and Pacific Crest Trail. Though considered part of the national park system, the Appalachian Trail has largely remained managed by the Appalachian Trail Conference. This responsibility was formally delegated by the Department of the Interior in 1984. Today, the trail and its associated lands are managed by the Appalachian Trail Conference, its 31 affiliated trail clubs, and the National Park Service Appalachian Trail Park Office, in conjunction with several agency partners including the USDA Forest Service and numerous state park and state forest agencies.
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Provide the track map of the nature trails under the jurisdiction of the Forestry Bureau - 033_East Eye Mountain National Forest Recreation Area Trail Group KMZ download file.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
A map service on the world wide web that depicts National Forest Service trails that have been approved for publication. This service is used internally and externally by forest service employees and the public to visualize trail information for each forest that has published this information. Metadata and Downloads
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Provide the trail map of the National Forest Recreation Area Trail Group KMZ download file under the jurisdiction of the Forestry Conservation Bureau.
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Provide the map of the trail-029 of the National Forest Recreation Area at Nei Dong for the Forestry Bureau.
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Provide the trail map of the nature trail under the jurisdiction of the Forestry Conservation Bureau - Download file for the trail of the giant tree group trail at Alishan National Forest Recreation Area KMZ.
https://data.gov.tw/licensehttps://data.gov.tw/license
Provide the trail map of the National Forest Recreation Area trail group KMZ download file managed by the Forestry Conservation Bureau.
Trails data are intended to be used for a variety of mapping, resource management, planning, and analysis applications.
A map service on the world wide web that depicts National Forest Service trails that have been approved for publication. This service is used internally and externally by forest service employees and the public to visualize trail information for each forest that has published this information. The map service uses a File Geodatabase data source with Web Mercator projection. Full metadata is available at National Trails Metadata
Road and Trail data in the Enterprise Data Warehouse (EDW) are kept current by daily updates from forest SDE geodatabases located in NRM and VDC. The EDW map services data layers are kept current with the EDW data. If a road or trail is added one day in a forest SDE geodatabase, the next day it will show up in the SDE EDW publication layer and dynamic map services. This applies to the following map services:
https://apps.fs.usda.gov/arcx/rest/services/EDW/EDW_RoadBasic_01/MapServer https://apps.fs.usda.gov/arcx/rest/services/EDW/EDW_TrailNFSPublish_01/MapServer
This feature class depicts Forest Service trails where motorized use is allowed. It contains information on the specific type of motor vehicle and their seasons of use. The feature class is consistent with the appropriate National Forest's Motor Vehicle Use Map (MVUM). Non-motorized trails are not included in this data. Trails in this feature class are legal for some motorized use for at least a portion of the year. Any reference to Open or Dates Open refers strictly to when it is legal to use that motor vehicle on the trail. It is not meant to describe when the conditions would be appropriate for that use. As an example, a trail may be designated open to motorcycles all year long but there may be periods of time when snow depth prevents the use of motorcycles on that trail. It is compiled from the GIS Data Dictionary data and tabular data that the administrative units have prepared for the creation of their MVUMs. This data is published and refreshed on a unit by unit basis as needed. Individual unit's data must be verified and proved consistent with the published MVUMs prior to publication in the Enterprise Data Warehouse (EDW).
The Appalachian National Scenic Trail geologic map index is a collection of zipped multipage PDF documents (APPA_GRI_
This feature service contains lines representing public trails on U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service lands, collected for the National Trails Inventory Program by the American Conservation Experience (ACE). The inventory uses a core set of questions and data attributes identified in the Federal Trail Data Standards (FTDS) and further developed by the Federal Trail GIS Schema (FTGS) Working Group. The Cycle 3 inventory began in 2019 and will be completed in 2022. This dataset may contain older, Cycle 2 trail information for stations until the inventory is complete. Data Set Contact: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Natural Resource Program Center, GIS Team Lead, richard_easterbrook@fws.govU.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Catalog (ServCat) Record - https://ecos.fws.gov/ServCat/Reference/Profile/143048
This is a web map for the National Trails National Historic Trail Viewer. The National Historic Trail Viewer is an interactive web mapping application allowing staff, partners and the public to view the nine designated National Historic Trails our office administers and the Route 66 Corridor. Please see National Trails Office - Regions 6, 7, 8 (U.S. National Park Service) (nps.gov) for more information.