The purpose of the�Natural Resources Atlas�is to provide geographic information about environmental features and sites that the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources manages, monitors, permits, or regulates. In addition to standard map navigation tools, this site allows you to link from sites to documents where available, generate reports, export search results, import data, search, measure, mark-up, query map features, and print PDF maps.
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
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The NRCS National Water and Climate Center's Interactive Map displays both current and historic hydrometeorological data in an easy-to-use, visual interface. The information on the map comes from many sources. Natural Resources Conservation Service snowpack and precipitation data are derived from manually-collected snow courses and automated Snow Telemetry (SNOTEL) and Soil Climate Analysis Network (SCAN) stations. Other data sources include precipitation, streamflow, and reservoir data from the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (BoR), the Applied Climate Information System (ACIS), the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), and other hydrometeorological monitoring entities. The Interactive Map has two regions: the map display itself, and the map controls which determine both the display mode and the types of data and stations to show on the map: Display Modes; Map Components; Station Conditions Controls; Basin Conditions Controls; Station Inventory Controls. Resources in this dataset:Resource Title: Interactive Map home. File Name: Web Page, url: https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/wcc/home/quicklinks/predefinedMaps/ The Interactive Map provides spatial visualization of current and historic hydrometeorological data collected by the Natural Resources Conservation Service and other monitoring agencies. The map also provides station inventories based on sensor and geographic filters. This page has links to pre-defined maps organized by data type. After opening a map, users can zoom to area of interest, customize the map, and then bookmark the URL to save the settings.
The Australian Natural Resources Atlas (ANRA) was developed by the National Land and Water Resources Audit to provide online access to information to support natural resource management. The Atlas …Show full descriptionThe Australian Natural Resources Atlas (ANRA) was developed by the National Land and Water Resources Audit to provide online access to information to support natural resource management. The Atlas was managed and maintained within the Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts. The Atlas comprises of a number of tools and information on Australia's natural resources: * Australia's Resources Online: Generate a report containing the latest available data on Australia's natural resources against the Natural Resource Management Monitoring and Evaluation framework . (See below). * Map Maker: View and query the data from the Atlas or make a map of a region of interest * Natural Resource Topics: View National, State and regional theme assessments of Australia's natural resources undertaken by the National Land and Water Resources Audit in 2000-2002, and find links to other sources of natural resource data.
Primary Natural Resource Areas represent lands with multiple resource values, including large forest blocks and other wildlife habitat, wetlands and water bodies, and the aquifers that feed Easton’s water supply wells. These are the core areas that maintain functioning ecosystems and healthy water supplies. Secondary Natural Areas contain fewer resources and are less critical to maintaining ecosystem functions. They serve as important buffers and extensions of the primary resource areas.
This map is a rendition of VTANR's Natural Resources Atlas. This application gives our users the ability to take the Atlas data with them, wherever there is network connectivity. Although not as rich with features as the Natural Resources Atlas website, this application provides a quick glance of Vermont's Natural Resources Data wherever you are, providing a great resource for field scientists, planners, consultants, etc. that need to know what's at their current location.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
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The Natural Resources Conservation Service Locator Map for Block Diagrams contains more than 3,750 block diagrams (line drawings) from published soil surveys. Most of the diagrams relate soils to landscape positions. Each point on the interactive map indicates the location of a soil survey area for which a block diagram is available online. Click on an individual point for details. The points do not indicate a specific location illustrated by a diagram. Only one point is shown per survey area. In many cases, more than one diagram is available per survey area. A detailed spreadsheet provides information on all available diagrams. Resources in this dataset:Resource Title: Locator Map for Block Diagrams. File Name: Web Page, url: https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/detailfull/soils/survey/geo/?cid=nrcs142p2_054317 Each point on the map indicates the location of a soil survey area for which a block diagram is available online. Click on an individual point for details. The points do not indicate a specific location illustrated by a diagram. Only one point is shown per survey area. In many cases, more than one diagram is available per survey area. For all available diagrams, see the spreadsheet.
ADMMR map collection: Emerald Isle Sample Map; 38 x 21 in.
ADMMR map collection: Roadside Mine, Geophysical Map; 1 in. to 500 feet; 27 x 27 in.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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This cartographic digital product is derived from the Atlas of Canada's wall map "The World" (MCR 0046) and "Le monde" (MCR 0046F) published in 2021. The World is a general reference political map focused on the names and international boundaries of sovereign and non-sovereign countries. The information is portrayed using the Winkel II projection at a scale of 1:29 000 000. The dataset includes international boundaries, populated places, and labelled major hydrographic and physical features. In the geodatabase the representation of political boundaries do not necessarily reflect the position of the Government of Canada on all international issues of recognition, sovereignty or jurisdiction; some of the populated places have seasonal populations, while others are research or military bases with no permanent populations; and, there are no attribute information in the geodatabase for the labelled hydrographic and physical features.
Map of Town of Falmouth's Water resources. Includes natural resources including wetlands, rare and threatened wildlife and plants, high value habitat and nexting islands. Created for the 2023 Comprehensive Plan update using data from Town of Falmouth, Maine DEP, Beginning with Habitat, Maine Office of GIS, US Geological Survey. Map prepared by VIEWSHED. www.viewshed.net
DWR has a long history of studying and characterizing California’s groundwater aquifers as a part of California’s Groundwater (Bulletin 118). The Basin Characterization Program provides the latest data and information about California’s groundwater basins to help local communities better understand their aquifer systems and support local and statewide groundwater management.
Under the Basin Characterization Program, new and existing data (AEM, lithology logs, geophysical logs, etc.) will be integrated to create continuous maps and three-dimensional models. To support this effort, new data analysis tools will be developed to create texture models, hydrostratigraphic models, and aquifer flow parameters. Data collection efforts will be expanded to include advanced geologic, hydrogeologic, and geophysical data collection and data digitization and quality control efforts will continue. To continue to support data access and data equity, the Basin Characterization Program will develop new online, GIS-based, visualization tools to serve as a central hub for accessing and exploring groundwater related data in California.
Additional information can be found on the Basin Characterization Program webpage.
DWR will undertake local and regional investigations to evaluate California's groundwater resources and develop state-stewarded maps and models. New and existing data will be combined and integrated using the analysis tools described below to develop maps and models to be developed will describe the grain size, the hydrostratigraphic properties, and hydrogeologic conceptual properties of California’s aquifers. These maps and models help groundwater managers understand how groundwater is stored and moves within the aquifer. The models will be state-stewarded, meaning that they will be regularly updated, as new data becomes available, to ensure that up-to-date information is used for groundwater management activities. The first iterations of the following maps and models will be published as they are developed:
As a part of the Basin Characterization Program, advanced geologic, hydrogeologic, and geophysical data will be collected to improve our understanding of groundwater basins. Data collected under Basin Characterization are collected at a local, regional, or statewide scale depending on the scope of the study.
Datasets collected under the Basin Characterization Program can be found under the following resource:
Lithology and geophysical logging data have been digitized to support the Statewide AEM Survey Project and will continue to be digitized to support Basin Characterization efforts. All digitized lithology logs with Well Completion Report IDs will be imported back into the OSWCR database.
Digitized lithology and geophysical logging can be found under the following resource:
To develop the state-stewarded maps and models outlined above, new tools and process documents will be created to integrate and analyze a wide range of data, including geologic, geophysical, and hydrogeologic information. By combining and assessing various datasets, these tools will help create a more complete picture of California's groundwater basins. All tools, along with guidance documents, will be made publicly available for local groundwater managers to use to support development of maps and models at a local scale. All tools and guidance will be updated as revisions to tools and process documents are made.
Analysis tools and process documents can be found under the following resource:
Data access equity is a priority for the Basin Characterization Program. To ensure data access equity, the Basin Characterization Program has developed applications and tools to allow data to be visualized without needing access to expensive data visualization software. This list below provides links and descriptions for the Basin Characterization's suite of data viewers.
SGMA Data Viewer: Basin Characterization tab: Provides maps, depth slices, and profiles of Basin Characterization maps, models, and datasets, including the following:
3D AEM Data Viewer: Displays the Statewide AEM Survey electrical resistivity and coarse fraction data, along with lithology logs, in a three-dimensional space.
DWR's Subsurface Viewer: Provides a map view and profile view of the Statewide AEM Survey electrical resistivity and coarse fraction data, along with lithology logs. The map view dynamically shows the exact location of AEM data displayed.
The Basin Characterization Exchange (BCX) is a meeting series and network space for the Basin Characterization community to exchange ideas, share lessons learned, define needed guidance, and highlight research topics. The BCX is open to federal, state, and local agencies, consultants, NGOs, academia, and interested parties who participate in Basin Characterization efforts. The BCX also plays a pivotal role in advancing the Basin Characterization Program’s activities and goals. BCX meetings will include regular updates from the Basin Characterization Program and participants can provide feedback and recommendations. Participants will also be provided with early opportunities to test data analysis tools and submit comments on draft process and guidance documents. BCX meetings are (generally) held the 3rd Tuesday of the month from 12:30 - 1:30 pm (PST).
Please email your contact information to Basin.Characterization@water.ca.gov if you’re interested in attending BCX meetings and to join the BCX listserv.
**Please Note – All published Saskatchewan Geological Survey datasets, including those available through the Saskatchewan Mining and Petroleum GeoAtlas, are sourced from the Enterprise GIS Data Warehouse. They are therefore identical and share the same refresh schedule. This map service is used by the GeoATLAS web application, sub-section Resource Map in the Mineral Exploration theme. It includes Base Metals Potential, Coal Potential, Gold Potential, Helium Potential, Bitumen (Oil Sands) Potential, Lithium Potential, Potash and Salt Resource Potential, Rare Earth Elements Potential and Uranium Potential schema in Production Data Warehouse. Note: Oil and Gas pools are found in the /Petroleum service.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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This web mapping application gives estimates of the electricity that can be generated by grid-connected photovoltaic systems without batteries (in kWh/kWp) and of the mean daily global insolation (in MJ/m2 and in kWh/m2) for any location in Canada on a 60 arc seconds ~2 km grid. They are presented for each month and for the entire year, for six different PV array orientations: a sun-tracking orientation and five fixed South-facing orientations with latitude, vertical (90°), horizontal (0°) and latitude ± 15° tilts. Data can also be obtained directly for individual municipalities from a list of over 3500 municipalities or downloaded for all municipalities at once. These maps and datasets were developed by the Canadian Forest Service (Great Lakes Forestry Centre) in collaboration with the CanmetENERGY Photovoltaic systems group and the Federal Geospatial Platform. Insolation data were provided by Environment and Climate Change Canada. Web map application developed by Federal Geospatial Platform, 2020. References: Pelland S., McKenney D. W., Poissant Y., Morris R., Lawrence K., Campbell K. and Papadopol P., 2006. The Development of Photovoltaic Resource Maps for Canada, In Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the Solar Energy Society of Canada (SESCI) 2006. McKenney D. W., Pelland S., Poissant Y., Morris R., Hutchinson M, Papadopol P., Lawrence K. and Campbell K., 2008. Spatial insolation models for photovoltaic energy in Canada, Solar Energy 82, pp. 1049–1061.
A collection of maps of San Diego County MPAs to target various audiences for improving understanding of the location, purpose and management of California’s marine protected areas.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
The Soil Data Warehouse and Data Mart provide the authoritative pathway for distributing current official soil survey data to service centers and to the public. Interactive maps and dynamic reports available include Dynamic Maps
Query by Location Query by Location and Connect to Web Soil Survey Prototype Soil (Beta Version) MLRA Explorer
Lists of Hydric Soils
Query by State Query by Soil Survey Area Query by State Map Unit Rating Query by Soil Survey Area Map Unit Rating
Map Unit Description (Brief, Generated)
Query by Soil Survey Area and Map Unit (All Components) Query by Soil Survey Area (Major Components)
Ecological Site Extent
Query by MLRA and Ecological Site
Legend & Prime Farmland
Query by Soil Survey Area
Wisconsin Soil Moisture Regime Site Assessment Guide
Query by Soil Survey Area
Wisconsin Forage Suitability Group Guide
Query by Soil Survey Area
RUSLE2 Related Attributes
Query by Soil Survey Area Resources in this dataset:Resource Title: Soil Data Mart. File Name: Web Page, url: https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/detail/wi/soils/?cid=nrcseprd1326315 Links pull information and hits from the official soils database live. Interactive maps and dynamic reports are available.
https://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontariohttps://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontario
The soil complex database contains other descriptive information including slope class, Canada Land Inventory (CLI) ranking, stoniness, drainage class, texture etc. The CLI components of the data layer is generally intended to be used as a tool for broad land use planning decision making, and not necessarily for field-level management. The soil complex information can also be applied to source water protection, nutrient management and soil erosion modeling. Note: The soil complex data layer is subject to a continuous improvement strategy - data was last download August 2023.Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food, and Rural Affairs and Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, in cooperation with the Ministry of Natural Resources, have compiled a geo-spatial soils database for Southern Ontario. The database consolidated the existing digital soil data mapped on a county basis into a digitally stitched and standardized product.The soil survey data was mapped by a number of soil surveyors from the 1920s to the 1990s. The Soil Ontario product incorporates soil information from a variety of map scales. The project has brought the individual county or regional municipality surveys together in a digitally stitched database which reveals inconsistencies in soil data across county boundaries. Using GIS and NRVIS (Natural Resource Values Information System) a GIS Specialist matched the soil polygons that crossed boundaries using the best available resources.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
EMR Natural Resource Districts Distributed from GeoYukon by the Government of Yukon . Discover more digital map data and interactive maps from Yukon's digital map data collection. For more information: geomatics.help@yukon.ca
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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This map of the terrestrial ecosystems of Myanmar was
developed using a supervised learning approach to classify earth observation data and other geospatial datasets into broad mappable units, which was then split into the ecosystem types defined by the IUCN Red List of Ecosystems of Myanmar project.The shapefile presents the hierarchical ecosystem typology for Myanmar, including attributes that indicate ecosystems grouped at the Biome (11 classes), Functional Ecotype (21 classes) and Ecosystem Type (64 classes) level of the Myanmar ecosystem typology.
For further information refer to the users guide, and the report:
Murray, N.J., Keith, D.A., Tizard, R., Duncan, A., Htut, W.T., Hlaing, N., Oo, A.H., Ya, K.Z., Grantham, H. (2020) Threatened Ecosystems of Myanmar. An IUCN Red List of Ecosystems Assessment. Version 1.0. Wildlife Conservation Society. ISBN: 978-0-9903852-5-7.
Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
License information was derived automatically
The Natural Resource Management (NRM) Regions dataset is maintained for the purpose of authoritative reporting on the Australian Government's NRM investments. The dataset is designed to cover all Australian territory where Australian Government funded NRM projects might take place and includes major islands, external territories, and state and coastal waters in addition to the NRM regional boundaries.The 2016 version 2 updates the marine portion of the NRM regions to be consistent with the current (2015) Australian Maritime Boundaries Information System (AMBIS) coastal water limit boundary. It also includes a new unique ID field for sorting purposes (this is explained in detail below). Three NRM names have also been updated as a result of new information from relevant state/territory agencies and/or NRM regional bodies, as follows:1. “Avon” changed to “Wheatbelt”2. “North West” changed to “Cradle Coast”The 2016 version 2 maintains definitions established in the 2015 version, including for the Peel-Harvey NRM region and for the OceanWatch Australia Limited NRM organisation (not spatially defined). It also maintains changes made in earlier versions including: the 2014 changes in NSW from Catchment Management Authorities (CMA) to Local Land Service areas; and the 2012 update/formalisation of the 2010 dataset (which was an interim update of the NRM Regions 2009 dataset, released Feb 2009). The original base layer version of this dataset was released in 2006 as the Natural Heritage Trust II (NHT2) Region Boundaries dataset.Whilst the boundaries of NRM Regions are defined by legislation in some states and territories, this dataset should not be used to represent legal boundaries in any way. It is an administrative dataset developed for the purpose of reporting and public information. It should be noted that from time to time the states and/or territories may revise their regional boundaries in accordance with local needs and therefore alterations to either the attribution or boundaries of the data may occur in the future.In total, this dataset now represents 61 NRM regions, two of which have large and remote islands which are distinguished in the spatial data, resulting in 63 map objects. The 61 NRM regions comprise 56 mainland regions administered by 55 NRM regional bodies (the Cooperative Management Area in QLD is jointly administered by the two adjacent regional bodies: the Cape York and Northern Gulf NRM bodies) and seven islands (five administered by the Australian Government as external territories, and two administered by nearby mainland NRM regional bodies, which are shown as separate map objects).The 2016 version 2 includes a new unique ID field in the table structure to allow for sorting based on state, region name and region object (where there is more than one part). The following list of regions includes the new NRM_ID field as a reference:New South Wales1010 Central Tablelands1020 Central West1030 Greater Sydney1040 Hunter1050 Murray1060 North Coast (excluding Lord Howe Island)1061 North Coast - Lord Howe Island1070 North West NSW1080 Northern Tablelands1090 Riverina1100 South East NSW1110 WesternVictoria2010 Corangamite2020 East Gippsland2030 Glenelg Hopkins2040 Goulburn Broken2050 Mallee2060 North Central2070 North East2080 Port Phillip and Western Port2090 West Gippsland2100 WimmeraQueensland3010 Burnett Mary3020 Cape York3030 Condamine3040 Cooperative Management Area (administered jointly by Cape York and Northern Gulf)3050 Desert Channels3060 Fitzroy3070 Burdekin3080 Northern Gulf3090 Border Rivers Maranoa-Balonne3100 Mackay Whitsunday3110 South East Queensland3120 South West Queensland3130 Southern Gulf3140 Wet Tropics3150 Torres StraitSouth Australia4010 Adelaide and Mount Lofty Ranges4020 Alinytjara Wilurara4030 Eyre Peninsula4040 Kangaroo Island4050 Northern and Yorke4060 South Australian Arid Lands4070 South Australian Murray Darling Basin4080 South EastWestern Australia5010 Northern Agricultural5020 Peel-Harvey5030 Perth5040 Rangelands5050 South Coast5060 South West5070 WheatbeltTasmania6010 Cradle Coast6020 North6030 South (excluding Macquarie Islands)6031 South - Macquarie IslandsNorthern Territory7010 Northern TerritoryAustralian Capital Territory8010 ACTExternal Territories9010 Ashmore and Cartier Islands9020 Christmas Island9030 Cocos Keeling Islands9040 Heard and McDonald Islands9050 Norfolk IslandCredit:The NRM region boundaries (2006 base layer) are primarily based on data and information supplied by the relevant state and territory government agencies. Geoscience Australia's Australian Maritime Boundaries (2014) and Geodata Coast 100K (2004) data were also used in the development of this dataset. Local Land Service region boundaries were sourced from the NSW Government.
Publicly accessible data services, apps, maps, downloads and KMLs for all of the Alaska Department of Natural Resources datasets. This is the community's public platform for exploring and downloading open data, discovering and building apps, and engaging to solve important local issues. Analyze and combine Open Datasets using maps, as well as develop new web and mobile applications. Let's make our great community even better, together!DO NOT DELETE OR MODIFY THIS ITEM. This item is managed by the Open Data application. To make changes to this site, please visit https://opendata.arcgis.com/admin/
The purpose of the�Natural Resources Atlas�is to provide geographic information about environmental features and sites that the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources manages, monitors, permits, or regulates. In addition to standard map navigation tools, this site allows you to link from sites to documents where available, generate reports, export search results, import data, search, measure, mark-up, query map features, and print PDF maps.