Select Aggregate Planimetric CAD Vectors from set of 2001-2019 Community Profile AutoCAD files - Initial release version Oct 26, 2023This is an AGOL-hosted Feature Service - hence text point labels only display horizontallySee these related Services (circa Oct 2023):DCRA Community Profile Availability and Map Sheet Outlines with PDF Maps as downloadable attachmentsDCRA Community Profile Aerial Imagery (Community Hi-Res Scale)DCRA Community Profile Aerial Imagery (Community General Area Low-Res Scale)State of Alaska Maxar RGB Satellite ImageryHigh Level Documentation as a PowerPoint Presentation in PDF form
USGS Imagery Only is a tile cache base map service of orthoimagery in The National Map visible to the 1:9,028 zoom scale. Orthoimagery data is typically high resolution aerial images that combine the visual attributes of an aerial photograph with the spatial accuracy and reliability of a planimetric map. USGS digital orthoimage resolution may vary from 6 inches to 1 meter. In the former resolution, every pixel in an orthoimage covers a six inch square of the earth's surface, while in the latter resolution, one meter square is represented by each pixel. Blue Marble: Next Generation and Landsat imagery data sources are displayed at small to medium scales, however, the majority of the imagery service source is from the National Agriculture Imagery Program (NAIP) for the conterminous United States. The data is 1 meter pixel resolution collected with "leaf-on" conditions. Collection of NAIP imagery is administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Farm Service Agency (FSA). In areas where NAIP data is not available, other imagery may be acquired through partnerships by the USGS. For Alaska, 10-meter resolution SPOT imagery is provided for viewing. The National Map download client allows free downloads of public domain, 1-meter resolution orthoimagery in JPEG 2000 (jp2) format for the conterminous United States. However, the 10-meter Alaska orthoimagery data will not be available for direct download from the National Map due to license restrictions. For additional information on orthoimagery, go to https://nationalmap.gov/ortho.html.
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The Surveying and Mapping Services industry in Canada has weathered uncertain conditions as downstream industries including residential, commercial, industrial construction and government authorities, fared with volatility brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic. The industry's performance is largely tied to developments in residential and nonresidential construction markets, which fuel both private- and public-sector spending.As Canadian oil, gas and mining companies cut back spending on exploration and development projects in response to falling commodity prices, and construction stalled in resource-rich provinces, demand for surveying and mapping services for these projects fell. While growth from the residential construction market helped offset some losses, rising interest intended to offset rising inflation have hampered residential demand. Thus, even as energy prices came roaring back, many surveyors saw a reduction in demand. Over the five years to 2023, industry revenue has been contracting at a CAGR of 1.7% and is expected to reach $1.7 billion, including an expected drop of 3.2% over the current year.The return to growth of downstream construction markets will likely keep industry demand afloat moving forward. In addition to solid demand from industrial building construction as commodity prices remain high, housing market expansion will stimulate demand for cadastral, property line and construction surveying. The continued adoption of new technology will also enable companies to realize new efficiencies and improve the quality of their services, expanding sizable profit margins further. Industry revenue is forecast to rise at a CAGR of 1.2% to $1.8 billion over the five years to 2028.
https://geoportal.cuzk.gov.cz/Dokumenty/Podminky.pdfhttps://geoportal.cuzk.gov.cz/Dokumenty/Podminky.pdf
The view service WMS-ZABAGED®-PLANIMETRY is provided as a public view service for ZABAGED® data. It is on-line dynamic map service, which is published from vector data stored in a database. Hence, it is possible to work with individual layers. The WMS interface provides GetFeatureInfo operation, which enables WMS clients to query for attributes of ZABAGED® features.
The files linked to this reference are the geospatial data created as part of the completion of the baseline vegetation inventory project for the NPS park unit. Current format is ArcGIS file geodatabase but older formats may exist as shapefiles. Large scale final map products were created within ArcMap and designed to show both the orthophoto coverage and the vegetation maps. For the vegetation maps, colors were assigned and the polygons labeled with the dominant vegetation and modifier and, where present, the second vegetation and modifier. For the orthophoto maps, the photos were simply plotted at the same scale and area coverage as the vegetation maps. Additional planimetric map data included roads, trails, hydrology, boundaries and a UTM coordinate grid. Legends are designed to provide full definitions of the vegetation and buffer classes and modifiers, as well as information about the park, map projection, data sources and authorship (Figure 19). All maps are projected to the Universal Transverse Mercator Coordinate System, North American Datum of 1984, in the local zone for the specific park.
Title: Luozi - Scale: 50000 - Commission de Géologie n° 41B Service Géologique n° SB 33.3 - Sheet number/Numéro de feuille/Bladnummer: S5/14-NW-3
This reference contains the imagery data used in the completion of the baseline vegetation inventory project for the NPS park unit. Orthophotos, raw imagery, and scanned aerial photos are common files held here. Imagery for both park units was obtained free of charge from a Tucson-based company, Western Mapping Inc., which had recently been hired by the park to conduct detailed planimetric mapping of both units. These high-resolution, three-band aerial photographs had a pixel size of 0.5 m (50 cm), providing detailed images. No post-processing of the images was needed. Imagery was used in various ways throughout the mapping project, including as a guide when conducting on-the-ground mapping.
Select Aggregate Planimetric CAD Vectors from set of 2001-2019 Community Profile AutoCAD files - Initial release version Oct 26, 2023This is an AGOL-hosted Feature Service - hence text point labels only display horizontallySee these related Services (circa Oct 2023):DCRA Community Profile Availability and Map Sheet Outlines with PDF Maps as downloadable attachmentsDCRA Community Profile Aerial Imagery (Community Hi-Res Scale)DCRA Community Profile Aerial Imagery (Community General Area Low-Res Scale)State of Alaska Maxar RGB Satellite ImageryHigh Level Documentation as a PowerPoint Presentation in PDF form
This layer represents the primary GIS mapped area for the City of Bloomington, Indiana. It covers the City of Bloomington plus the Bloomington Utilities service area. Detailed planimetric data such as edge of pavement and early aerial orthophotography is limited to this area.
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Revenue for the Surveying and Mapping Services industry has been volatile in the years since the pandemic. As the economy emerged from a short-lived downturn, surveyors were buoyed by strong residential construction resulting from record-low interest rates. Investment from the commercial sector also expanded as corporate profit soared. However, as the Federal Reserve raised the cost of borrowing to combat high inflation, homebuying and existing home improvements declined, severely inhibiting the residential sector and prompting a multi-year revenue decline for the industry. While interest rates have remained elevated, the 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law has pumped millions of dollars into highway construction, civil engineering, mineral surveying and geospatial data processing, rewarding select surveying and mapping companies with hefty contracts. Thus, industry revenue is anticipated to grow at a CAGR of 2.0% through 2025, even as interest rates remain elevated. In 2025, the industry is projected to grow 1.8% with revenue totalling $11.5 billion.Advances in technology are revolutionizing surveying by enabling faster, more accurate data collection and processing. Mobile mapping tools, UAVs, 3D laser scanning and AI-driven analytics are streamlining workflows, reducing field time and expanding the range of services companies offer. These innovations are supporting complex projects in construction, infrastructure and smart city planning, while cloud-based GIS and automation are improving productivity. As these tools are becoming industry standards, companies that have been quick to adopt them have gained a competitive edge. This increased competition has left laggards behind, making innovation incumbent to sustaining profitability.The industry will continue to see modest expansion as steady economic growth will increase demand from the nonresidential sector. However, economic uncertainty and the expectation of conservative monetary policy by the Federal Reserve will continue to keep interest rates elevated, tempering the residential housing market. Still, surveyors will benefit from new home construction that is expected to rise above historical averages, especially in regions where job growth will support relocation. Through 2030, industry revenue is forecast to expand at a CAGR of 1.1% to reach $12.2 billion.
USGS Imagery Topo is a tile cache base map of orthoimagery in The National Map and US Topo vector data visible to the 1:9,028 scale. Orthoimagery data are typically high resolution images that combine the visual attributes of an aerial photograph with the spatial accuracy and reliability of a planimetric map. USGS digital orthoimage resolution may vary from 6 inches to 1 meter. In the former resolution, every pixel in an orthoimage covers a six inch square of the earth's surface, while in the latter resolution, one meter square is represented by each pixel. Blue Marble: Next Generation source is displayed at small to medium scales. However, the majority of the imagery service source is from the National Agriculture Imagery Program (NAIP) for the conterminous United States. The data is 1-meter pixel resolution with "leaf-on". Collection of NAIP imagery is administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Farm Service Agency (FSA). In areas where NAIP data is not available, other imagery may be acquired through partnerships by the USGS. The National Map program is working on acquisition of high resolution orthoimagery (HRO) for Alaska. Most of the new Alaska imagery data will not be available in this service due to license restrictions. The National Map viewer allows free downloads of public domain, 1-meter resolution orthoimagery in JPEG 2000 (jp2) format for the conterminous United States.
The files linked to this reference are the geospatial data created as part of the completion of the baseline vegetation inventory project for the NPS park unit. Current format is ArcGIS file geodatabase but older formats may exist as shapefiles. Large scale final map products were created within ArcMap and designed to show both the orthophoto coverage and the vegetation maps. For the vegetation maps, colors were assigned and the polygons labeled with the dominant vegetation and modifier and, where present, the second vegetation and modifier. For the orthophoto maps, the photos were simply plotted at the same scale and area coverage as the vegetation maps. Additional planimetric map data included roads, trails, hydrology, boundaries and a UTM coordinate grid. Legends are designed to provide full definitions of the vegetation and buffer classes and modifiers, as well as information about the park, map projection, data sources and authorship. All maps are projected to the Universal Transverse Mercator Coordinate System, North American Datum of 1984, in the local zone for the specific park Map information- Veg Classes: 35 Polygons: 7,907 Avg Polygon size(ha) 2.58 Map Scale: 1:26,000
Title: Léopoldville - Scale: 50000 - Commission de Géologie n° 42A Service Géologique n° SB 33.4 - Sheet number/Numéro de feuille/Bladnummer: S5/15-SW-4
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License information was derived automatically
WMS visualisation service of the handwritten planimetry of Spanish municipalities carried out between 1870 and 1950 in Spain, which are preserved in the Topographic Archive of the IGN. They are the works prior to the realisation of the National Topographic Map, in some cases with several decades of difference with respect to the publication of the first edition of the MTN in the area. They contain planimetric information such as: communication routes, hydrography, populations, growing masses of more than 10 ha, municipal boundary line and boundary markers that indicate the limit line described in the minutes of delinding. They are made at 1:25,000 scale, with a precision of obtaining the data corresponding to a 1:50,000 scale. Through the GetFeatureInfo operation (which displays information from a point) you can access the IGN Planimetry, Altimemetry and Joints available in the CNIG download center. WMS 1.3.0 service according to ISO 19128:2005.
This map service displays Soils of Tallahassee - Leon County. With scale dependent draw and labeling. Best used with an alpha setting of 0.7 or transparency of 30%.SSURGO (Soil Survey Geographic database) refers to digital soils data produced and distributed by the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) - National Cartography and Geospatial Center (NCGC).This data set is a digital soil survey and generally is the most detailed level of soil geographic data developed by the National Cooperative Soil Survey. The information was prepared by digitizing maps, by compiling information onto a planimetric correct base and digitizing, or by revising digitized maps using remotely sensed and other information. This data set consists of georeferenced digital map data and computerized attribute data. The map data are in a soil survey area extent format and include a detailed, field verified inventory of soils and miscellaneous areas that normally occur in a repeatable pattern on the landscape and that can be cartographically shown at the scale mapped. A special soil features layer (point and line features) is optional. This layer displays the location of features too small to delineate at the mapping scale, but they are large enough and contrasting enough to significantly influence use and management. The soil map units are linked to attributes in the National Soil Information System relational database, which gives the proportionate extent of the component soils and their properties.SSURGO Metadata Document
Title: Luozi, Points d'observation Musée - Scale: 50000 - Commission de Géologie n° 41B Service Géologique n° SB 33.3 - Sheet number/Numéro de feuille/Bladnummer: S5/14-SW-1
Service road centerlines captured in 1999. Contract NCPC 93-02. This document describes the planimetric map production for the 350 tiles located in Washington DC and the surrounding states of MD and VA.
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Companies in the Surveying and Mapping Services industry have struggled with volatile downstream demand over the past few years. Demand for surveying services fluctuates in response to construction activity, as surveyors are a necessity for construction projects. Although demand for surveying services has risen in areas like heavy and civil engineering construction, as well as exploration, these gains haven’t been enough to counterbalance a drop in demand from residential building construction. Slow growth in the number of surveyors has constrained the market’s size, as more experienced surveyors are retiring while fewer young people are interested in pursuing surveying as a career. Overall, revenue is expected to have contracted at an annualised 3.9% over the five years through 2024-25 to $4.0 billion, including an anticipated plummet of 7.1% in 2024-25. Technological advancements in surveying and mapping services have influenced the industry’s performance. Cost-effective drone surveying technology with fast processing speeds has allowed some companies to provide value-added products that appeal to time-sensitive clients. However, some downstream clients with large capital resources have bypassed third-party surveying service providers, even though they can offer specialised services, and developed in-house surveying capabilities for cost efficiency, limiting surveyors’ pricing ability. Some large-scale surveyors have capitalised on a flurry of high-profile projects to build stronger reputations and expand their market share. Over the coming years, a recovery in key downstream sectors, including residential housing construction, as interest rates ease will improve the industry’s performance. As softening interest rates improve downstream conditions, surveyors working in construction markets will be in a better position to capitalise on improved downstream conditions. Investment in apartment and townhouse construction will also rally, driven by government efforts to solve housing supply shortages over the coming years. Industry revenue is projected to climb at an annualised 2.2% over the five years through 2029-30 to $4.1 billion.
This data set is a digital soil survey and generally is the most detailed level of soil geographic data developed by the National Cooperative Soil Survey. The information was prepared by digitizing maps, by compiling information onto a planimetric correct base and digitizing, or by revising digitized maps using remotely sensed and other information. This data set consists of georeferenced digital map data and computerized attribute data. The map data are in a soil survey area extent format and include a detailed, field verified inventory of soils and miscellaneous areas that normally occur in a repeatable pattern on the landscape and that can be cartographically shown at the scale mapped. A special soil features layer (point and line features) is optional. This layer displays the location of features too small to delineate at the mapping scale, but they are large enough and contrasting enough to significantly influence use and management. The soil map units are linked to attributes in the National Soil Information System relational database, which gives the proportionate extent of the component soils and their properties.
Disclaimer: This information is to be used for reference purposes only. Scott County does not guarantee accuracy of the material contained herein and is not responsible for misuse or misinterpretation. The preceding disclaimer is provided pursuant to Minnesota Statutes 466.03, Subd. 21, and the user of this service acknowledges that Scott County shall not be liable for any damages, and expressly waives all claims, and agrees to defend, indemnify, and hold harmless Scott County from any and all claims brought by User, its employees or agents, or third parties which arise out of the user's access or use of data provided.
Select Aggregate Planimetric CAD Vectors from set of 2001-2019 Community Profile AutoCAD files - Initial release version Oct 26, 2023This is an AGOL-hosted Feature Service - hence text point labels only display horizontallySee these related Services (circa Oct 2023):DCRA Community Profile Availability and Map Sheet Outlines with PDF Maps as downloadable attachmentsDCRA Community Profile Aerial Imagery (Community Hi-Res Scale)DCRA Community Profile Aerial Imagery (Community General Area Low-Res Scale)State of Alaska Maxar RGB Satellite ImageryHigh Level Documentation as a PowerPoint Presentation in PDF form