13 datasets found
  1. g

    MTBS Wildfire Burned Area Boundaries | gimi9.com

    • gimi9.com
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    MTBS Wildfire Burned Area Boundaries | gimi9.com [Dataset]. https://gimi9.com/dataset/data-gov_mtbs-wildfire-burned-area-boundaries-3961b
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    License

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

    Description

    The Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity MTBS project assesses the frequency, extent, and magnitude (size and severity) of all large wildland fires (includes wildfire, wildland fire use, and prescribed fire) in the conterminous United States (CONUS), Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for the period between 1984 and the current MTBS release. All fires reported as greater than 1,000 acres in the western U.S. and greater than 500 acres in the eastern U.S. are mapped across all ownerships. MTBS produces a series of geospatial and tabular data for analysis at a range of spatial, temporal, and thematic scales and are intended to meet a variety of information needs that require consistent data about fire effects through space and time. This map layer is a vector polygon of the location of all currently inventoried and mappable MTBS fires occurring between calendar year 1984 and the current MTBS release for the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. Map Service Feature Layer

  2. d

    Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity (ver. 9.0, August 2024)

    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated Aug 25, 2024
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    U.S. Geological Survey (2024). Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity (ver. 9.0, August 2024) [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/monitoring-trends-in-burn-severity-ver-9-0-august-2024
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 25, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    United States Geological Surveyhttp://www.usgs.gov/
    Description

    The Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity (MTBS) Program assesses the frequency, extent, and magnitude (size and severity) of all large wildland fires (including wildfires and prescribed fires) in the conterminous United States (CONUS), Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for the period of 1984 and beyond. All fires reported as greater than 1,000 acres in the western U.S. and greater than 500 acres in the eastern U.S. are mapped across all ownerships. MTBS produces a series of geospatial and tabular data for analysis at a range of spatial, temporal, and thematic scales and are intended to meet a variety of information needs that require consistent data about fire effects through space and time. This map layer is a vector point shapefile of the location of all currently inventoried fires occurring between calendar year 1984 and 2022 for CONUS, Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico. Fires omitted from this mapped inventory are those where suitable satellite imagery was not available, or fires were not discernable from available imagery.

  3. g

    USFS - Burn Areas - MTBS

    • data.geospatialhub.org
    • hub.arcgis.com
    • +2more
    Updated Aug 17, 2017
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    WyomingGeoHub (2017). USFS - Burn Areas - MTBS [Dataset]. https://data.geospatialhub.org/datasets/7407f87f5653458e9ad8706db7aa9031
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 17, 2017
    Dataset authored and provided by
    WyomingGeoHub
    Area covered
    Description

    The Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity (MTBS) project assesses the frequency, extent, and magnitude (size and severity) of all large wildland fires (includes wildfire, wildland fire use, and prescribed fire) in the conterminous United States (CONUS), Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for the period of 1984 through 2015. All fires reported as greater than 1,000 acres in the western U.S. and greater than 500 acres in the eastern U.S. are mapped across all ownerships. MTBS produces a series of geospatial and tabular data for analysis at a range of spatial, temporal, and thematic scales and are intended to meet a variety of information needs that require consistent data about fire effects through space and time. This map layer is a vector point shapefile of the location of all currently inventoried and mappable MTBS fires occurring between calendar year 1984 and 2015 for the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. The point location represents the geographic centroid for the MTBS_Burn_Area_Boundary polygon(s) associated with each fire.

  4. d

    MTBS Wildfire Burned Area Boundaries

    • datasets.ai
    • agdatacommons.nal.usda.gov
    • +5more
    21, 3, 55
    Updated Aug 6, 2024
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    Department of Agriculture (2024). MTBS Wildfire Burned Area Boundaries [Dataset]. https://datasets.ai/datasets/mtbs-wildfire-burned-area-boundaries-3961b
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    55, 3, 21Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 6, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Department of Agriculture
    Description

    The Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity MTBS project assesses the frequency, extent, and magnitude (size and severity) of all large wildland fires (includes wildfire, wildland fire use, and prescribed fire) in the conterminous United States (CONUS), Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for the period between 1984 and the current MTBS release. All fires reported as greater than 1,000 acres in the western U.S. and greater than 500 acres in the eastern U.S. are mapped across all ownerships. MTBS produces a series of geospatial and tabular data for analysis at a range of spatial, temporal, and thematic scales and are intended to meet a variety of information needs that require consistent data about fire effects through space and time. This map layer is a vector polygon of the location of all currently inventoried and mappable MTBS fires occurring between calendar year 1984 and the current MTBS release for the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. Map Service Feature Layer

  5. MTBS Wildfire Burned Area Boundaries

    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated Jun 10, 2020
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    U.S. Forest Service (2020). MTBS Wildfire Burned Area Boundaries [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/ja/dataset/mtbs-wildfire-burned-area-boundaries-3d6d0
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 10, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Servicehttp://fs.fed.us/
    Description

    The Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity MTBS project assesses the frequency, extent, and magnitude (size and severity) of all large wildland fires (includes wildfire, wildland fire use, and prescribed fire) in the conterminous United States (CONUS), Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for the period of 1984 through 2018. All fires reported as greater than 1,000 acres in the western U.S. and greater than 500 acres in the eastern U.S. are mapped across all ownerships. MTBS produces a series of geospatial and tabular data for analysis at a range of spatial, temporal, and thematic scales and are intended to meet a variety of information needs that require consistent data about fire effects through space and time. This map layer is a vector polygon of the location of all currently inventoried and mappable MTBS fires occurring between calendar year 1984 and 2018 for the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. Map Service Feature Layer

  6. Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity Fire Occurrence Locations (Feature Layer)...

    • data-usfs.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated May 4, 2017
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    U.S. Forest Service (2017). Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity Fire Occurrence Locations (Feature Layer) [Dataset]. https://data-usfs.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/81284bfaf86a4fa2a7d49c74424ffe1e
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    Dataset updated
    May 4, 2017
    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

    The Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity MTBS project assesses the frequency, extent, and magnitude (size and severity) of all large wildland fires (includes wildfire, wildland fire use, and prescribed fire) in the conterminous United States (CONUS), Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for the period of 1984 through 2018. All fires reported as greater than 1,000 acres in the western U.S. and greater than 500 acres in the eastern U.S. are mapped across all ownerships. MTBS produces a series of geospatial and tabular data for analysis at a range of spatial, temporal, and thematic scales and are intended to meet a variety of information needs that require consistent data about fire effects through space and time. This map layer is a vector point of the location of all currently inventoried and mappable fires occurring between calendar year 1984 and 2017 for the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. The point location represents the geographic centroid for the _BURN_AREA_BOUNDARY polygon(s) associated with each fire. Metadata

  7. A

    Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity Burned Area Boundaries (Feature Layer)

    • data.amerigeoss.org
    • data.wu.ac.at
    csv, esri rest +6
    Updated Jul 26, 2019
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    United States[old] (2019). Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity Burned Area Boundaries (Feature Layer) [Dataset]. https://data.amerigeoss.org/it/dataset/monitoring-trends-in-burn-severity-burned-area-boundaries-feature-layer-6322c
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    ogc wms, geojson, esri rest, csv, ogc wfs, kml, html, zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 26, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    United States[old]
    Description

    The Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity MTBS project assesses the frequency, extent, and magnitude (size and severity) of all large wildland fires (includes wildfire, wildland fire use, and prescribed fire) in the conterminous United States (CONUS), Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for the period of 1984 through 2014. All fires reported as greater than 1,000 acres in the western U.S. and greater than 500 acres in the eastern U.S. are mapped across all ownerships. MTBS produces a series of geospatial and tabular data for analysis at a range of spatial, temporal, and thematic scales and are intended to meet a variety of information needs that require consistent data about fire effects through space and time. This map layer is a vector polygon of the location of all currently inventoried and mappable MTBS fires occurring between calendar year 1984 and 2014 for the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. Metadata

  8. d

    Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity Burned Areas Boundaries for 1984-2022...

    • datasets.ai
    • s.cnmilf.com
    55
    Updated Aug 6, 2024
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    Department of the Interior (2024). Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity Burned Areas Boundaries for 1984-2022 (ver. 9.0, August 2024) [Dataset]. https://datasets.ai/datasets/monitoring-trends-in-burn-severity-burned-areas-boundaries-for-1984-2022
    Explore at:
    55Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 6, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Department of the Interior
    Description

    The Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity (MTBS) Program assesses the frequency, extent, and magnitude (size and severity) of all large wildland fires (including wildfires and prescribed fires) in the conterminous United States (CONUS), Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for the period of 1984 and beyond. All fires reported as greater than 1,000 acres in the western U.S. and greater than 500 acres in the eastern U.S. are mapped across all ownerships. MTBS produces a series of geospatial and tabular data for analysis at a range of spatial, temporal, and thematic scales and are intended to meet a variety of information needs that require consistent data about fire effects through space and time. This map layer is a vector polygon shapefile of the location of all currently inventoried fires occurring between calendar year 1984 and 2022 for CONUS, Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico. Fires omitted from this mapped inventory are those where suitable satellite imagery was not available, or fires were not discernable from available imagery.

  9. d

    Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity Burned Areas Boundaries for 1984-2024

    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated Feb 21, 2025
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    U.S. Geological Survey (2025). Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity Burned Areas Boundaries for 1984-2024 [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/monitoring-trends-in-burn-severity-burned-areas-boundaries-for-1984-2022
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 21, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    United States Geological Surveyhttp://www.usgs.gov/
    Description

    The Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity (MTBS) Program assesses the frequency, extent, and magnitude (size and severity) of all large wildland fires (including wildfires and prescribed fires) in the conterminous United States (CONUS), Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for the period of 1984 and beyond. All fires reported as greater than 1,000 acres in the western U.S. and greater than 500 acres in the eastern U.S. are mapped across all ownerships. MTBS produces a series of geospatial and tabular data for analysis at a range of spatial, temporal, and thematic scales and are intended to meet a variety of information needs that require consistent data about fire effects through space and time. This map layer is a vector polygon shapefile of the location of all currently inventoried fires occurring between calendar year 1984 and 2024 for CONUS, Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico. Fires omitted from this mapped inventory are those where suitable satellite imagery was not available, or fires were not discernable from available imagery.

  10. Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity Burned Area Boundaries (Feature Layer)

    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated May 4, 2017
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    U.S. Forest Service (2017). Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity Burned Area Boundaries (Feature Layer) [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/eu/dataset/monitoring-trends-in-burn-severity-burned-area-boundaries-feature-layer-25774
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    May 4, 2017
    Dataset provided by
    U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Servicehttp://fs.fed.us/
    Description

    The Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity MTBS project assesses the frequency, extent, and magnitude (size and severity) of all large wildland fires (includes wildfire, wildland fire use, and prescribed fire) in the conterminous United States (CONUS), Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for the period of 1984 through 2018. All fires reported as greater than 1,000 acres in the western U.S. and greater than 500 acres in the eastern U.S. are mapped across all ownerships. MTBS produces a series of geospatial and tabular data for analysis at a range of spatial, temporal, and thematic scales and are intended to meet a variety of information needs that require consistent data about fire effects through space and time. This map layer is a vector polygon of the location of all currently inventoried and mappable MTBS fires occurring between calendar year 1984 and 2018 for the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. Metadata

  11. A

    Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity Fire Occurrence Locations (Feature Layer)...

    • data.amerigeoss.org
    csv, esri rest +6
    Updated Apr 23, 2019
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    United States (2019). Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity Fire Occurrence Locations (Feature Layer) [Dataset]. https://data.amerigeoss.org/id/dataset/monitoring-trends-in-burn-severity-fire-occurrence-locations-feature-layer-e6fe1
    Explore at:
    ogc wms, zip, html, csv, geojson, esri rest, ogc wfs, kmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 23, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    United States
    License

    https://hub.arcgis.com/api/v2/datasets/81284bfaf86a4fa2a7d49c74424ffe1e_62/licensehttps://hub.arcgis.com/api/v2/datasets/81284bfaf86a4fa2a7d49c74424ffe1e_62/license

    Description

    The Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity MTBS project assesses the frequency, extent, and magnitude (size and severity) of all large wildland fires (includes wildfire, wildland fire use, and prescribed fire) in the conterminous United States (CONUS), Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for the period of 1984 through 2014. All fires reported as greater than 1,000 acres in the western U.S. and greater than 500 acres in the eastern U.S. are mapped across all ownerships. MTBS produces a series of geospatial and tabular data for analysis at a range of spatial, temporal, and thematic scales and are intended to meet a variety of information needs that require consistent data about fire effects through space and time. This map layer is a vector point of the location of all currently inventoried and mappable fires occurring between calendar year 1984 and 2014 for the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. The point location represents the geographic centroid for the _BURN_AREA_BOUNDARY polygon(s) associated with each fire. Metadata

  12. U

    Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity from 1984-2018

    • data.usgs.gov
    Updated Jan 13, 2021
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    Nelson Kurtis (2021). Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity from 1984-2018 [Dataset]. https://data.usgs.gov/datacatalog/data/USGS:5e541969e4b0ff554f753113
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 13, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    United States Geological Survey
    Authors
    Nelson Kurtis
    License

    U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    1984 - 2018
    Description

    The Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity (MTBS) Program assesses the frequency, extent, and magnitude (size and severity) of all large wildland fires (including wildfires and prescribed fires) in the conterminous United States (CONUS), Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for the period of 1984 and beyond. All fires reported as greater than 1,000 acres in the western U.S. and greater than 500 acres in the eastern U.S. are mapped across all ownerships. MTBS produces a series of geospatial and tabular data for analysis at a range of spatial, temporal, and thematic scales and are intended to meet a variety of information needs that require consistent data about fire effects through space and time. This map layer is a vector point shapefile of the location of all currently inventoried fires occurring between calendar year 1984 and 2018 for CONUS, Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. Fires omitted from this mapped inventory are those where suitable satellite imagery was not available or fires were not ...

  13. Fires 1985-2021 PDF

    • avca-open-data-avca.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Mar 6, 2022
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    ADMIN_AVCA (2022). Fires 1985-2021 PDF [Dataset]. https://avca-open-data-avca.hub.arcgis.com/items/a37f84892978470294763f8e5a157de0
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 6, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    American Volleyball Coaches Associationhttps://www.avca.org/
    Authors
    ADMIN_AVCA
    Description

    The Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity (MTBS) project assesses the frequency, extent, and magnitude (size and severity) of all large wildland fires (includes wildfire, wildland fire use, and prescribed fire) in the conterminous United States (CONUS), Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for the period of 1984 through 2015. All fires reported as greater than 1,000 acres in the western U.S. and greater than 500 acres in the eastern U.S. are mapped across all ownerships. MTBS produces a series of geospatial and tabular data for analysis at a range of spatial, temporal, and thematic scales and are intended to meet a variety of information needs that require consistent data about fire effects through space and time. This map layer is a vector polygon of the location of all currently inventoried and mappable MTBS fires occurring between calendar year 1984 and 2015 for the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico.Three datasets were combined to form this single set and then only included fires with Fire Number starting with AZUSDA MTBS (the base Dataset) was merged with GEOMAC Fire perimeters for 2016 and 2017. These were then joined to USDA's "Spatial wildfire occurrence data for the United States, 1992-2015 FPA_FOD_20170508 " and then re-saved as this dataset which provides a single dataset from 1984-2016. 2017 and on are managed and maintained by added those fires as they occur.Fire data for years after 2016 is manually added from either GEOMAC or the Arizona Department of Emergency and Military Affairs (DEMA)Websites: USDA MTBS: https://www.mtbs.gov/ (for base perimeter data)GeoMAC: website is down, GeoMAC no longer exists. The replacement for GeoMAC is here: https://data-nifc.opendata.arcgis.com/Karen C. Short with the USGS for fire cause through 2015Because the Forest Service archive cause data ends in 2015, we manually added cause for altar valley fires only. Data for those manual entries was obtained from the GEOMAC web visual interface.Update: 23 August 2018. For clarity, we've trimmed the layers to include historic fires south of highway 86, north of the international border, west of interstate 19, and east of the reservation.20200301: Updated the 2018 and 2019 fire perimeters based on the updated GEOMAC service.20200321: Updated with a RX fire from Landsat-5 imagery (30 Jun 1985) of a fire that can be seen burning on 14 June 85 (by evidence of smoke in LS5 image). Confirmed as a RX fire by the Kings Anvil Ranch.20200520: Updated with an RX fire from Sentinel-2 imagery (6 Mar 2019) of a fire reported by the Southern Border Fuels Management Initiative (SBI) of the USGS. 20201024: Updated with several fire perimeters developed from Sentinel-2 imagery between July and October 2020. 20201201: Updated with the three hills fire perimeter based on Sentinel-2 imagery of 20201105. Of note, the imagery shows this fire to be south and east of the refuge hq. The NIFC has this fire to the north and west of the HQ. We've plotted this in the southeast position.20220306: Updated to include newest NFIC data and site. Checked 2021 fires -- none reported by NFIC.

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MTBS Wildfire Burned Area Boundaries | gimi9.com [Dataset]. https://gimi9.com/dataset/data-gov_mtbs-wildfire-burned-area-boundaries-3961b

MTBS Wildfire Burned Area Boundaries | gimi9.com

Explore at:
License

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

Description

The Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity MTBS project assesses the frequency, extent, and magnitude (size and severity) of all large wildland fires (includes wildfire, wildland fire use, and prescribed fire) in the conterminous United States (CONUS), Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for the period between 1984 and the current MTBS release. All fires reported as greater than 1,000 acres in the western U.S. and greater than 500 acres in the eastern U.S. are mapped across all ownerships. MTBS produces a series of geospatial and tabular data for analysis at a range of spatial, temporal, and thematic scales and are intended to meet a variety of information needs that require consistent data about fire effects through space and time. This map layer is a vector polygon of the location of all currently inventoried and mappable MTBS fires occurring between calendar year 1984 and the current MTBS release for the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. Map Service Feature Layer

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