17 datasets found
  1. a

    West Virginia Parcels

    • home-pugonline.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Apr 5, 2022
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    The PUG User Group (2022). West Virginia Parcels [Dataset]. https://home-pugonline.hub.arcgis.com/maps/ba9748f464db4f1487bb372515f354b8
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 5, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    The PUG User Group
    Area covered
    Description

    The WV_Parcel data is a composite dataset of individual county parcel data. Each county provides a unique dataset, with different temporal currencies, attributes and geographies.Website Link: https://www.mapwv.gov/

  2. K

    Kanawha County, West Virginia Parcels

    • koordinates.com
    csv, dwg, geodatabase +6
    Updated Aug 18, 2022
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    Kanawha County, West Virginia (2022). Kanawha County, West Virginia Parcels [Dataset]. https://koordinates.com/layer/110188-kanawha-county-west-virginia-parcels/
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    pdf, mapinfo tab, csv, shapefile, geopackage / sqlite, kml, mapinfo mif, dwg, geodatabaseAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 18, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Kanawha County, West Virginia
    Area covered
    Description

    Vector polygon map data of property parcels from Kanawha County, West Virginia containing 117689 features.

    Property parcel GIS map data consists of detailed information about individual land parcels, including their boundaries, ownership details, and geographic coordinates.

    Property parcel data can be used to analyze and visualize land-related information for purposes such as real estate assessment, urban planning, or environmental management.

    Available for viewing and sharing as a map in a Koordinates map viewer. This data is also available for export to DWG for CAD, PDF, KML, CSV, and GIS data formats, including Shapefile, MapInfo, and Geodatabase.

  3. K

    Wetzel County, West Virginia Parcels

    • koordinates.com
    csv, dwg, geodatabase +6
    Updated Oct 11, 2022
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    Wetzel County, West Virginia (2022). Wetzel County, West Virginia Parcels [Dataset]. https://koordinates.com/layer/110692-wetzel-county-west-virginia-parcels/
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    pdf, geopackage / sqlite, kml, mapinfo tab, dwg, mapinfo mif, csv, geodatabase, shapefileAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 11, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Wetzel County, West Virginia
    Area covered
    Description

    Geospatial data about Wetzel County, West Virginia Parcels. Export to CAD, GIS, PDF, CSV and access via API.

  4. a

    Data from: Districts

    • home-pugonline.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Apr 5, 2022
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    The PUG User Group (2022). Districts [Dataset]. https://home-pugonline.hub.arcgis.com/maps/pugonline::districts
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 5, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    The PUG User Group
    Area covered
    Description

    Tax District Boundaries: Official tax district boundary lines adopted by the WV Legislature in 1978 as a general reference to delineate rural tax district boundaries. The boundaries were drawn from 1:24,000-scale USGS topographic maps in 1978 and coincide with county magisterial districts as of July 1, 1973. Unlike magisterial districts that are realigned every ten years following the census, the tax district boundary does not follow equal representation requirements. In 1978 the West Virginia Geologic and Economical Survey published six 1:500,000-scale maps delineating official county and tax district boundary lines for the State. In 1996 the West Virginia Department of Tax and Revenue, Property Tax Division, converted the 1978 source maps into a digital format and added descriptive attributes for each tax district. In October of 2003, the WV GIS Technical Center appended 24K DLG boundary files and lines drawn from 24K DRGs into a statewide 24K Tax District Boundary dataset. In 2017, WVGISTC has appended this file with parcel data or Census Populated Places boundaries for missing tax districts.

  5. K

    Berkeley County, West Virginia Parcels

    • koordinates.com
    csv, dwg, geodatabase +6
    Updated Jun 4, 2022
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    Berkeley County, West Virginia (2022). Berkeley County, West Virginia Parcels [Dataset]. https://koordinates.com/layer/108151-berkeley-county-west-virginia-parcels/
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    mapinfo tab, geodatabase, kml, pdf, mapinfo mif, shapefile, dwg, csv, geopackage / sqliteAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 4, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Berkeley County, West Virginia
    Area covered
    Description

    Vector polygon map data of property parcels from Berkeley County, West Virginia containing 54,024 features.

    Property parcel GIS map data consists of detailed information about individual land parcels, including their boundaries, ownership details, and geographic coordinates.

    Property parcel data can be used to analyze and visualize land-related information for purposes such as real estate assessment, urban planning, or environmental management.

    Available for viewing and sharing as a map in a Koordinates map viewer. This data is also available for export to DWG for CAD, PDF, KML, CSV, and GIS data formats, including Shapefile, MapInfo, and Geodatabase.

  6. a

    WVU Land Inventory

    • wvu-outdoor-economic-development-collaborative-wvu-admin.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Dec 10, 2019
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    WVU Enterprise GIS (2019). WVU Land Inventory [Dataset]. https://wvu-outdoor-economic-development-collaborative-wvu-admin.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/wvu-land-inventory
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 10, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    WVU Enterprise GIS
    Description

    A General Land and building inventory of West Virginia University owned or controlled real estate. This application shows WVU owned property along with the WV Sheriff's Tax Parcel information, Clery Geography, and WVU Facilities Building inventory information. This map is for planning purposes only and is provided with no warranty. For the most recent and up to date information please contact the author.

  7. a

    Blackwater Falls State Park

    • conservation-abra.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Oct 4, 2022
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    Allegheny-Blue Ridge Alliance (2022). Blackwater Falls State Park [Dataset]. https://conservation-abra.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/blackwater-falls-state-park
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 4, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Allegheny-Blue Ridge Alliance
    Area covered
    Description

    This layer, Blackwater Falls State Park, shows the boundary of Blackwater Falls State Park in Tucker County, West Virginia. The data associated with this layer were received from Friends of Blackwater. Source and date:The Blackwater Falls State Park boundary was received as a shapefile from Friends of Blackwater on September 29th, 2022. It reflects the boundary shown on the official Blackwater Falls State Park trail map, and was confirmed with tax parcel maps by Civil & Environmental Consultants, Inc. of Bridgeport, WV.Purpose:The Blackwater Falls State Park boundary was created to show the extent of the park and its proximity to the proposed Corridor H. Processing:ABRA imported the downloaded shapefile polygon layer into ArcGIS and symbolized it as shown to create this feature layer.Symbolization:The following symbolization is how it appears in the Parsons to Davis online map provided by ABRA.Blackwater Falls State Park: green polygon with a black dashed outline

  8. TNC Lands West Virginia Public Layer

    • geospatial.tnc.org
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Apr 30, 2024
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    The Nature Conservancy (2024). TNC Lands West Virginia Public Layer [Dataset]. https://geospatial.tnc.org/datasets/tnc-lands-west-virginia-public-layer
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 30, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    The Nature Conservancyhttp://www.nature.org/
    Area covered
    Description

    This TNC Lands spatial dataset represents the lands and waters in which The Nature Conservancy (TNC) currently has, or historically had, an interest, legal or otherwise in West Virginia. The system of record for TNC Lands is the Legal Records Management (LRM) system, which is TNC’s database for all TNC land transactions.TNC properties should not be considered open to the public unless specifically designated as being so. TNC may change the access status at any time at its sole discretion. It's recommended to visit preserve-specific websites or contact the organization operating the preserve before any planned visit for the latest conditions, notices, and closures. TNC prohibits redistribution or display of the data in maps or online in any way that misleadingly implies such lands are universally open to the public.The types of current land interests represented in the TNC Lands data include: Fields and Attributes included in the public dataset:Field NameField DefinitionAttributesAttribute Definitions Public NameThe name of the tract that The Nature Conservancy (TNC) Business Unit (BU) uses for public audiences.Public name of tract if applicableN/A TNC Primary InterestThe primary interest held by The Nature Conservancy (TNC) on the tractFee OwnershipProperties where TNC currently holds fee-title or exclusive rights and control over real estate. Fee Ownership can include TNC Nature Preserves, managed areas, and properties that are held for future transfer. Conservation EasementProperties on which TNC holds a conservation easement, which is a legally binding agreement restricting the use of real property for conservation purposes (e.g., no development). The easement may additionally provide the holder (TNC) with affirmative rights, such as the rights to monitor species or to manage the land. It may run forever or for an expressed term of years. Deed RestrictionProperties where TNC holds a deed restriction, which is a provision placed in a deed restricting or limiting the use of the property in some manner (e.g., if a property goes up for sale, TNC gets the first option). TransferProperties where TNC historically had a legal interest (fee or easement), then subsequently transferred the interest to a conservation partner. AssistProperties where TNC assisted another agency/entity in protecting. Management Lease or AgreementAn agreement between two parties whereby one party allows the other to use their property for a certain period of time in exchange for a periodic fee. Grazing Lease or PermitA grazing lease or permit held by The Nature Conservancy Right of WayAn access easement or agreement held by The Nature Conservancy. OtherAnother real estate interest or legal agreement held by The Nature Conservancy Fee OwnerThe name of the organization serving as fee owner of the tract, or "Private Land Owner" if the owner is a private party. If The Nature Conservancy (TNC) primary interest is a "Transfer" or "Assist", then this is the fee owner at the time of the transaction.Fee Owner NameN/A Fee Org TypeThe type of organization(s) that hold(s) fee ownership. Chosen from a list of accepted values.Organization Types for Fee OwnershipFED:Federal, TRIB:American Indian Lands, STAT:State,DIST:Regional Agency Special District, LOC:Local Government, NGO:Non-Governmental Organization, PVT:Private, JNT:Joint, UNK:Unknown, TERR:Territorial, DESG:Designation Other Interest HolderThe name of the organization(s) that hold(s) a different interest in the tract, besides fee ownership or TNC Primary Interest. This may include TNC if the Other Interest is held or co-held by TNC. Multiple interest holders should be separated by a semicolon (;).Other Interest Holder NameN/A Other Interest Org TypeThe type of organization(s) that hold(s) a different interest in the tract, besides fee ownership. This may include TNC if the Other Interest is held or co-held by TNC. Chosen from a list of accepted values.Organization Types for interest holders:FED:Federal, TRIB:American Indian Lands, STAT:State,DIST:Regional Agency Special District, LOC:Local Government, NGO:Non-Governmental Organization, PVT:Private, JNT:Joint, UNK:Unknown, TERR:Territorial, DESG:Designation Other Interest TypeThe other interest type held on the tract. Chosen from a list of accepted values.​Access Right of Way; Conservation Easement; Co-held Conservation Easement; Deed Restriction; Co-held Deed Restriction; Fee Ownership; Co-held Fee Ownership; Grazing Lease or Permit; Life Estate; Management Lease or Agreement; Timber Lease or Agreement; OtherN/A Preserve NameThe name of The Nature Conservancy (TNC) preserve that the tract is a part of, this may be the same name as the as the "Public Name" for the tract.Preserve Name if applicableN/APublic AccessThe level of public access allowed on the tract.Open AccessAccess is encouraged on the tract, trails are maintained, signage is abundant, and parking is available. The tract may include regular hours of availability.Open with Limited AccessThere are no special requirements for public access to the tract, the tract may include regular hours of availability with limited amenities.Restricted AccessThe tract requires a special permit from the owner for access, a registration permit on public land, or has highly variable times or conditions to use.Closed AccessNo public access is allowed on the tract.UnknownAccess information for the tract is not currently available.Gap CategoryThe Gap Analysis Project (GAP) code for the tract. Gap Analysis is the science of determining how well we are protecting common plants and animals. Developing the data and tools to support that science is the mission of the Gap Analysis Project (GAP) at the US Geological Survey. See their website for more information, linked in the field name.1 - Permanent Protection for BiodiversityPermanent Protection for Biodiversity2 - Permanent Protection to Maintain a Primarily Natural StatePermanent Protection to Maintain a Primarily Natural State3 - Permanently Secured for Multiple Uses and in natural coverPermanently Secured for Multiple Uses and in natural cover39 - Permanently Secured and in agriculture or maintained grass coverPermanently Secured and in agriculture or maintained grass cover4 - UnsecuredUnsecured (temporary easements lands and/or municipal lands that are already developed (schools, golf course, soccer fields, ball fields)9 - UnknownUnknownProtected AcresThe planar area of the tract polygon in acres, calculated by the TNC Lands geographic information system (GIS).Total geodesic area of polygon in acresProjection: WGS 1984 Web Mercator Auxiliary SphereOriginal Protection DateThe original protection date for the tract, from the Land Resource Management (LRM) system record.Original protection dateN/AStateThe state within the United States of America or the Canadian province where the tract is located.Chosen from a list of state names.N/ACountryThe name of the country where the tract is located.Chosen from a list of countries.N/ADivisionThe name of the TNC North America Region Division where the tract is located. Chosen from a list of TNC North America DivisionsN/A

  9. K

    West Point, Virginia Parcels

    • koordinates.com
    csv, dwg, geodatabase +6
    Updated Dec 28, 2022
    + more versions
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    State of Virginia (2022). West Point, Virginia Parcels [Dataset]. https://koordinates.com/layer/111718-west-point-virginia-parcels/
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    kml, mapinfo tab, pdf, geopackage / sqlite, dwg, geodatabase, csv, shapefile, mapinfo mifAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 28, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    State of Virginia
    Area covered
    Description

    Geospatial data about West Point, Virginia Parcels. Export to CAD, GIS, PDF, CSV and access via API.

  10. d

    Protected Areas Database of the United States (PAD-US)

    • search.dataone.org
    • datadiscoverystudio.org
    • +1more
    Updated Oct 26, 2017
    + more versions
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    US Geological Survey (USGS) Gap Analysis Program (GAP) (2017). Protected Areas Database of the United States (PAD-US) [Dataset]. https://search.dataone.org/view/0459986b-9a0e-41d9-9997-cad0fbea9c4e
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 26, 2017
    Dataset provided by
    USGS Science Data Catalog
    Authors
    US Geological Survey (USGS) Gap Analysis Program (GAP)
    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 2005 - Jan 1, 2016
    Area covered
    Variables measured
    Shape, Access, Des_Nm, Des_Tp, Loc_Ds, Loc_Nm, Agg_Src, GAPCdDt, GAP_Sts, GIS_Src, and 20 more
    Description

    The USGS Protected Areas Database of the United States (PAD-US) is the nation's inventory of protected areas, including public open space and voluntarily provided, private protected areas, identified as an A-16 National Geospatial Data Asset in the Cadastral Theme (http://www.fgdc.gov/ngda-reports/NGDA_Datasets.html). PAD-US is an ongoing project with several published versions of a spatial database of areas dedicated to the preservation of biological diversity, and other natural, recreational or cultural uses, managed for these purposes through legal or other effective means. The geodatabase maps and describes public open space and other protected areas. Most areas are public lands owned in fee; however, long-term easements, leases, and agreements or administrative designations documented in agency management plans may be included. The PAD-US database strives to be a complete “best available” inventory of protected areas (lands and waters) including data provided by managing agencies and organizations. The dataset is built in collaboration with several partners and data providers (http://gapanalysis.usgs.gov/padus/stewards/). See Supplemental Information Section of this metadata record for more information on partnerships and links to major partner organizations. As this dataset is a compilation of many data sets; data completeness, accuracy, and scale may vary. Federal and state data are generally complete, while local government and private protected area coverage is about 50% complete, and depends on data management capacity in the state. For completeness estimates by state: http://www.protectedlands.net/partners. As the federal and state data are reasonably complete; focus is shifting to completing the inventory of local gov and voluntarily provided, private protected areas. The PAD-US geodatabase contains over twenty-five attributes and four feature classes to support data management, queries, web mapping services and analyses: Marine Protected Areas (MPA), Fee, Easements and Combined. The data contained in the MPA Feature class are provided directly by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Marine Protected Areas Center (MPA, http://marineprotectedareas.noaa.gov ) tracking the National Marine Protected Areas System. The Easements feature class contains data provided directly from the National Conservation Easement Database (NCED, http://conservationeasement.us ) The MPA and Easement feature classes contain some attributes unique to the sole source databases tracking them (e.g. Easement Holder Name from NCED, Protection Level from NOAA MPA Inventory). The "Combined" feature class integrates all fee, easement and MPA features as the best available national inventory of protected areas in the standard PAD-US framework. In addition to geographic boundaries, PAD-US describes the protection mechanism category (e.g. fee, easement, designation, other), owner and managing agency, designation type, unit name, area, public access and state name in a suite of standardized fields. An informative set of references (i.e. Aggregator Source, GIS Source, GIS Source Date) and "local" or source data fields provide a transparent link between standardized PAD-US fields and information from authoritative data sources. The areas in PAD-US are also assigned conservation measures that assess management intent to permanently protect biological diversity: the nationally relevant "GAP Status Code" and global "IUCN Category" standard. A wealth of attributes facilitates a wide variety of data analyses and creates a context for data to be used at local, regional, state, national and international scales. More information about specific updates and changes to this PAD-US version can be found in the Data Quality Information section of this metadata record as well as on the PAD-US website, http://gapanalysis.usgs.gov/padus/data/history/.) Due to the completeness and complexity of these data, it is highly recommended to review the Supplemental Information Section of the metadata record as well as the Data Use Constraints, to better understand data partnerships as well as see tips and ideas of appropriate uses of the data and how to parse out the data that you are looking for. For more information regarding the PAD-US dataset please visit, http://gapanalysis.usgs.gov/padus/. To find more data resources as well as view example analysis performed using PAD-US data visit, http://gapanalysis.usgs.gov/padus/resources/. The PAD-US dataset and data standard are compiled and maintained by the USGS Gap Analysis Program, http://gapanalysis.usgs.gov/ . For more information about data standards and how the data are aggregated please review the “Standards and Methods Manual for PAD-US,” http://gapanalysis.usgs.gov/padus/data/standards/ .

  11. d

    Data from: Map showing inventory and regional susceptibility for Holocene...

    • dataone.org
    Updated Dec 1, 2016
    + more versions
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    Brabb, E.E.; Colgan, J.P.; Best, T.C. (2016). Map showing inventory and regional susceptibility for Holocene debris flows and related fast moving landslides in the conterminous United States: Raster data [Dataset]. https://dataone.org/datasets/5155b1e4-7324-4094-8e83-62746b62a5b0
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 1, 2016
    Dataset provided by
    United States Geological Surveyhttp://www.usgs.gov/
    Authors
    Brabb, E.E.; Colgan, J.P.; Best, T.C.
    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 1928 - Jan 1, 1999
    Area covered
    Contiguous United States, United States,
    Variables measured
    Debris-flow susceptibility grid cell value
    Description

    Debris flows, debris avalanches, mud flows and lahars are fast-moving landslides that occur in a wide variety of environments throughout the world. They are particularly dangerous to life and property because they move quickly, destroy objects in their paths, and can strike with little warning. The purpose of this map is to show where debris flows have occurred in the conterminous United States and where these slope movements might be expected in the future.

  12. d

    Data from: Map showing inventory and regional susceptibility for Holocene...

    • search.dataone.org
    Updated Dec 1, 2016
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    Brabb, E.E.; Colgan, J.P.; Best, T.C. (2016). Map showing inventory and regional susceptibility for Holocene debris flows and related fast moving landslides in the conterminous United States: vector data [Dataset]. https://search.dataone.org/view/f4b71e04-dc1f-4f96-8de1-bf1dbcbd916c
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 1, 2016
    Dataset provided by
    United States Geological Surveyhttp://www.usgs.gov/
    Authors
    Brabb, E.E.; Colgan, J.P.; Best, T.C.
    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 1928 - Jan 1, 1999
    Area covered
    Variables measured
    REF, STATE, DFTYPE
    Description

    Debris flows, debris avalanches, mud flows and lahars are fast-moving landslides that occur in a wide variety of environments throughout the world. They are particularly dangerous to life and property because they move quickly, destroy objects in their paths, and can strike with little warning. The purpose of this map is to show where debris flows have occurred in the conterminous United States and where these slope movements might be expected in the future.

  13. a

    Fayette County Ohio GIS Web Map

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Apr 4, 2018
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    Fayette County Ohio GIS (2018). Fayette County Ohio GIS Web Map [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/fayettegis::fayette-county-ohio-gis-web-map/about
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 4, 2018
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Fayette County Ohio GIS
    Area covered
    Description

    A web map used to access tax parcel, boundary, ownership, acreage, survey, zoning and tax information. Errors and Omissions Do Exist.The information provided is for reference only and subject to independent verification. User assumes all responsibility for its use.https://www.fayette-co-oh.com/Fayette County ProfileFayette County is a county located in the U.S. state of Ohio. Its county seat is Washington Court House. Fayette County was formed on March 1, 1810 from portions of Highland County and Ross County. It was named after Marie-Joseph Motier, Marquis de La Fayette, a French general and politician who took the side of the Colonials during the American Revolutionary War and who played an important role in the French Revolution.Fayette County is a part of the Virginia Military survey, which was reserved in 1783, to be allotted to Virginia soldiers. This district includes the entire counties of Adams, Brown, Clermont, Clinton, Highland, Fayette, Madison and Union; and a portion of the counties of Scioto, Pike, Ross, Pickaway, Franklin, Delaware, Marion, Hardin, Logan, Champaign, Clarke, Greene, Warren and Hamilton.Fayette County was formed January 19, 1810 (took effect March 1st) from Ross and Highland counties. Beginning at the southwest corner of Pickaway, running north “with the line of said county to the corner of Madison; thence west with the line of said Madison county to the line of Greene county; thence south with the line of Greene county to the southeast corner thereof; thence east five miles; thence south to the line of Highland county; thence east with said line to Paint Creek; thence in a straight line to the beginning.” All the lower portion was taken from Highland and the upper from Ross.The first portion of land entered within the territory of what is now Fayette county, was a part of original surveys Nos. 243 and 772, lying partly in Clinton county. The first survey lying wholly within Fayette county was No. 463, in what is now Madison township, surveyed for Thomas Overton by John O’Bannon June 30, 1776.The original townships were Jefferson, Greene, Wayne, Madison, Paint and Union. Concord township was formed in April 1818, from Greene. Marion township was formed in June, 1840 from Madison. Perry township was formed June 4, 1845, from Wayne and Greene. Jasper township was formed from Jefferson and Concord December 2, 1845.Washington C.H. was laid out originally on a part of entry 757, which contained 1200 acres and belonged to Benjamin Temple, of Logan county, Kentucky, who donated 150 acres to Fayette county, on condition that it be used as the site of the county seat. The deed of conveyance was made December 1, 1810, by Thomas S. Hind, attorney for Temple, to Robert Stewart, who was appointed by the legislature as director for the town of Washington. The town was laid off some time between December 1, 1810, and February 26, 1811, the latter being the date of the record of the town plat.Bloomingburg (originally called New Lexington) was laid out in 1815, by Solomon Bowers, and originally contained 34 and ¾ acres. On March 4, 1816, Bowers laid out and added twenty more lots. The name of the town was later changed to Bloomingburg by act of the legislature. The town was incorporated by act of the legislature, February 5, 1847.Jeffersonville was laid out March 1, 1831, by Walter B. Write and Chipman Robinson, on 100 acres of land belonging to them, they started selling the lots at $5 each. The town incorporated March 17, 1838. The first house was erected by Robert Wyley.The first railroad, now the C. & M. V., was completed in 1852; the second, now the Detroit Southern, in 1875; the third, now the C.H. & D. in 1879; and the fourth, now the B. & O. S. W., in 1884.The first permanent settler (probably) was a Mr. Wolf who settled in what is now Wayne township, in about the year 1796. - Circa 1886 - Map of Fayette County, Ohio. Issued by the Fayette County Record.

  14. VDOT Designated Truck Routes and Length Restrictions Map

    • virginiaroads.org
    • data.virginia.gov
    • +1more
    Updated May 21, 2019
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    Virginia Department of Transportation (2019). VDOT Designated Truck Routes and Length Restrictions Map [Dataset]. https://www.virginiaroads.org/maps/37996a21073e4cdabf054f3ab705947c
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    Dataset updated
    May 21, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    Virginia Department Of Transportation
    Authors
    Virginia Department of Transportation
    Area covered
    Description

    THIS MAP SHOWS THE FOLLOWING:Designated Highways on the state-maintained system. The National Network and Virginia Qualifying Highways include all interstates and certain other highways respectively, with one road-mile of access permissible off these routes to access terminals, fuel, food, rest, and repairs (except in cities and towns, or in Henrico and Arlington Counties where permission is required from those localities). The Virginia Access portion includes certain other primary and secondary routes where no access is allowed off the system. LIMITATIONS & EXCLUSIONS REGARDING TRUCK ROUTES & RESTRICTIONS PROVIDED ON THIS MAP1. The information presented applies only to the highway systems maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT). Additional STAA access or restrictions may apply in incorporated cities and towns, and on secondary roads (numbered 600 or higher) in Henrico and Arlington Counties.2. Access to, or restrictions on, the indicated routes for the specified vehicles is applicable unless other restrictions or limitations apply due to weight, height, or width; incidents or construction; or as otherwise indicated by signs on the highway.3. To the best of our knowledge the information provided is updated on a weekly basis or as received from Districts. It is the responsibility of the highway user to ensure their information is current and correct.A permit for additional access off the state maintained system may be requested by contacting the Department of Motor Vehicles at (804) 497-7135. For additional access in cities and towns and in Henrico and Arlington Counties contact officials in those localities.

  15. National Land Cover Data (NLCD), 1992

    • search.dataone.org
    Updated Oct 14, 2013
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    Cary Institute Of Ecosystem Studies; Jarlath O'Neil-Dunne (2013). National Land Cover Data (NLCD), 1992 [Dataset]. https://search.dataone.org/view/knb-lter-bes.202.570
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 14, 2013
    Dataset provided by
    Long Term Ecological Research Networkhttp://www.lternet.edu/
    Authors
    Cary Institute Of Ecosystem Studies; Jarlath O'Neil-Dunne
    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 2004 - Nov 17, 2011
    Area covered
    Description

    1992 National Land Cover Dataset (NLCD) for the Baltimore MSA. The National Land Cover Dataset was compiled from Landsat satellite TM imagery (circa 1992) with a spatial resolution of 30 meters and supplemented by various ancillary data (where available). The analysis and interpretation of the satellite imagery was conducted using very large, sometimes multi-State image mosaics (i.e. up to 18 Landsat scenes). Using a relatively small number of aerial photographs for 'ground truth', the thematic interpretations were necessarily conducted from a spatially-broad perspective. Furthermore, the accuracy assessments (see below) correspond to 'federal regions' which are groupings of contiguous States. Thus, the reliability of the data is greatest at the State or multi-State level. The statistical accuracy of the data is known only for the region. Important Caution Advisory With this in mind, users are cautioned to carefully scrutinize the data to see if they are of sufficient reliability before attempting to use the dataset for larger-scale or local analyses. This evaluation must be made that the NLCD represents conditions in the early 1990s. The Maryland portion of the NLCD was created as part of land cover mapping activities for Federal Region III that includes the States of, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia. The NLCD classification contains 21 different land cover categories with a spatial resolution of 30 meters. The NLCD was produced as a cooperative effort between the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) to produce a, land cover data layer for the conterminous U.S. using early 1990s Landsat thematic mapper (TM) data purchased by the Multi-resolution Characterization (MRLC) Consortium. The MRLC Consortium is a partnership of federal agencies that produce or use land cover data. Partners include the USGS (National Mapping, Biological Resources, and Divisions), US EPA, the U.S. Forest Service, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. This is part of a collection of 221 Baltimore Ecosystem Study metadata records that point to a geodatabase. The geodatabase is available online and is considerably large. Upon request, and under certain arrangements, it can be shipped on media, such as a usb hard drive. The geodatabase is roughly 51.4 Gb in size, consisting of 4,914 files in 160 folders. Although this metadata record and the others like it are not rich with attributes, it is nonetheless made available because the data that it represents could be indeed useful. This is part of a collection of 221 Baltimore Ecosystem Study metadata records that point to a geodatabase. The geodatabase is available online and is considerably large. Upon request, and under certain arrangements, it can be shipped on media, such as a usb hard drive. The geodatabase is roughly 51.4 Gb in size, consisting of 4,914 files in 160 folders. Although this metadata record and the others like it are not rich with attributes, it is nonetheless made available because the data that it represents could be indeed useful.

  16. a

    K2P RoadPlan pkg

    • conservation-abra.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated May 10, 2023
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    Allegheny-Blue Ridge Alliance (2023). K2P RoadPlan pkg [Dataset]. https://conservation-abra.hub.arcgis.com/maps/ddbaef9b77444128b06f5cc6f1802766
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    Dataset updated
    May 10, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Allegheny-Blue Ridge Alliance
    Area covered
    Description

    This tile layer, Kerens to Parsons Road Plan (under construction), displays the road design plan for the Kerens to Parsons section of Corridor H, in Tucker County, West Virginia. The data associated with this layer was obtained from the West Virginia Department of Transportation project website. This is not an official or authoritative data set.Source and date:The source of this data was a PDF (Exhibit_3) obtained from the WV DOT Corridor H project website. Accessed May of 2023.Purpose:The road design PDF was created to provide a planned route for the extensive Corridor H project. This plan has a lot of detail and can be used as a reference.Processing:Roadway features were extracted from the source PDF to TIF images. Those images were then georeferenced and mosaicked, to produce a layer with a general view of the plan. This is not an official or authoritative data set.Symbolization:The following symbolization is how it appears in the Parsons to Davis online map provided by ABRA.Kerens to Parsons Road Plan: thin pink lines

  17. a

    PAD-US Park Boundaries 2022

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • indianamap.org
    • +1more
    Updated Sep 21, 2023
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    IndianaMap (2023). PAD-US Park Boundaries 2022 [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/INMap::pad-us-park-boundaries-2022
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 21, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    IndianaMap
    License

    MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    The USGS Protected Areas Database of the United States (PAD-US) is the nation's inventory of protected areas, including public land and voluntarily provided private protected areas, identified as an A-16 National Geospatial Data Asset in the Cadastre Theme ( https://communities.geoplatform.gov/ngda-cadastre/ ). The PAD-US is an ongoing project with several published versions of a spatial database including areas dedicated to the preservation of biological diversity, and other natural (including extraction), recreational, or cultural uses, managed for these purposes through legal or other effective means. The database was originally designed to support biodiversity assessments; however, its scope expanded in recent years to include all open space public and nonprofit lands and waters. Most are public lands owned in fee (the owner of the property has full and irrevocable ownership of the land); however, permanent and long-term easements, leases, agreements, Congressional (e.g. 'Wilderness Area'), Executive (e.g. 'National Monument'), and administrative designations (e.g. 'Area of Critical Environmental Concern') documented in agency management plans are also included. The PAD-US strives to be a complete inventory of U.S. public land and other protected areas, compiling “best available” data provided by managing agencies and organizations. The PAD-US geodatabase maps and describes areas using thirty-six attributes and five separate feature classes representing the U.S. protected areas network: Fee (ownership parcels), Designation, Easement, Marine, Proclamation and Other Planning Boundaries. An additional Combined feature class includes the full PAD-US inventory to support data management, queries, web mapping services, and analyses. The Feature Class (FeatClass) field in the Combined layer allows users to extract data types as needed. A Federal Data Reference file geodatabase lookup table (PADUS3_0Combined_Federal_Data_References) facilitates the extraction of authoritative federal data provided or recommended by managing agencies from the Combined PAD-US inventory. This PAD-US Version 3.0 dataset includes a variety of updates from the previous Version 2.1 dataset (USGS, 2020, https://doi.org/10.5066/P92QM3NT ), achieving goals to: 1) Annually update and improve spatial data representing the federal estate for PAD-US applications; 2) Update state and local lands data as state data-steward and PAD-US Team resources allow; and 3) Automate data translation efforts to increase PAD-US update efficiency. The following list summarizes the integration of "best available" spatial data to ensure public lands and other protected areas from all jurisdictions are represented in the PAD-US (other data were transferred from PAD-US 2.1). Federal updates - The USGS remains committed to updating federal fee owned lands data and major designation changes in annual PAD-US updates, where authoritative data provided directly by managing agencies are available or alternative data sources are recommended. The following is a list of updates or revisions associated with the federal estate: 1) Major update of the Federal estate (fee ownership parcels, easement interest, and management designations where available), including authoritative data from 8 agencies: Bureau of Land Management (BLM), U.S. Census Bureau (Census Bureau), Department of Defense (DOD), U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), National Park Service (NPS), Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), U.S. Forest Service (USFS), and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The federal theme in PAD-US is developed in close collaboration with the Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) Federal Lands Working Group (FLWG, https://communities.geoplatform.gov/ngda-govunits/federal-lands-workgroup/ ). 2) Improved the representation (boundaries and attributes) of the National Park Service, U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service lands, in collaboration with agency data-stewards, in response to feedback from the PAD-US Team and stakeholders. 3) Added a Federal Data Reference file geodatabase lookup table (PADUS3_0Combined_Federal_Data_References) to the PAD-US 3.0 geodatabase to facilitate the extraction (by Data Provider, Dataset Name, and/or Aggregator Source) of authoritative data provided directly (or recommended) by federal managing agencies from the full PAD-US inventory. A summary of the number of records (Frequency) and calculated GIS Acres (vs Documented Acres) associated with features provided by each Aggregator Source is included; however, the number of records may vary from source data as the "State Name" standard is applied to national files. The Feature Class (FeatClass) field in the table and geodatabase describe the data type to highlight overlapping features in the full inventory (e.g. Designation features often overlap Fee features) and to assist users in building queries for applications as needed. 4) Scripted the translation of the Department of Defense, Census Bureau, and Natural Resource Conservation Service source data into the PAD-US format to increase update efficiency. 5) Revised conservation measures (GAP Status Code, IUCN Category) to more accurately represent protected and conserved areas. For example, Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) Waterfowl Production Area Wetland Easements changed from GAP Status Code 2 to 4 as spatial data currently represents the complete parcel (about 10.54 million acres primarily in North Dakota and South Dakota). Only aliquot parts of these parcels are documented under wetland easement (1.64 million acres). These acreages are provided by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and are referenced in the PAD-US geodatabase Easement feature class 'Comments' field. State updates - The USGS is committed to building capacity in the state data-steward network and the PAD-US Team to increase the frequency of state land updates, as resources allow. The USGS supported efforts to significantly increase state inventory completeness with the integration of local parks data in the PAD-US 2.1, and developed a state-to-PAD-US data translation script during PAD-US 3.0 development to pilot in future updates. Additional efforts are in progress to support the technical and organizational strategies needed to increase the frequency of state updates. The PAD-US 3.0 included major updates to the following three states: 1) California - added or updated state, regional, local, and nonprofit lands data from the California Protected Areas Database (CPAD), managed by GreenInfo Network, and integrated conservation and recreation measure changes following review coordinated by the data-steward with state managing agencies. Developed a data translation Python script (see Process Step 2 Source Data Documentation) in collaboration with the data-steward to increase the accuracy and efficiency of future PAD-US updates from CPAD. 2) Virginia - added or updated state, local, and nonprofit protected areas data (and removed legacy data) from the Virginia Conservation Lands Database, provided by the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation's Natural Heritage Program, and integrated conservation and recreation measure changes following review by the data-steward. 3) West Virginia - added or updated state, local, and nonprofit protected areas data provided by the West Virginia University, GIS Technical Center. For more information regarding the PAD-US dataset please visit, https://www.usgs.gov/gapanalysis/PAD-US/. For more information about data aggregation please review the PAD-US Data Manual available at https://www.usgs.gov/core-science-systems/science-analytics-and-synthesis/gap/pad-us-data-manual . A version history of PAD-US updates is summarized below (See https://www.usgs.gov/core-science-systems/science-analytics-and-synthesis/gap/pad-us-data-history for more information): 1) First posted - April 2009 (Version 1.0 - available from the PAD-US: Team pad-us@usgs.gov). 2) Revised - May 2010 (Version 1.1 - available from the PAD-US: Team pad-us@usgs.gov). 3) Revised - April 2011 (Version 1.2 - available from the PAD-US: Team pad-us@usgs.gov). 4) Revised - November 2012 (Version 1.3) https://doi.org/10.5066/F79Z92XD 5) Revised - May 2016 (Version 1.4) https://doi.org/10.5066/F7G73BSZ 6) Revised - September 2018 (Version 2.0) https://doi.org/10.5066/P955KPLE 7) Revised - September 2020 (Version 2.1) https://doi.org/10.5066/P92QM3NT 8) Revised - January 2022 (Version 3.0) https://doi.org/10.5066/P9Q9LQ4B Comparing protected area trends between PAD-US versions is not recommended without consultation with USGS as many changes reflect improvements to agency and organization GIS systems, or conservation and recreation measure classification, rather than actual changes in protected area acquisition on the ground.

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The PUG User Group (2022). West Virginia Parcels [Dataset]. https://home-pugonline.hub.arcgis.com/maps/ba9748f464db4f1487bb372515f354b8

West Virginia Parcels

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Dataset updated
Apr 5, 2022
Dataset authored and provided by
The PUG User Group
Area covered
Description

The WV_Parcel data is a composite dataset of individual county parcel data. Each county provides a unique dataset, with different temporal currencies, attributes and geographies.Website Link: https://www.mapwv.gov/

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