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TwitterMaine Statewide Orthoimagery Project 2018 for York, ME. All imagery was collected during the 2018 Spring flying season during leaf-off conditions for deciduous vegetation in the State of Maine. The sun angle was at 30-degrees or greater, and streams were within their normal banks. During the flight planning and acquisition, a significant effort was made to limit clouds, snow, fog, haze, smoke, or other ground obscuring conditions in the imagery. In no case does the maximum cloud cover exceed 5% per image. Within the immediate areas of power plants, factories, or controlled agricultural burns some steam or smoke and/or shadows may be visible on imagery. The Maine GeoLibrary Board has developed a statewide, 5-year, rotating orthoimagery acquisition program for Maine to facilitate state, regional and local government GIS base mapping in an efficient and cost effective program. The State of Maine will use digital orthoimagery for the development of various base map products in a computerized GIS that will support the needs of the state and multiple stakeholders through applications, such as, multi-jurisdictional homeland security mapping applications, state and county emergency management applications, regional and local planning, state and local public safety applications, economic development and other GIS business objectives.
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TwitterBase and overlay zones for the Town of York, Maine. The data shown here is for reference purposes only. Official copies of this data can be viewed upon request at the Town of York Clerk's office or through the Code or Planning Staff at the Town of York, Maine.
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TwitterFEMA Flood Zone data from 2002 that is clipped to the Town of York, Maine. Official copies of the data seen here can be viewed in the Town of York Code Enforcement office or through the Town of York Floodplain Administrator.
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TwitterFEMA Flood Zone data from 2002 that is clipped to the Town of York, Maine. Official copies of the data seen here can be viewed in the Town of York Code Enforcement office or through the Town of York Floodplain Administrator.
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TwitterThese data were automated to provide an accurate high-resolution historical shoreline of York Harbor, ME suitable as a geographic information system (GIS) data layer. These data are derived from shoreline maps that were produced by the NOAA National Ocean Service including its predecessor agencies which were based on an office interpretation of imagery and/or field survey. The NGS attribution scheme 'Coastal Cartographic Object Attribute Source Table (C-COAST)' was developed to conform the attribution of various sources of shoreline data into one attribution catalog. C-COAST is not a recognized standard, but was influenced by the International Hydrographic Organization's S-57 Object-Attribute standard so the data would be more accurately translated into S-57. This resource is a member of https://inport.nmfs.noaa.gov/inport/item/39808
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TwitterBase and overlay zones as adopted by the voters of the Town of York, Maine. The data shown here is for reference purposes only. Official copies of this data can be viewed upon request at the Town of York Clerk's office or through the Code or Planning Staff at the Town of York, Maine
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Market Hotness: Listing Views per Property in York County, ME was -1.75754 % Chg. in August of 2025, according to the United States Federal Reserve. Historically, Market Hotness: Listing Views per Property in York County, ME reached a record high of 70.83022 in January of 2021 and a record low of -19.91392 in May of 2022. Trading Economics provides the current actual value, an historical data chart and related indicators for Market Hotness: Listing Views per Property in York County, ME - last updated from the United States Federal Reserve on September of 2025.
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TwitterBase and overlay zones for the Town of York, Maine. The data shown here is for reference purposes only. Official copies of this data can be viewed upon request at the Town of York Clerk's office or through the Code or Planning Staff at the Town of York, Maine.
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TwitterBase and overlay zones for the Town of York, Maine. The data shown here is for reference purposes only. Official copies of this data can be viewed upon request at the Town of York Clerk's office or through the Code or Planning Staff at the Town of York, Maine.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Market Hotness: Listing Views per Property Versus the United States in York County, ME was 2.95222 Ratio in August of 2025, according to the United States Federal Reserve. Historically, Market Hotness: Listing Views per Property Versus the United States in York County, ME reached a record high of 3.41059 in August of 2023 and a record low of 1.26190 in December of 2016. Trading Economics provides the current actual value, an historical data chart and related indicators for Market Hotness: Listing Views per Property Versus the United States in York County, ME - last updated from the United States Federal Reserve on September of 2025.
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TwitterBase and overlay zones as adopted by the voters of the Town of York, Maine. The data shown here is for reference purposes only. Official copies of this data can be viewed upon request at the Town of York Clerk's office or through the Code or Planning Staff at the Town of York, Maine
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TwitterTile Download Link Ortho Imagery - As the prime contractor, Bradstreet Consultants, Inc. used the aerial photography flown in one session on April 23-26, 2007, by The Sanborn Map Compay, Inc. of Charlotte, NC who acquired approximately 4,000 photos @ a resolution of 0.5' pixel (similar to 1"=600') with airborne GPS using a Z/I Digital Mapping Aerial Camera. Bradstreet Consultants, Inc. painted and repainted ground targets for photo survey control points (~400) to support full analytical aerotriangulation. The aerotriangulation solution was used to set up each stereopair of photos for orthorectification and DTM compilation. The ortho imagery was rectified from the natural color digial imagery employing a digital terrain model (DTM) collected from the 2007 imagery and supplemented from updating some town's original DTM and some town's from scratch using the imagery in softcopy (digital) stereoplotter in the Kork KDMS and DAT/EM AutoCAD DWG format.
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TwitterLocations of tidal marshes in Maine as mapped by the Maine Natural Areas Program, Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry. Data are mapped at 1:24K or larger scale.
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TwitterThis crash dataset does include crashes from 2023 up until near the middle of July that have been reviewed and loaded into the Maine DOT Asset Warehouse. This crash dataset is static and was put together as an example showing the clustering functionality in ArcGIS Online. In addition the dataset was designed with columns that include data items at the Unit and Persons levels of a crash. The feature layer visualization by default will show the crashes aggregated by the predominant crash type along the corridor. The aggregation settings can be toggled off if desired and crashes can be viewed by the type of crash. Both the aggregation and standard Feature Layer configurations do include popup settings that have been configured.As mentioned above, the Feature Layer itself has been configured to include a standard unique value renderer based on Crash Type and the layer also includes clustering aggregation configurations that could be toggled on or off if the user were to add this layer to a new ArcGIS Online Map. Clustering and aggregation options in ArcGIS Online provide functionality that is not yet available in the latest version of ArcGIS Pro (<=3.1). This additional configuration includes how to show the popup content for the cluster of crashes. Users interested in learning more about clustering and aggregation in ArcGIS Online and some more advanced options should see the following ESRI article (https://www.esri.com/arcgis-blog/products/arcgis-online/mapping/summarize-and-explore-point-clusters-with-arcade-in-popups/).Popups have been configured for both the clusters and the individual crashes. The individual crashes themselves do include multiple tables within a single text element. The bottom table does include data items that pertain to at a maximum of three units for a crash. If a crash includes just one unit then this bottom table will include only 2 columns. For each additional unit involved in a crash an additional column will appear listing out those data items that pertain to that unit up to a maximum of 3 units. There are crashes that do include more than 3 units and information for these additional units is not currently included in the dataset at the moment. The crash data items available in this Feature Layer representation includes many of the same data items from the Crash Layer (10 Years) that are available for use in Maine DOT's Public Map Viewer Application that can be accessed from the following link(https://www.maine.gov/mdot/mapviewer/?added=Crashes%20-%2010%20Years). However this crash data includes data items that are not yet available in other GIS Crash Departments used in visualizations by the department currently. These additional data items can be aggregated using other presentation types such as a Chart, but could also be filtered in the map. Users should refer to the unit count associated to each crash and be aware when a units information may not be visible in those situations where there are four or more units involved in a crash.
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TwitterMaine Statewide Orthoimagery Project - During the spring of 2020 new 4-band (R, G, B, and NIR) aerial imagery was acquired covering the entire project area using Leica ADS digital camera systems. All imagery was collected during the 2022 spring flying season during leaf-off conditions for deciduous vegetation in the State of Maine. The sun angle shall be 25-degrees or greater, and streams should be within their normal banks, unless otherwise negotiated. During flight planning and acquisition, a significant effort is made to limit clouds, snow (please note: small amounts of snow such as piles in parking lots, extreme shaded areas, within dense evergreens or unpopulated northern facing slopes may be acceptable), fog, haze, smoke, or other ground obscuring conditions in the imagery. In no case will the maximum cloud cover exceed 5% per image. Within the immediate areas of power plants, factories, or controlled agricultural burns some steam or smoke and/or shadows may be visible on imagery. Woolpert produced new 8-bit, 4-band stacked color digital orthoimagery files in GeoTIFF format with TFW “world file” at a 45cm (18-inch), 30cm (12-inch), 15cm (6-inch) and 7.5cm (3-inch).The Maine GeoLibrary Board has developed a statewide, 5-year, rotating orthoimagery acquisition program for Maine to facilitate state, regional and local government GIS base mapping in an efficient and cost-effective program. The State of Maine will use digital orthoimagery for the development of various base map products in a computerized GIS that will support the needs of the state and multiple stakeholders through applications, such as, multi-jurisdictional homeland security mapping applications, state and county emergency management applications, regional and local planning, state and local public safety applications, economic development and other GIS business objectives.
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TwitterGIS dataset includes surveyed shoreline positions for most of the larger beach systems along the southern to mid-coast Maine coastline in York, Cumberland, and Sagadahoc counties. Data were collected using a Leica GS-15 network Real Time Kinematic Global Positioning System (RTK-GPS), and in areas with poor cellular coverage, an Ashtech Z-Xtreme RTK-GPS. Both systems typically have horizontal and vertical accuracies of less than 5 cm. In general, surveys are attempted to be repeated at approximately the same month in each consecutive survey year, however this is not always possible. As a result, the number of available shoreline positions may vary by beach.The line feature class includes the following attributes:BEACH_NAME: The name of the beach where a shoreline was surveyed.SURVEY_DATE: The date (year, month, day; for example 20160901 would be September 1, 2016) upon which a shoreline was surveyed.SURVEY_YEAR: The year (e.g., 2016) within which a shoreline was surveyed.SHAPE_LENGTH: The length, in meters, of the surveyed shoreline.
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TwitterMaine Statewide Orthoimagery Project 2018 for York, ME. All imagery was collected during the 2018 Spring flying season during leaf-off conditions for deciduous vegetation in the State of Maine. The sun angle was at 30-degrees or greater, and streams were within their normal banks. During the flight planning and acquisition, a significant effort was made to limit clouds, snow, fog, haze, smoke, or other ground obscuring conditions in the imagery. In no case does the maximum cloud cover exceed 5% per image. Within the immediate areas of power plants, factories, or controlled agricultural burns some steam or smoke and/or shadows may be visible on imagery. The Maine GeoLibrary Board has developed a statewide, 5-year, rotating orthoimagery acquisition program for Maine to facilitate state, regional and local government GIS base mapping in an efficient and cost effective program. The State of Maine will use digital orthoimagery for the development of various base map products in a computerized GIS that will support the needs of the state and multiple stakeholders through applications, such as, multi-jurisdictional homeland security mapping applications, state and county emergency management applications, regional and local planning, state and local public safety applications, economic development and other GIS business objectives.