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Surface Disturbance Footprint from Development for the Western United States

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
1999
End Date
2014

Citation

Carr, N.B., Leinwand, I.I.F., and Wood, D.J.A., 2016, A Multiscale Index of Landscape Intactness for the Western United States: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://dx.doi.org/10.5066/F75H7DCW.

Summary

The surface disturbance footprint raster data set quantifies the percent surface disturbance from development at a 90-meter resolution. The surface disturbance footprint is used to compute a multiscale index of landscape intactness for the Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM) landscape approach. The surface disturbance footprint is mapped for the western United States (17 states), by compiling and combining spatial data for four development disturbance variable classes. Development classes include urban land cover (impervious surface), agriculture (cropland), energy and mineral extraction and transport (oil and gas wells, solar arrays, wind turbines, surface mines, pipelines, and transmission lines), and transportation (roads, railroads).

Contacts

Attached Files

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Landscape_Intactness_Development_Footprint.tfw 94 Bytes text/plain
Landscape_Intactness_Development_Footprint.tif.aux.xml 2.45 KB application/xml
3.44 GB image/geotiff
Landscape_Intactness_Development_Footprint.jpg thumbnail 3.31 MB image/jpeg

Purpose

The purpose of the surface disturbance footprint is to estimate the cumulative surface disturbance footprint from development for the Western United States. The surface disturbance footprint is used to compute a multiscale index of landscape intactness for the Bureau of Land Management’s BLM) landscape approach.

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