Name: US Coast Guard - EPA Jurisdictional Boundary
Display Field: LENGTH
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolyline
Description: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency / U.S. Coast Guard jurisdictional Boundary map is used for determining the location of the USEPA and USCG agency jurisdictional boundaries. The USEPA / USCG jurisdictional boundary is a line running from the Oregon border to the Mexican border and is adjacent to the coastline. The boundary was developed from text descriptions provided in the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Region 9 mainland Regional Contingency Plan dated March 17, 1994. The Bolsa Chica Ecological Reserve was added to the EPA's jurisdiction in 2011.
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Description: NAVTEQ Administrative Area Boundaries 2 (State Boundaries) for Region 9. There are five Administrative Area Boundaries layers (1, 2, 3, 4, 5). These layers contain the boundaries that divide countries into administrative areas such as country, state, county, city, or settlement. These designations vary on a country by country basis. (In the US for example, the AdminBndy2 layer contains State boundaries, the AdminBndy3 layer contains County boundaries, and the AdminBndy4 layer contains City boundaries.) See Administrative Level Coding and Boundary Features in the NAVSTREETS manual for a list of the administrative area types by country. This layer is used for map visualisation. Note that an Administrative Area Boundary is represented by multiple region objects when it has names in multiple languages. This dataset is a subset of the full NAVTEQ NAVSTREETS database.
With the most accurate geometry, the highest number of attributes, and the most complete detailed coverage, NAVTEQ data is the ideal resource for Fleet applications that offer route planning and optimization, and GIS geocoding and other applications that require superior accuracy, and location-enabled services, from Personal Navigation Devices (PNDs) and mobile social networking, to location-enabled entertainment, leisure, and business applications. Products, applications, and services that rely on digital mapping data can ensure superior performance and accuracy by using NAVSTREETS. NAVTEQ data drives most in-vehicle navigation systems around the world, the top routing Web sites, and the leading brands of wireless devices. Designed for rapid display and retrieval of attributes for routing, NAVTEQ data additionally provides support for express mail services, emergency and government routing plans, efficient field service management, wireless Location Based Services (LBS), and delivery of real-time traffic information.
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Description: NAVTEQ Administrative Area Boundaries 3 (County Boundaries) for Region 9. There are five Administrative Area Boundaries layers (1, 2, 3, 4, 5). These layers contain the boundaries that divide countries into administrative areas such as country, state, county, city, or settlement. These designations vary on a country by country basis. (In the US for example, the AdminBndy2 layer contains State boundaries, the AdminBndy3 layer contains County boundaries, and the AdminBndy4 layer contains City boundaries.) See Administrative Level Coding and Boundary Features in the NAVSTREETS manual for a list of the administrative area types by country. This layer is used for map visualisation. Note that an Administrative Area Boundary is represented by multiple region objects when it has names in multiple languages. This dataset is a subset of the full NAVTEQ NAVSTREETS database.
With the most accurate geometry, the highest number of attributes, and the most complete detailed coverage, NAVTEQ data is the ideal resource for Fleet applications that offer route planning and optimization, and GIS geocoding and other applications that require superior accuracy, and location-enabled services, from Personal Navigation Devices (PNDs) and mobile social networking, to location-enabled entertainment, leisure, and business applications. Products, applications, and services that rely on digital mapping data can ensure superior performance and accuracy by using NAVSTREETS. NAVTEQ data drives most in-vehicle navigation systems around the world, the top routing Web sites, and the leading brands of wireless devices. Designed for rapid display and retrieval of attributes for routing, NAVTEQ data additionally provides support for express mail services, emergency and government routing plans, efficient field service management, wireless Location Based Services (LBS), and delivery of real-time traffic information.
<br><A HREF="https://edg.epa.gov/metadata/catalog/search/resource/details.page?uuid={B5F3F5CE-D9E6-43BB-A581-6085A3F82741}" target="_blank"><IMG SRC="https://edg.epa.gov/clipship/doc/metadata.png" BORDER=0></A>
Description: NAVTEQ Administrative Area Boundaries 4 (City Boundaries) for Region 9. There are five Administrative Area Boundaries layers (1, 2, 3, 4, 5). These layers contain the boundaries that divide countries into administrative areas such as country, state, county, city, or settlement. These designations vary on a country by country basis. (In the US for example, the AdminBndy2 layer contains State boundaries, the AdminBndy3 layer contains County boundaries, and the AdminBndy4 layer contains City boundaries.) See Administrative Level Coding and Boundary Features in the NAVSTREETS manual for a list of the administrative area types by country. This layer is used for map visualisation. Note that an Administrative Area Boundary is represented by multiple region objects when it has names in multiple languages. This dataset is a subset of the full NAVTEQ NAVSTREETS database.
With the most accurate geometry, the highest number of attributes, and the most complete detailed coverage, NAVTEQ data is the ideal resource for Fleet applications that offer route planning and optimization, and GIS geocoding and other applications that require superior accuracy, and location-enabled services, from Personal Navigation Devices (PNDs) and mobile social networking, to location-enabled entertainment, leisure, and business applications. Products, applications, and services that rely on digital mapping data can ensure superior performance and accuracy by using NAVSTREETS. NAVTEQ data drives most in-vehicle navigation systems around the world, the top routing Web sites, and the leading brands of wireless devices. Designed for rapid display and retrieval of attributes for routing, NAVTEQ data additionally provides support for express mail services, emergency and government routing plans, efficient field service management, wireless Location Based Services (LBS), and delivery of real-time traffic information.
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Description: Dataset of all Indian Reservations in US EPA Region 9 (California, Arizona and Nevada) with some reservation border areas of adjacent states included (adjacent areas of Colorado, New Mexico and Utah). Reservation boundaries are compiled from multiple sources and are derived from several different source scales. Information such as reservation type, primary tribe name are included with the feature dataset. Public Domain Allotments are not included in this data set.
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Description: Country of Mexico. Digitized from 1:1,000,000 source maps produced by the Instituto Nacional De Estadistica Geografia E Informatica (INEGI), 1982. Each administrative unit (32 states in all) has the following associated data items which were also obtained from INEGI: population in 1990; square kilometers; population density; population by gender; population 6 to 14 years of age that can read and write; population 6 to 14 years of age that cannot read and write; literate population 15 years of age and older; and, illiterate population 15 years of age and older. Data items listed in attached (1a.2), as well as population in 1980, can also be linked to this coverage.
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