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Mapping

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Mapping:
about this Topic
mapping Mapping is a major under-taking of this research program. The goal is a description of sea-floor geology with direct linkages to important biological habitats identified by cooperating agencies. Digital interpretive maps of the seabed in each study area will define sediment texture and rock types, morphology, sediment pollutant concentrations, and geological structures along with infauna, epifuana and fisheries species.
Other related USGS websites:
National Mapping Information

Content Types:
Research icon Project Information
Educational Materials icon Educational Materials
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Photographs icon Photographs
Movies icon Movies
Maps icon Maps
Publications icon Publications
Data Sets icon Data Sets

Items below are listed from most recently updated to least recently updated.

These are results 1 through 25 of 295 matches.

Publication icon Publication
EAARL Topography - Vicksburg National Military Park 2008: Bare Earth
Description: This DVD contains Lidar-derived bare earth (BE) topography GIS datasets of the Vicksburg National Military Park in Mississipi. These datasets were acquired on March 6, 2008.
updated: 2009-12-01       pages include: Data Sets icon Maps icon Publications icon

Publication icon Publication
EAARL Topography - Vicksburg National Military Park 2007: First Surface
Description: This DVD contains Lidar-derived first surface (FS) topography GIS datasets of the Vicksburg National Military Park in Mississipi. These datasets were acquired on September 12, 2007.
updated: 2009-11-01       pages include: Data Sets icon Maps icon Publications icon

Research Project icon Research Project
Cascadia Seismic Hazard Studies
Description: Investigations of Earthquake and Tsunami Hazards and History in the Pacific Northwest, specifically the Cascadia Subduction Zone.
updated: 2009-07-24       pages include: Research Materials icon Maps icon Photographs icon Movies icon

Educational Material icon Educational Materials
Equipment Used in Marine Geology Research
Description: Description and links to information on nine types of marine geology research equipment used by the USGS Western Region Coastal & Marine Geology Team
updated: 2009-07-02       pages include: Educational Materials icon Photographs icon

General Information icon General Information
WCMG Marine Facility Home Page
Description: Links to software downloads and documentation for YoNav and MudSeis systems used on Western Region Coastal and Marine Geology Team cruises.
updated: 2009-07-02       pages include: Data Sets icon

General Information icon General Information
Research Vessel Parke Snavely
Description: The USGS Western Coastal and Marine Geology Team, located in Santa Cruz and Menlo Park, CA, acquired Research Vessel Parke Snavely in November 2007. R/V Snavely is a 34’ Armstrong Catamaran with an open stern and an aluminum hull. The boat is named after Parke D. Snavely, Jr. (1919 - 2003), a pioneer of marine geology research at USGS. R/V Snavely is principally a seafloor mapping boat, used in many seafloor and nearshore operations.
updated: 2009-07-02       pages include:

Research Project icon Research Project
USGS Coral Reef Studies
Description: Coral Reef Studies conducted in Hawaii, Florida and California.
updated: 2009-06-24       pages include: Research Materials icon Educational Materials icon Photographs icon Movies icon

Publication icon Publication
General Information Product 57: South San Francisco Bay, California
Description: The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the California Coastal Conservancy and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, mapped the floor of south San Francisco Bay and adjoining land using single-beam sonar and airborne lidar (light detection and ranging). To learn more, visit http://pubs.usgs.gov/sim/2007/2987/.
updated: 2009-06-17       pages include: Publications icon

Publication icon Publication
Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5116: Topographic Change Detection at Select Archeological Sites in Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, 2006–2007
Description: Topographic change of archeological sites within the Colorado River corridor of Grand Canyon National Park (GCNP) is a subject of interest to National Park Service managers and other stakeholders in the Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program. Although long-term topographic change resulting from a variety of natural processes is typical in the Grand Canyon region, a continuing debate exists on whether and how controlled releases from Glen Canyon Dam, located immediately upstream of GCNP, are impacting rates of site erosion, artifact transport, and the preservation of archeological resources. Continued erosion of archeological sites threatens both the archeological resources and our future ability to study evidence of past cultural habitation. Understanding the causes and effects of archaeological site erosion requires a knowledge of several factors including the location and magnitude of the changes occurring in relation to archeological resources, the rate of the changes, and the relative contribution of several potential causes, including sediment depletion associated with managed flows from Glen Canyon Dam, site-specific weather patterns, visitor impacts, and long-term climate change. To obtain this information, highly accurate, spatially specific data are needed from sites undergoing change. Using terrestrial lidar data collection techniques and novel TIN- and GRID-based change-detection post-processing methods, we analyzed topographic data for nine archeological sites. The data were collected using three separate data collection efforts spanning 16 months (May 2006 to September 2007). Our results documented positive evidence of erosion, deposition, or both at six of the nine sites investigated during this time interval. In addition, we observed possible signs of change at two of the other sites. Erosion was concentrated in established gully drainages and averaged 12 cm to 17 cm in depth with maximum depths of 50 cm. Deposition was concentrated at specific locations outside of drainages but generally was spread over larger areas (tens to hundreds of square meters). Maximum depths of deposition averaged 12 cm to 15 cm and reached as much as 35 cm. Overall, we found that the spatial distribution and magnitudes of surface change are specific to each site and that a thorough understanding of the geomorphology, weather, and sand supply is requisite for a complete understanding of the data. Additional work in combining these results with site-specific weather, hydrology, and geomorphology data will assist in the development of working models for determining the causes of the documented topographic changes.
updated: 2009-06-16       pages include: Publications icon

Educational Material icon Educational Materials
Tsunami and Earthquake Research at the USGS
Description: General information on how earthquakes generate tsunamis and summaries of tsunami research.
updated: 2009-06-10       pages include: Research Materials icon Data Sets icon Maps icon Educational Materials icon Publications icon Photographs icon Movies icon

Publication icon Publication
Open-File Report 2009-1100: High-Resolution Seismic-Reflection and Marine Magnetic Data Along the Hosgri Fault Zone, Central California
Description: The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) collected high-resolution shallow seismic-reflection and marine magnetic data in June 2008 in the offshore areas between the towns of Cayucos and Pismo Beach, Calif., from the nearshore (~6-m depth) to just west of the Hosgri Fault Zone (~200-m depth). These data are in support of the California State Waters Mapping Program and the Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) between the Pacific Gas & Electric Co. and the U.S. Geological Survey. Seismic-reflection and marine magnetic data were acquired aboard the R/V Parke Snavely, using a SIG 2Mille minisparker seismic source and a Geometrics G882 cesium-vapor marine magnetometer. More than 550 km of seismic and marine magnetic data was collected simultaneously along shore-perpendicular transects spaced 800 m apart, with an additional 220 km of marine magnetometer data collected across the Hosgri Fault Zone, resulting in spacing locally as smallas 400 m. This report includes maps of the seismic-survey sections, linked to Google Earth™ software, and digital data files showing images of each transect in SEG-Y, JPEG, and TIFF formats, as well as preliminary gridded marine-magnetic-anomaly and residual-magnetic-anomaly (shallow magnetic source) maps.
updated: 2009-05-29       pages include: Publications icon

Research Project icon Research Project
USGS Northern Gulf of Mexico (NGOM)
Description: The goal of the USGS Northern Gulf of Mexico project is to understand the evolution of coastal ecosystems on the Northern Gulf Coast, the impact of human activities on these ecosystems, and the vulnerability of ecosystems and human communities to more frequent and more intense hurricanes in the future.
updated: 2009-05-28       pages include: Research Materials icon Data Sets icon Maps icon Educational Materials icon Publications icon Photographs icon Movies icon

Map icon Map
National Seafloor Mapping and Characterization
Description: Images of the sea floor off the coasts of California, Hawaii, Florida, Mississippi, Alabama, Texas, Louisiana, and Washington; images of lake floor of Lake Michigan, Crater Lake, Lake Tahoe. Backscatter and swath bathymetry, regular and in 3-D view.
updated: 2009-05-11       pages include: Data Sets icon Maps icon Publications icon Movies icon

Research Project icon Research Project
Potential San Francisco Bay Landslides During El Nino
Description: EL Nino - Actual and Potential Landslides in San Francisco Bay Area including fly-bys, photos, maps and animations
updated: 2009-05-06       pages include: Research Materials icon Maps icon Photographs icon Movies icon

Publication icon Publication
Data Series 436: Oblique Aerial Photography of the Arctic Coast of Alaska, Nulavik to Demarcation Point, August 7–10, 2006
Description: The Arctic Coastal Plain of northern Alaska, an area of strategic economic importance to the United States, is home to remote Native American communities and encompasses unique habitats of global significance. Coastal erosion along the Arctic coast is chronic and widespread; recent evidence suggests that erosion rates are among the highest in the world (up to ~16 m/yr) and may be accelerating. Coastal erosion adversely impacts energy-related infrastructure, natural shoreline habitats, and Native American communities. Climate change is thought to be a key component of recent environmental changes in the Arctic. Reduced sea-ice cover in the Arctic Ocean is one of the probable mechanisms responsible for increasing coastal exposure to wave attack and the resulting increase in erosion. Extended periods of permafrost melting and associated decrease in bluff cohesion and stability are another possible source of the increase in erosion. Several studies of selected areas on the Alaska coast document past shoreline positions and coastal change, but none have examined the entire North coast systematically. Results from these studies indicate high rates of coastal retreat that vary spatially along the coast. To address the need for a comprehensive and regionally consistent evaluation of shoreline change along the North coast of Alaska, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), as part of their Coastal and Marine Geology Program’s (CMGP) National Assessment of Shoreline Change Study, is evaluating shoreline change from Peard Bay to the United States/Canadian border, using historical maps and photography and a standardized methodology that is consistent with other shoreline-change studies along the Nation’s coastlines (for example, URL http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/shoreline-change/ (last accessed March 2, 2009). This report contains photographs collected during an aerial-reconnaissance survey conducted in support of this study. An accompanying ESRI ArcGIS shape file (and plain-text copy) indicates the position of the aircraft and time when each photograph was taken.
updated: 2009-05-05       pages include: Publications icon

Publication icon Publication
U.S. Geological Survey Karst Interest Group Proceedings, Bowling Green, Kentucky, May 27-29, 2008
Description: The concept for developing a Karst Interest Group evolved from the November 1999 National Ground-Water Meeting of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), Water Resources Division. As a result, the karst Interest Group was formed in 2000. The Karst Interest Group is a loose-knit grass-roots organization of USGS employees devoted to fostering better communication among scientists working on, or interested in, karst hydrology studies.
updated: 2009-05-01       pages include: Maps icon Publications icon

Research Project icon Research Project
Coastal Change Hazards: Hurricanes and Extreme Storms
Description: This project investigates the coastal impacts of hurricanes and extreme storms, such as Hurricanes Isabel (2003), Dennis (1999), Bonnie & Georges (1998), and winter storms, such as those associated with the 1997-98 El Niño.
updated: 2009-04-28       pages include: Research Materials icon Data Sets icon Maps icon Educational Materials icon Photographs icon

Publication icon Publication
Open-File Report 2009-1029: Coastal processes study of Santa Barbara and Ventura Counties, California
Description: By Patrick L. Barnard, David L. Revell, Dan Hoover, Jon Warrick, John Brocatus, Amy E. Draut, Pete Dartnell, Edwin Elias, Neomi Mustain, Pat E. Hart, and Holly F. Ryan. The Santa Barbara littoral cell (SBLC) is a complex coastal system with significant management challenges. The coastline ranges broadly in exposure to wave energy, fluvial inputs, hard structures, and urbanization. Geologic influence (structural control) on coastline orientation exerts an important control on local beach behavior, with anthropogenic alterations and the episodic nature of sediment supply and transport also playing important roles.
updated: 2009-03-27       pages include: Data Sets icon

Publication icon Publication
Digital Data Series 72: 2000 Multibeam sonar survey of Crater Lake, Oregon - Data, GIS, images, and movies
Description: In the summer of 2000, the bottom of Crater Lake, Oregon was mapped. The effort was a cooperative effort between the U.S. Geological Survey's Pacific Seafloor Mapping Project, the National Park Service, and the Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping at the University of New Hampshire. The team used a state-of-the-art multibeam sonar system to collect high-resolution bathymetry and calibrated, co-registered acoustic backscatter to support both biological and geological research in the area (aquatic biology, geochemistry, volcanic processes, etc). This survey collected over 16 million soundings and the resulting data portrays the bottom of Crater Lake at a spatial resolution of 2 meters. This CD-ROM is published for the scientific community, the general public, and as a teaching tool. The CD-ROM contains the raw multibeam bathymetry and backscatter data as well as an ArcExplorer 2.0 project for the scientific community to use in research. Computer-generated images and a fly-by movie allow any user to visualize the lake floor. Photographs and a QuickTime® movie of the helicopter operations shows how the multibeam survey took place and a list of Crater Lake publications and related websites can be used for further Crater Lake research and general interest.
updated: 2009-03-10       pages include: Data Sets icon Maps icon Publications icon Movies icon

Publication icon Publication
Development of High-Resolution Digital Elevation Products along the Northern Gulf of Mexico Coast
Description: Poster Absract
updated: 2009-03-01       pages include:

Publication icon Publication
EAARL Coastal Topography–Northeast Barrier Islands 2007: Bare Earth
Description: This DVD contains Lidar-derived bare earth (BE) topography GIS datasets of a portion of the northeast coastal barrier islands in New York and New Jersey. These datasets were acquired April 29-30 and May 15-16, 2007.
updated: 2009-03-01       pages include: Data Sets icon Maps icon Publications icon

Publication icon Publication
EAARL Coastal Topography - Northeast Barrier Islands 2007: First Surface
Description: This DVD contains Lidar-derived first surface (FS) topography GIS datasets of a portion of the northeast coastal barrier islands in New York and New Jersey. These datasets were acquired April 29-30 and May 15-16, 2007.
updated: 2009-03-01       pages include: Data Sets icon Maps icon Publications icon

Publication icon Publication
Open-File Report 2008-1191: Geologic Resource Evaluation of Kaloko-Honokōhau National Historical Park, Hawai‘i; Geology and Coastal Landforms
Description: Geologic resource inventories of lands managed by the National Park Service (NPS) are important products for the parks and are designed to provide scientific information to better manage park resources. Park-specific geologic reports are used to identify geologic features and processes that are relevant to park ecosystems, evaluate the impact of human activities on geologic features and processes, identify geologic research and monitoring needs, and enhance opportunities for education and interpretation. These geologic reports are planned to provide a brief geologic history of the park and address specific geologic issues that link the park geology and the resource manager...
updated: 2009-02-19       pages include: Publications icon

Publication icon Publication
Open-File Report 2008-1190: Geologic Resource Evaluation of Pu‘ukoholā Heiau National Historic Site, Hawai‘i; Part I, Geology and Coastal Landforms
Description: Geologic resource inventories of lands managed by the National Park Service (NPS) are important products for the parks and are designed to provide scientific information to better manage park resources. Park-specific geologic reports are used to identify geologic features and processes that are relevant to park ecosystems, evaluate the impact of human activities on geologic features and processes, identify geologic research and monitoring needs, and enhance opportunities for education and interpretation. These geologic reports are planned to provide a brief geologic history of the park and address specific geologic issues forming a link between the park geology and the resource manager. The Kona coast National Parks of the Island of Hawai‘i are intended to preserve the natural beauty of the Kona coast and protect significant ancient structures and artifacts of the native Hawaiians. Pu‘ukoholā Heiau National Historic Site (PUHE), Kaloko-Honokōhau National Historical Park (KAHO), and Pu‘uhonua O Hōnaunau National Historical Park (PUHO) are three Kona parks studied by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Coastal and Marine Geology Team in cooperation with the National Park Service. This report is one of six related reports designed to provide geologic and benthic-habitat information for the three Kona parks. Each geology and coastal-landform report describes the regional geologic setting of the Hawaiian Islands, gives a general description of the geology of the Kona coast, and presents the geologic setting and issues for one of the parks. The related benthic-habitat mapping reports discuss the marine data and habitat classification scheme, and present results of the mapping program.
updated: 2009-02-10       pages include: Publications icon

Publication icon Publication
USGS Gulf Coast Science Conference and Florida Integrated Science Center Meeting: Proceedings with Abstracts, October 20-23, 2008, Orlando, Florida
Description: Talks, posters, and abstracts from the USGS Gulf Coast Science Conference and Florida Integrated Science Center Meeting.
updated: 2009-01-29       pages include: Publications icon

These are results 1 through 25 of 295 matches.

 


Coastal and Marine Geology Program > Online Science Resource Locator > Mapping

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