Bull Trout Range by Watershed (4th field HUC)

Mar 17, 2010
Description:
The Geographic Information Retrieval and Analysis System (GIRAS) was developed in the mid 70s to put into digital form a number of data layers which were of interest to the USGS. One of these data layers was the Hydrologic Units. The map is based on the Hydrologic Unit Maps published by the U.S. Geological Survey Office of Water Data Coordination, together with the list descriptions and name of region, subregion, accounting units, and cataloging unit. The hydrologic units are encoded with an eight-digit number that indicates the hydrologic region (first two digits), hydrologic subregion second two digits), accounting unit (third two digits), and cataloging unit (fourth two digits). The data produced by GIRAS was originally collected at a scale of 1:250K. Some areas, notably major cities in the west, were recompiled at a scale of 1:100K. In order to join the data together and use the data in a geographic information system (GIS) the data were processed in the ARC/INFO GUS software package. Within the GIS, the data were edgematched and the neatline boundaries between maps were removed to create a single data set for the conterminous United States. These watersheds were extracted from the data set for the conterminous US to represent those 4th code HUC watersheds of the Bull Trout Distribution Range. HUC, GIRAS, Hydrologic Units, 1:250
Data Provided By:
Peter Steeves and Douglas Nebert
Content date:
not specified
Citation:
Title: Bull Trout Range, by watershed (4th field HUC)
Credits: Peter Steeves and Douglas Nebert
Publication Date: 1994
Publisher: U.S. Geological Survey
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Contact Organization:
US Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Boise Aquatic Sciences Laboratory
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Use Constraints:
These data were digitized at a scale of 1:250,000 with some portions of coverage at 1:100,000- and 1:2 million scale. Limitations of the data strictly revolve around this scale input. Use of these boundaries with larger scale data (i.e. 1:24k hydrography) is not recommended as it would be beyond the resolution capabilities of the data set.
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About the Uploader

Jeremiah Osborne-Gowey
Aquatic/Landscape Ecologist with Conservation Biology Institute

Jeremiah Osborne-Gowey is an aquatic/landscape ecologist with more than 15 years of Federal, State, and educational natural resource experience. His experience includes aquatic and terrestrial species habitat survey and inventory, invasive-species monitoring, natural resource impact analyses, public...