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California volcano locations, threat rank and hazard zones

Dates

Publication Date
Time Period
2019

Citation

Peters, J., Mangan, M.T., Ball, J.L., Wood, N., Jones, J.L., and Abdollahian, N., 2019, California volcano locations, threat rank and hazard zones: U. S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9XT483Z.

Summary

The California volcano locations, threat rank and hazard zones data release contains two shapefiles for download or use as a web map service. The California Volcanic Center Locations shapefile was created to provide a generalized location of volcano hazard sources. The California Volcano Hazard Zones shapefile was created from previously published hazard zone reports. Specific details about each file can be found in the metadata included with each file and the read-me document for this data release. Together, these files were used to define California Volcano Hazards for the GIS analysis that supports conclusions in the California's exposure to volcano hazards report. Geologists produce hazard zone maps to convey the types of hazards [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

CaliforniaVolcano_HazardZones.zip
“California Volcano Hazard Zones shapefiles”
458 KB application/zip
CaliforniaVolcano_locations_threatRank.zip
“California volcano locations and threat rank shapefile”
35.42 KB application/zip
ReadMe_CaliforniaVolcanoes_SimplifiedVolcanoHazardZones.docx
“Read Me - California Volcanoes Simplified Volcano Hazard Zones”
26.89 KB application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
Extension: CaliforniaVolcano_locations_threatRank_HazardZones.zip
thumbnail.png thumbnail 4.51 KB

Purpose

The California Volcano hazard zones were created as a combination of volcano hazard modeling efforts in California to provide the most up to date zones for assessing potential volcano hazard exposure in California. The exposure results are intended to prompt follow-up site and sector specific vulnerability analysis and improved hazard mitigation, disaster planning, and response protocols. Use caution when interpreting hazard boundaries. Hazard boundaries are not sharp, but gradational and approximately located. The degree of hazard does not change abruptly at the boundary, instead it gradually decreases away from the volcanic vent, and for lahars, floods, and lava flows it rapidly decreases with increasing elevation above the valley floor.

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
doi https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/P9XT483Z

ArcGIS Service Definition Extension

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