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Human Footprint in the West

Summary

Humans have dramatically altered wildlands in the western United States over the past 100 years by using these lands and the resources they provide. Anthropogenic changes to the landscape, such as urban expansion, construction of roads, power lines, and other networks and land uses necessary to maintain human populations influence the number and kinds of plants and wildlife that remain. We developed the map of the human footprint for the western United States from an analysis of 14 landscape structure and anthropogenic features: human habitation, interstate highways, federal and state highways, secondary roads, railroads, irrigation canals, power lines, linear feature densities, agricultural land, campgrounds, highway rest stops, land [...]

Attached Files

Map

Spatial Services

ArcGIS Mapping Service

Communities

  • Great Northern Landscape Conservation Cooperative
  • LC MAP - Landscape Conservation Management and Analysis Portal
  • North Pacific Landscape Conservation Cooperative
  • Southern Rockies Landscape Conservation Cooperative

Associated Items

Tags

Provenance

<p> <b>US Geological Survey</b></p>

Additional Information

ArcGIS REST Service Extension

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maxY49.61957810385341
maxX-99.31572348647987
minX-126.25116829163325
minY30.505486249718437
urlhttp://srfs.wr.usgs.gov/ArcGIS/rest/services/HumanFootprint/HumanFootprintModel/MapServer

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