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DSM MultiYear USFS R3 Southwest multiRes Public

dataset
posted on 2025-04-22, 00:12 authored by U.S. Forest Service

This is a collection of Digital Surface Models and Highest Hit rasters covering selected U.S. Forest Service and adjoining lands in the Southwest Region, encompassing Arizona and New Mexico. The data are presented in a time-enabled format, allowing the end-user to view available data year-by-year, or all available years at once, within a GIS system. The data encompass varying years, varying resolutions, and varying geographic extents, dependent upon available data as provided by the region. DSM and Highest Hit rasters represent elevation of Earth's surface, including its natural and human-made features, such as vegetation and buildings.

The data contains an attribute table. Notable attributes that may be of interest to an end-user are:

  • lowps: the pixel size of the source raster, given in meters.

  • highps: the pixel size of the top-most pyramid for the raster, given in meters.

  • beginyear: the first year of data acquisition for an individual dataset.

  • endyear: the final year of data acquisition for an individual dataset.

  • dataset_name: the name of the individual dataset within the collection.

  • metadata: A URL link to a file on IIPP's Portal containing metadata pertaining to an individual dataset within the image service.

  • resolution: The pixel size of the source raster, given in meters.

Terrain-related imagery are primarily derived from Lidar, stereoscopic aerial imagery, or Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar datasets. Consequently, these derivatives inherit the limitations and uncertainties of the parent sensor and platform and the processing techniques used to produce the imagery. The terrain images are orthographic; they have been georeferenced and displacement due to sensor orientation and topography have been removed, producing data that combines the characteristics of an image with the geometric qualities of a map. The orthographic images show ground features in their proper positions, without the distortion characteristic of unrectified aerial or satellite imagery. Digital orthoimages produced and used within the Forest Service are developed from imagery acquired through various national and regional image acquisition programs. The resulting orthoimages can be directly applied in remote sensing, GIS and mapping applications. They serve a variety of purposes, from interim maps to references for Earth science investigations and analysis. Because of the orthographic property, an orthoimage can be used like a map for measurement of distances, angles, and areas with scale being constant everywhere. Also, they can be used as map layers in GIS or other computer-based manipulation, overlaying, and analysis. An orthoimage differs from a map in a manner of depiction of detail; on a map only selected detail is shown by conventional symbols whereas on an orthoimage all details appear just as in original aerial or satellite imagery.

Tribal lands have been masked from this public service in accordance with Tribal agreements.


This record was taken from the USDA Enterprise Data Inventory that feeds into the https://data.gov catalog. Data for this record includes the following resources:
For complete information, please visit https://data.gov.

Funding

USDA-FS

History

Data contact name

GTAC_Image_Services

Data contact email

SM.FS.data@usda.gov

Publisher

U.S. Forest Service

Theme

  • Geospatial

Geographic Coverage

{"type": "FeatureCollection", "features": [{"type": "Feature", "properties": {}, "geometry": {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[0.0, 0.0], [0.0, 0.0], [0.0, 0.0], [0.0, 0.0], [0.0, 0.0]]]}}]}

ISO Topic Category

  • environment

National Agricultural Library Thesaurus terms

Forestry, Wildland Management

OMB Bureau Code

  • 005:96 - Forest Service

OMB Program Code

  • 005:059 - Management Activities

Pending citation

  • No

Public Access Level

  • Public