This layer includes information that is static and was compiled at a specific point in time. It is not updated.
Phragmites 1968 is a 1:12,000-scale, polygon feature-based layer that includes areas where phragmites existed in 1968 along the lower Connecticut River corridor from the towns of Portland and Cromwell south to Long Island Sound. This layer was published at the same time as the Phragmites 1994 layer in order to depict the historic differences in phragmites growth between 1968 and 1994. The Phragmites 1968 layer was compiled using 1:12,000 black and white digital orthophotos obtained in 1968 as part of a Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection aerial mapping survey. This data represents a particular point in time (1968). It is not updated and does not depcit current conditions. Features are polygon locations that represent the approximate location of phragmites growth in 1968. Attribute information is comprised of the NAME68 attribute that identifies one of 25 general locations of phragmites growth. Other attributes include AV_LEGEND that depicts the existence of phragmites, and ACREAGE that depicts the size of each polygon in acres. Data was compiled at a 1:12,000 scale.
Phragmites 1968 is 1:12,000 scale data that depicts the locations of phragmites growth in 1968. Use this layer to show the extent of phragmites growth in 1968 along the lower Connecticut River corridor. In addition, this layer can be used with Phragmites 1994 that depicts the locations of phragmites growth in 1994. The use of both of these layers can more clearly demonstrate the extent of invasive growth of phragmites between 1968 and 1994. Not intended for maps printed at map scales greater or more detailed than 1:12,000 scale (1 inch = 1,000 feet).
For additional information, refer to the complete report generated as a result of the study that commissioned the publication of the Phragmites 1968 and Phragmites 1994 layers. This report is entitled "Spatial Pattern of Phragmites Australis (CAV) Trin ex Steuf. Within the Tidelands of the Connecticut River, 1994" and was authored by Nels Barrett (United States Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service, 344 Merrow Road, Suite A., Tolland, Connecticut 06084 USA) and Sandy Prisloe (University of Connecticut Cooperative Extension System, College of Agricultural and Natural Resources, P.O. Box 70, Haddam, CT 06438 USA).
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publication date
None. The data is in the public domain and may be redistributed.
No restrictions or legal prerequisites for using the data. The data is suitable for use at appropriate scale, and is not intended for maps printed at scales greater or more detailed than 1:12,000 scale (1 inch = 1,000 feet). Although this data set has been used by the State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection, no warranty, expressed or implied, is made by the State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection as to the accuracy of the data and or related materials. The act of distribution shall not constitute any such warranty, and no responsibility is assumed by the State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection in the use of these data or related materials. The user assumes the entire risk related to the use of these data. Once the data is distributed to the user, modifications made to the data by the user should be noted in the metadata. When printing this data on a map or using it in a software application, analysis, or report, please acknowledge the State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection as the source for this information.
Boundary | Coordinate |
---|---|
Left | 1081802.500000 (survey feet) |
Right | 1123613.875000 (survey feet) |
Top | 722791.063000 (survey feet) |
Bottom | 657683.438000 (survey feet) |
Boundary | Coordinate |
---|---|
West | -72.452450 (longitude) |
East | -72.299130 (longitude) |
North | 41.444400 (latitude) |
South | 41.265219 (latitude) |
Includes Phragmites 1968 features such as the location and size of the polygon. Attributes include AV_LEGEND, which identifies the polygon as phragmites, ACREAGE, which identifies the size of the polygon in acres, and NAME68, which identifies the general location (one of 25 areas) of the feature. This layer is best symbolized as a single feature type.
Phragmites growth in 1968 represented as polygon features.
State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection
Internal feature number.
ESRI
Name of location where phragmites exists.
Value | Definition |
---|---|
Black Hall River |
Black Hall River area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Calves Island |
Calves Island area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Chapman Pond |
Chapman Pond area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Chester Creek |
Chester Creek area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Deep River |
Deep River area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Duck River |
Duck River area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Essex Middle Cove Complex |
Essex Middle Cove Complex area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Fenwick |
Fenwick area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Ferry Point |
Ferry Point area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Goose Island |
Goose Island area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Great Island |
Great Island area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Great Meadow / Essex North Cove |
Great Meadow / Essex North Cove area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Griswold Point |
Griswold Point area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Hamburg Cove |
Hamburg Cove area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Joshua Creek |
Joshua Creek area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Lieutenant River North |
Lieutenant River North area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Lieutenant River South |
Lieutenant River South area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Lord Cove |
Lord Cove area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
North Cove |
North Cove area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Nott Island |
Nott Island area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Otter Cove |
Otter Cove area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Post & Prat Cove |
Post & Prat Cove area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Ragged Rock Creek |
Ragged Rock Creek area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Smiths Neck |
Smiths Neck area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
South Cove |
South Cove area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection | |
Upper Island Marsh Complex |
Upper Island Marsh Complex area |
Definition Source: State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection |
State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection
Size of feature in acres
State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection
Feature geometry.
ESRI
Feature geometry.
ESRI
Polygon features conform to the following topological rules. Polygons are single part. There are no duplicate polygons. Polygons do not self overlap. Polygons do not overlap other polygons. No automated procedures or tests were performed to guarantee desired topology other than visual inspection.
The completeness of the data reflects the feature content of the data sources, which include the digital orthophotos (Source 1). The Phragmites 1968 layer is complete in the sense that it accurately reflects 1968 phragmites information available at the time the layer was created. This data is not updated and represents a particular point in time (1968). This data does not represent all of the phragmites in Connecticut.
The Phragmites 1968 layer retains the feature types and information identified by the State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection and obtained from the 1968 digital orthophotos. Accuracy level of attributes is not known. The AV_LEGEND attribute contains the string "Phragmites" for every feature. The NAME68 field identifies the particular location (25 total locations) of the feature. The ACREAGE attribute is a calculated field that depicts the area in acres of each feature.
Horizontal accuracy of this layer is consistent only with the source data (1:12,000 scale digital orthophotos) from which features were compiled. Feature locations were determined by using a stereoscope with the 1:12,000 orthophotos and identifying ground control points, e.g., large boulders, road/stream crossings, intersections, etc., on the photos. An overall horizontal accuracy level cannot be determined.
These maps were prepared for the Department of Environmental Protection as a mapping survey project.
The 1968 orthophotos were used as the base map for locating and identifying phragmites and ground control points with the use of a stereoscope.
publication date
This source was created by manually interpreting phragmites areas onto mylar that was overlaid onto Source 1, the 1968 digital orthophotos.
publication date
After completion of the mylar overlays, the orthophotos and the mylars were scanned and saved at 300 dpi in tagged image file (tif) format.
publication date
This data source was created when the tif images in Source 3 were scanned and rectified using established ground control points referenced in Source 1.
publication date
This data source refers to all features combined in one statewide layer. Since initial publication in 1995, a subsequent edition of the layer was generated by the State of Connecticut in order to convert from NAD 27 to NAD 83. Changes made to the entire layer are reflected in metadata process steps where this particular data source is cited as both the Source Used and the Source Produced.
publication date
Using a stereoscope and the 1:12,000 scale 1968 orthophotos, the phragmites invasive extent was manually interpreted by an ecologist, then transferred along with ground control points, e.g., large boulders, road/stream crossings, intersections, etc., to mylar overlays (Source 2).
These maps were prepared for the Department of Environmental Protection as a mapping survey project.
The 1968 orthophotos were used as the base map for locating and identifying phragmites and ground control points with the use of a stereoscope.
publication date
This source was created by manually interpreting phragmites areas onto mylar that was overlaid onto Source 1, the 1968 digital orthophotos.
publication date
The 1968 orthophotos (Source 1) and the mylar overlays (Source 2) were scanned at an optical resolution of 300 dpi and saved as gray-scale images in the tagged image file (tif) format (Source 3).
These maps were prepared for the Department of Environmental Protection as a mapping survey project.
The 1968 orthophotos were used as the base map for locating and identifying phragmites and ground control points with the use of a stereoscope.
publication date
This source was created by manually interpreting phragmites areas onto mylar that was overlaid onto Source 1, the 1968 digital orthophotos.
publication date
After completion of the mylar overlays, the orthophotos and the mylars were scanned and saved at 300 dpi in tagged image file (tif) format.
publication date
Using coordinates for the ground control points obtained from Digital Ortho Quarter Quads (DOQQs), the scanned imagery was rectified using Blue Marble Geographics Geographic Transformer software. The registration of each aerial photograph and overlay used anywhere from five to fifty-three control points depending on the distribution of phragmites in the photograph, and was output to Connecticut State Plane Coordinates, NAD 27.
After completion of the mylar overlays, the orthophotos and the mylars were scanned and saved at 300 dpi in tagged image file (tif) format.
publication date
This data source was created when the tif images in Source 3 were scanned and rectified using established ground control points referenced in Source 1.
publication date
Once the Rectified Scanned Imagery (Source 4) was completed, the images were imported into ArcView 3 software where the boundaries were manually digitized (heads-up digitizing) to create the ArcView shapefile.
This data source was created when the tif images in Source 3 were scanned and rectified using established ground control points referenced in Source 1.
publication date
This data source refers to all features combined in one statewide layer. Since initial publication in 1995, a subsequent edition of the layer was generated by the State of Connecticut in order to convert from NAD 27 to NAD 83. Changes made to the entire layer are reflected in metadata process steps where this particular data source is cited as both the Source Used and the Source Produced.
publication date
Datum conversion - Using DEPGIS Connecticut NADCON Extension for ESRI ArcView 3 software, the Phragmites 1968 layer was converted from the Connecticut State Plane Coordinate System of 1927 (NAD27) to the Connecticut State Plane Coordinate System of 1983 (NAD83). The NADCON (North American Datum CONversion) data transformation was used.
This data source refers to all features combined in one statewide layer. Since initial publication in 1995, a subsequent edition of the layer was generated by the State of Connecticut in order to convert from NAD 27 to NAD 83. Changes made to the entire layer are reflected in metadata process steps where this particular data source is cited as both the Source Used and the Source Produced.
publication date
This data source refers to all features combined in one statewide layer. Since initial publication in 1995, a subsequent edition of the layer was generated by the State of Connecticut in order to convert from NAD 27 to NAD 83. Changes made to the entire layer are reflected in metadata process steps where this particular data source is cited as both the Source Used and the Source Produced.
publication date
Phragmites 1968
Geographic information sytem (GIS), computer-aided drawing or other mapping software is necessary to display, view and access the information.
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The data distributor does not provide custom GIS analysis or mapping services. Data is available in a standard format and may be converted to other formats, projections, coordinate systems, or selected for specific geographic regions by the party receiving the data.
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