SDE Feature Class
Tags
Cadiz Valley SW Quadrangle, East Deception Canyon Quadrangle, Seven Palms Valley Quadrangle, Cottonwood Spring Quadrangle, Rockhouse Canyon Quadrangle, Placer Canyon Quadrangle, Fried Liver Wash Quadrangle, soils, San Berardino County, Pinto Wells Quadrangle, Thermal Canyon Quadrangle, San Bernardino Wash Quadrangle, SSURGO, soil survey, Clarks Pass Quadrangle, Desert Center Quadrangle, Washington Wash Quadrangle, New Dale Quadrangle, Pinto Mountain Quadrangle, Buzzard Spring Quadrangle, East of Victory Pass Quadrangle, Yucca Valley South Quadrangle, West Berdoo Canyon Quadrangle, Malapai Hill Quadrangle, Riverside County, Hayfield Quadrangle, Porcupine Wash Quadrangle, Soil Survey Geographic, Cottonwood Basin Quadrangle, Conejo Well Quadrangle, Twentynine Palms Quadrangle, Keys View Quadrangle, Twentynine Palms Mountain Quadrangle, Hayfield Spring Quadrangle, Coxcomb Mountains Quadrangle, Indian Cove Quadrangle, Victory Pass Quadrangle, Queen Mountain Quadrangle, California, Cadiz Valley SE Quadrangle, Joshua Tree South Quadrangle
SSURGO depicts information about the kinds and distribution of soils on the landscape. The soil map and data used in the SSURGO product were prepared by soil scientists as part of the National Cooperative Soil Survey.
This data set is a digital soil survey and generally is the most detailed level of soil geographic data developed by the National Cooperative Soil Survey. The information was prepared by digitizing maps, by compiling information onto a planimetric correct base and digitizing, or by revising digitized maps using remotely sensed and other information. This data set consists of georeferenced digital map data and computerized attribute data. The map data are in a soil survey area extent format and include a detailed, field verified inventory of soils and miscellaneous areas that normally occur in a repeatable pattern on the landscape and that can be cartographically shown at the scale mapped. A special soil features layer (point and line features) is optional. This layer displays the location of features too small to delineate at the mapping scale, but they are large enough and contrasting enough to significantly influence use and management. The soil map units are linked to attributes in the National Soil Information System relational database, which gives the proportionate extent of the component soils and their properties.
Data current as of September 2014
Currency of updates - Every 2 years
Expected next update - Septmember 2016
The U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service, should be acknowledged as the data source in products derived from these data. This data set is not designed for use as a primary regulatory tool in permitting or citing decisions, but may be used as a reference source. This is public information and may be interpreted by organizations, agencies, units of government, or others based on needs; however, they are responsible for the appropriate application. Federal, State, or local regulatory bodies are not to reassign to the Natural Resources Conservation Service any authority for the decisions that they make. The Natural Resources Conservation Service will not perform any evaluations of these maps for purposes related solely to State or local regulatory programs. Photographic or digital enlargement of these maps to scales greater than at which they were originally mapped can cause misinterpretation of the data. If enlarged, maps do not show the small areas of contrasting soils that could have been shown at a larger scale. The depicted soil boundaries, interpretations, and analysis derived from them do not eliminate the need for onsite sampling, testing, and detailed study of specific sites for intensive uses. Thus, these data and their interpretations are intended for planning purposes only. Digital data files are periodically updated. Files are dated, and users are responsible for obtaining the latest version of the data.
Extent
West | -117.678557 | East | -115.672961 |
North | 34.040274 | South | 33.418099 |
Maximum (zoomed in) | 1:5,000 |
Minimum (zoomed out) | 1:50,000 |
Digital versions of hydrography, cultural features, and other associated layers that are not part of the SSURGO data set may be available from the primary organization listed in the Point of Contact.
publication date
The U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service, should be acknowledged as the data source in products derived from these data. This data set is not designed for use as a primary regulatory tool in permitting or citing decisions, but may be used as a reference source. This is public information and may be interpreted by organizations, agencies, units of government, or others based on needs; however, they are responsible for the appropriate application. Federal, State, or local regulatory bodies are not to reassign to the Natural Resources Conservation Service any authority for the decisions that they make. The Natural Resources Conservation Service will not perform any evaluations of these maps for purposes related solely to State or local regulatory programs. Photographic or digital enlargement of these maps to scales greater than at which they were originally mapped can cause misinterpretation of the data. If enlarged, maps do not show the small areas of contrasting soils that could have been shown at a larger scale. The depicted soil boundaries, interpretations, and analysis derived from them do not eliminate the need for onsite sampling, testing, and detailed study of specific sites for intensive uses. Thus, these data and their interpretations are intended for planning purposes only. Digital data files are periodically updated. Files are dated, and users are responsible for obtaining the latest version of the data.
Internal feature number.
Esri
Feature geometry.
Esri