Tags
O-21-13 is an Esri ArcGIS version 10.7 file geodatabase. The geodatabase contains four feature classes total. O-21-13 includes 1,394 landslide polygons in the Deposits feature class dataset.
The purpose of this landslide inventory in coastal Douglas County is to provide users with basic information regarding landslides within the study area. The geologic, terrain, and climatic conditions that led to landslides in the past may provide clues to the locations and conditions of future landslides, and it is intended that this map will provide useful information to develop regional landslide susceptibility maps, to guide site-specific investigations for future developments, and to assist in regional planning and mitigation of existing landslides.
Publication
None
REPORT DATA: This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for or be suitable for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. Users of this information should review or consult the primary data and information sources to ascertain the usability of the information. This publication cannot substitute for site-specific investigations by qualified practitioners. Site-specific data may give results that differ from the results shown in the publication. See the accompanying text report for more details on the limitations of the methods and data used to prepare this publication.
When contacting DOGAMI about this data set, please reference the data set title or other identifying information in your correspondence. DOGAMI publications can be downloaded from http://www.oregongeology.org
The project described in this publication was supported in part by Federal Emergency Management Agency grant HMGP 4258 8-F.
Douglas Landslide Inventory was created with the best data available. Although every effort was made to ensure that database entry entries were accurate and complete, some errors may still occur.
Database QA/QC was carried out, duplicate data were removed. Study used SP-42 methodology for landslide studies.
This database covers the coastal Douglas County. This landslide study data set has been developed using methodology from DOGAMI Special Paper 42.
The line work was captured by heads up digitizing at several different scales; 1:24,000 (the native scale of standard printed 7.5-minute topographic quadrangles), 1:10,000, and 1:4,000. All lines were relocated at a scale of 1:4,000 to ensure that all spatial data (lines) have been mapped consistently. While the protocol recommends data use at a map scale of 1:8,000, and the geodatabase contains data at 1:8,000 or better, for representation purposes the data have been visualized on the map plate at 1:32,000. Base map used for digitization was DOGAMI’s bare earth lidar. Lidar data quality requires that the average departure from planarity within any 10 meters by 10 meters area shall be no greater than 5 cm. However the accuracy will still vary with the skill and care of the individual mapper.
Maximum error calculated from the 1:8000 scale horizontal positional accuracy error.
Lidar-derived bare earth elevation model vertical accuracy is typically less than 1 foot.
Maximum error from lidar.
This geodatabase is a new landslide study for the coastal Douglas County.
When contacting DOGAMI about this data set, please reference the data set title or other identifying information in your correspondence. DOGAMI publications can be downloaded from http://www.oregongeology.org
When contacting DOGAMI about this data set, please reference the data set title or other identifying information in your correspondence. DOGAMI publications can be downloaded from http://www.oregongeology.org
Although these data have been processed successfully on a computer system at the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, no warranty expressed or implied is made by DOGAMI regarding the utility of the data on any other system, nor shall the act of distribution constitute any such warranty.
When contacting DOGAMI about this data set, please reference the data set title or other identifying information in your correspondence. DOGAMI publications can be downloaded from http://www.oregongeology.org