AGSL GeoDiscovery
South America, Venezuela, Maracaibo Channel (Image 1 of 2) (Raster Image)
- Description:
-
This layer is a georeferenced raster image of a portion of a scanned nautical chart titled "South America, Venezuela, Maracaibo Channel" originally published by the United States Defense Mapping Agency in 1993. This layer is 1 of 2 parts representing the original source sheet map. Map no. 24482. Historic paper maps can provide an excellent view of the changes that have occurred in the cultural and physical landscape. The wide range of information provided on these maps make them useful in the study of historic geography, and urban and rural land use change. As this map has been georeferenced, it can be used in a GIS as a source or background layer in conjunction with other GIS data. This layer is presented in the WGS84 coordinate system for web display purposes. Downloadable data are provided in native coordinate system or projection.
- Resource Link:
- https://purl.stanford.edu/gm659dr6033
- Identifier:
- https://purl.stanford.edu/gm659dr6033
- Language:
- eng
- Creator:
- Land Info (Firm) and United States. Defense Mapping Agency
- Publisher:
- Land Info (Firm)
- Provider:
- Stanford
- Resource Class:
- Datasets and Maps
- Resource Type:
- Raster data
- Subject:
- Navigation and Imagery and Base Maps
- Theme:
- Imagery and Land Cover
- Temporal Coverage:
- 1995
- Date Issued:
- 1995
- Spatial Coverage:
- Maracaibo Channel (Venezuela), Maracaibo Lake (Venezuela), Maracaibo, Gulf of (Colombia and Venezuela), Atlantic Coast (Venezuela), and Caribbean Sea
- Rights:
-
These data are licensed by Stanford Libraries and are available to Stanford University affiliates only. Affiliates are limited to current faculty, staff and students. Non affiliates seeking access should contact the publisher directly. These data may not be reproduced or used for any purpose without permission
- Rights Holder:
- Copyright ownership resides with the originator.
- Access Rights:
- Restricted
- Format:
- GeoTIFF
- Georeferenced:
- true