Slope maps of the San Francisco Bay region, California: A digital database

Open-File Report 98-766
By:  and 

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Abstract

PREFACE: Topography, the configuration of the land surface, plays a major role in various natural processes that have helped shape the ten-county San Francisco Bay region and continue to affect its development. Such processes include a dangerous type of landslide, the debris flow (Ellen and others, 1997) as well as other modes of slope failure that damage property but rarely threaten life directly?slumping, translational sliding, and earthflow (Wentworth and others, 1997). Different types of topographic information at both local and regional scales are helpful in assessing the likelihood of slope failure and the mapping the extent of its past activity, as well as addressing other issues in hazard mitigation and land-use policy. The most useful information is quantitative. This report provides detailed digital data and plottable map files that depict in detail the most important single measure of ground-surface form for the Bay region, slope angle. We computed slope data for the entire region and each of its constituent counties from a new set of 35,000,000 digital elevations assembled from 200 local contour maps.

Study Area

Publication type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Title Slope maps of the San Francisco Bay region, California: A digital database
Series title Open-File Report
Series number 98-766
DOI 10.3133/ofr98766
Year Published 1998
Language English
Publisher U.S. Geological Survey
Contributing office(s) Western Earth Surface Processes
Description HTML Document
Country United States
State California
Other Geospatial San Francisco Bay region
Google Analytic Metrics Metrics page
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