The purpose of this map viewer is to provide federal, state, and local coastal resource managers and planners with a preliminary look at sea level rise and coastal flooding impacts. The viewer is a screening-level tool that uses best-available, nationally consistent data sets and analyses. Data and maps provided can be used at several scales to help estimate impacts and prioritize actions for different scenarios.
We also have the same problem with the new map viewer Everything seems to work fine in the old map viewer and/or web app builder. We started to use the new map viewer and experience builder because we wanted to group layers and make use of all the new widgets in EB. Now all of our bigger project running on the new map viewer and in Experience builder are so slow. I do not want to convert back to the old map viewer and webappbuilder, because we really like and find the new funcionalities in EB and new map viewer very useful.
Both, Experience Builder and the new map viewer are slow in mye opinion. Turning on and off sublayers, using the draw and print widgets. Working with the symbology, labels etc on the map layers, moving around in the map and more. For me this works so much quicker in the old web map and web app builder unfortunately.
This viewer allows you to:
In 2018 Microsoft released the Diagnostic Data Viewer (DDV) which is a tool that lets you review the raw diagnostic data Windows is sending to Microsoft. Now you can also view Office diagnostic data using the same viewer. The DDV requires Windows 10, version 1803 or newer. Viewing diagnostic data from Office requires Microsoft 365, or Office 2019, for Windows, version 1904 or newer; or Microsoft 365, or Office 2019, for Mac, version 16.28 or newer.
The viewer relies on voluntarily submitted well water samples from homeowners and other well water data collected by state agencies over the past 25 years. This includes private well water quality data from the Center for Watershed Science and Education, the WI Dept. of Ag, Trade and Consumer Protection, and the WI Department of Natural Resources Groundwater Retrieval Network, Eau Claire County Health Dept and La Crosse County Health Dept.
The WI Well Water Viewer does not represent well water quality information for all known private wells. This information is not intended to be a substitute for well water testing and the viewer does not provide site specific information for an individual well or property. The Center for Watershed Science and Education is not responsible for misuse or misinterpretation of the data.
The viewer relies mostly on voluntarily submitted well water samples from homeowners and other well water data collected by state agencies over the past 25 years. It would not have been made possible without the many well owners who took the initiative to have their wells tested.
Yes, absolutely. The viewer is not a replacement for testing your well. Well water quality is often site or system specific. Every well should be tested for certain things depending on where you live and the types of land-use activities around your well.
The viewer can be useful in providing some information on what water quality is like in the area or what additional parameters might be worth testing for. The value of the water quality viewer is in the amount of data displayed. It does a good job of showing areas where water quality has been degraded or is more likely to exceed certain drinking water standards. It relies on the law of averages and requires large numbers of samples in order to characterize water quality for a county or town. The smaller the number of samples the less representative the information will be of water quality in an area. The viewer is not a replacement for a water test.
Answering whether water quality is getting better or worse requires baseline data as a starting point and regular monitoring of wells into the future. This viewer is a good start for communities to view baseline data and identify areas where more data is needed. It can also help communities focus future water quality testing efforts in areas where problems exist.
If the viewer is successful in encouraging private well owners to perform routine well water testing, then in the future we will have a better chance of answering whether groundwater quality is getting better or worse.
The following training videos provide step-by-step instruction for new features of the Public GIS Viewer. The videos will open in a separate window, allowing you to toggle between the video and viewer.
The Public GIS Viewer contains the combined functionality of the Legacy GIS Viewer and the newer appearance of the Enhanced GIS Viewer. In addition, the viewer has been improved with the addition of the following features and is updated nightly.
The Public GIS Map Viewers use pop-up windows to display details on mapped wells and pipelines. Disable pop-up blocking software while using this viewer. If you are not sure if pop-up blocking is enabled on your computer, try our Pop-up Blocker Test.
Note: Only viewers can block other viewers. Blocking a viewer may block them across other Google products and services. Creators and moderators may hide viewers from their channel by moderating live chat.
We provide alternate versions of the application for CMIP6 (current generation) and CMIP5 (previous generation). We suggest using the most current CMIP6 version of the viewer unless you need legacy data. Downscaling methodologies and a user quick start slideshow are below.
For stakeholders who only need file-viewing access, we offer free viewers without a subscription. If you're transitioning to named user, be sure to take advantage of the trade-in offers available to you.
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