

State, county, city, special district and non-governmental agency holdings are included and have been mapped at high levels of accuracy.


The lands in the database range from huge national forests to very small urban parks.
Smart click map overlay manual#
CPAD is more completely described in the CPAD Manual (. The database contains lands held in fee ownership by public agencies and non-profits - it does not contain data on private conservation and other similar public agency easements. The California Protected Areas Database (CPAD) 2015b is a GIS inventory of all protected park and open space lands in California (. Your users might be interested in this higher quality data set for California: The public land ownership data in all of the layers, at least in California, is rather inaccurate. Thanks for the service, a real improvement to Google Earth basemaps. If you have any questions regarding this don't hesitate to contact me or yohanboniface (the main developer and maintainer of the style).Īgain, BIG thanks for this wonderful set of map layers! Look forward to inclusion of more good layers and the tweaking of the attributions/license notes. and they are also available among others at osm.org. , the tiles are globally created and available via the French OSM community's server. But it's really a general style well suited for many needs. The style was developed originally as part of one Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team mapping project to function as a general map style with a twist/focus for the needs of humanitarian and international development work. * It would be great to see the Humanitarian map style added to your layers.
Smart click map overlay license#
I would be happy to help you figure out an appropriate placing of the license and attribution if you want/need help.

(Lower right corner gets a text of "Data, imagery and map information provided by, , and contributors, " where brackets indicate corresponding hyperlinks). But the MapQuest OSM style is a prime example of attribution and license statement done right. OpenLayers plugin for QGIS does this nowadays automatically albeit the info is not perfect for all available layers. But I think the license would be an appropriate addition and would be good to follow the styles consistently.įrom the top of my mind I think that there would be three good places for the attribution/license info: i) these web pages (as you already have for attribution), ii) the Properties > Description box for each of the map layer (that currently have the URL to the info page of the given layer) and finally it would also be great and appropriate - and I think many would argue that also required - to include the info in the map browsing window. You already have very good attribution on the pages of the individual map styles and the grouping of the layers in the layer pack indicate attribution (including the use of the logos). But the license and the attribution should be included in the layers and visible (clearly enough). While the relatively new ODbL license of the OSM data allows nowadays to publish maps created with OSM data under traditional restrictive licenses I think that all of the maps you have included here are licensed under a permissive license or at least there's some sort of fair use clause for their use that allow using these. * It would be great and also inline with the licenses / use permissions of the map styles to include appropriate map (tiles) license information (that would include attribution and note of the license under which the different OSM maps are offered for reuse and distribution). * You might want to move the currently named "Cycle Map" layer under Thunderforest in your next version as it's also a "Thunderforest style" (by Andy Allan) and rename it to OpenCycleMap, which Andy uses for it. Thanks also for your latest addition of three more Thunderforest styles (by Andy Allan). This is really a great service that I hope gets more publicity as it helps put OSM at the hands of so many people that use GE. Big thanks for these wonderful packs of map layers that include so many of the numerous OpenStreetMap-based layers.
