This is very important information to cities, counties, and states for all types of planning and permitting. Some of these jurisdictions have this information on line, for example, Colorado has a great deal of information about oil and gas drilling on line (if you are patient enough to let the map download!). Some counties are layering their maps on GIS systems to get a sense for land use, flora and fauna, pollution, streets, topology including riverine and lacustrine, geology including surficial minerals and faults. Over all of these they then lay the satellite photos and renditions, such as infrared, etc. You can peel off layers and compare layers to see relationships and determine planning.
What you would need to do is to either explore the Internet pages of the jurisdiction in which you are interested, or call them to see if and where their site is for this.
This is a very expensive undertaking by any jurisdiction, so do not be surprised if even basic information is not available. More and more counties and cities are putting their information on line. If this is not available you could go to the county planning office, local bait and hunting shop, or a USGS office and get maps of various types.
Best wishes,
Carol
Carol E.B. Choksy, Ph.D., CRM
CEO
IRAD Strategic Consulting, Inc.
(317)294-8329
Adjunct Professor
School of Library and Information Science
Indiana University, Bloomington
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