The water area of Carl Junction, MO was 0 in 2011.

Land Area

Water Area

Land area is a measurement providing the size, in square miles, of the land portions of geographic entities for which the Census Bureau tabulates and disseminates data. Area is calculated from the specific boundary recorded for each entity in the Census Bureau's geographic database. Land area is based on current information in the TIGER® data base, calculated for use with Census 2010.

Water Area figures include inland, coastal, Great Lakes, and territorial sea water. Inland water consists of any lake, reservoir, pond, or similar body of water that is recorded in the Census Bureau's geographic database. It also includes any river, creek, canal, stream, or similar feature that is recorded in that database as a two- dimensional feature (rather than as a single line). The portions of the oceans and related large embayments (such as Chesapeake Bay and Puget Sound), the Gulf of Mexico, and the Caribbean Sea that belong to the United States and its territories are classified as coastal and territorial waters; the Great Lakes are treated as a separate water entity. Rivers and bays that empty into these bodies of water are treated as inland water from the point beyond which they are narrower than 1 nautical mile across. Identification of land and inland, coastal, territorial, and Great Lakes waters is for data presentation purposes only and does not necessarily reflect their legal definitions.

Above charts are based on data from the U.S. Census American Community Survey | ODN Dataset | API - Notes:

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Geographic and Area Datasets Involving Carl Junction, MO

  • API

    MO_2016_Section_305b_Water_Quality_Report_Complete_Listing_of_Impaired_Rivers_and_Streams

    data.mo.gov | Last Updated 2024-04-10T19:09:55.000Z

    This data set contains those Missouri waters which have been assessed as impaired in 2016, including waters on Missouri's EPA Approved 2016 Section 303(d) List, but also including waters not on that list, such as waters which have a Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) or other appropriate management plan in place, or waters which are not impaired by a discrete pollutant. Missouri's EPA Approved 2016 303(d) List has received approval from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The data set contains the names of impaired waters, their unique identification numbers and locations, and identifies specific pollutants and pollutant sources if they are known. This data set is created in conjunction with the Missouri Water Quality Report, which is produced biennially as required by Section 305(b) of the Federal Clean Water Act, and correlates to Tables 14-15 of that report. These data were formally named: MO_2014_Section_305b_Water_Quality_Report_Complete_Listing_of_Impaired_Lakes_shp.zip and MO_2014_Section_305b_Water_Quality_Report_Complete_Listing_of_Impaired_Rivers_and_Streams_shp.zip which have been removed from MSDIS at MO Office of Administration request.

  • API

    MO_2010_Department_of_Natural_Resources_Wild_Areas_shp

    data.mo.gov | Last Updated 2024-04-10T19:09:53.000Z

    This data set depicts the boundaries of Wild Areas managed by the Missouri Department of Natural Resources, Division of State Parks. This data was derived by digitizing United States Geological Survey (USGS) Digital Orthophoto Quarter Quadrangles (DOQQ) from boundary descriptions and sketches varying in age, content and quality. The Missouri Wild Area System was partially modeled after the National Wilderness Preservation System. Wild areas are protected by the benefits they provide for hiking and backpacking as well as the benefits they provide as outdoor classrooms for environmental education and as increasingly important reservoirs of scientific information. According to the Department of Natural Resources' policy, a wild area must be a "spacious" tract of land generally 1,000 or more acres in size. Generally, it must appear to have been affected primarily by the forces of nature, and to possess outstanding opportunities for solitude and unconfined recreation.

  • API

    Find A Missouri Utility

    data.mo.gov | Last Updated 2019-02-15T19:50:21.000Z

  • API

    MO_2017_Wells_shp

    data.mo.gov | Last Updated 2024-04-10T19:09:53.000Z

    This data set provides information about wells in the State of Missouri. The parent data set is the Wellhead Information Management System (WIMS) database that is maintained by the Missouri Department of Natural Resources (DNR), Missouri Geological Survey (MGS), Geological Survey Program (GSP), Wellhead Protection Section (WHP). The WIMS database resulted from implementation of the Water Well Drillers Law of 1985. The information about well location, well ownership, well completion date, well construction, well yield, static water level, and borehole stratigraphy was provided by well drillers as required by state statute RSMo 256.600-256.640. Wells drilled prior to July of 1987 are not included in this data set. A WIMS Well Search is also available online at http://dnr.mo.gov/mowells/publicLanding.do These data were formally named MO_2015_Wells_shp.zip which have been removed from MSDIS at MO Office of Administration request.

  • API

    Kansas City Monthly Car Auction

    data.kcmo.org | Last Updated 2024-08-31T19:19:44.000Z

    City of Kansas City, Missouri Neighborhoods and Housing Services Department - Tow Services Division 7750 E Front Street Kansas City, MO 64120 Unclaimed Vehicle Auction – January 18, 2022 Auction Rules In order to ensure that order is maintained, acts of theft are eliminated, and to keep the risk of any loss to a minimum on auction days, auction customers must: All buyers must register with the auctioneer and be issued a buyer number. Buyer numbers must be worn at all times. All buyers must have valid state ID to register. All buyers must be at least 18 years of age. If you are currently banned from the auction or have questions about your registration , you will need to wait until after registration closes at 11am ( or when registration closes)  and visit with city and auction management   Penalties may be imposed on auction customers for failure to comply with all established protocols and procedures. A buyer may be suspended or banned for a minimum period of 3 years or permanently banned for violation of established auction protocols and procedures. Buyer may be removed immediately and given a 3 year suspension for: Disruptive, disrespectful, obscene or abusive language toward other customers, the auctioneer or City staff members. Refusal to follow legal direction of City staff or auctioneers. Bidders may enter the driver’s side door of a vehicle to access the hood release only. Entering vehicles to access trunks, glove boxes, or interior areas will result in immediate removal and permanent suspension. Dumping trash from purchased vehicles on the lot before taking the purchased vehicle. Failing to take all vehicle parts when taking the purchased vehicle from the lot. Failure to pay for vehicles purchased at an auction. (Upon completion of the three year suspension, a $500.00 deposit will be required for all future purchases made). Failure to pay security deposit for vehicles purchased at auction, when required. 2nd violation of any offense listed above will result in a permannet ban from the auction.   Buyers may be banned permanently for: Any form of theft. Any 2nd failure to pay for vehicles purchased. Assault on another customer, city staff member, the auctioneer and their staff or anyone on Tow Service property. Any misrepresentation, as a buyer for a company, when not authorized or without written approval, from that company to act as a buyer for said company. Being found in violation of any city code pertaining to inoperable vehicles on property owned or controlled by the buying company or individual buyer. Attempting to purchase vehicles while under a 6-month or 12-month suspension.   All sales must be final and paid in full by 4:30 PM on the day of the sale. The auctioneer will process all final sales and provide documentation of the sale to the City outlining each transaction by the close of business on the 3rd day after the auction. The auctioneer will provide a wire transfer for the proceeds of the auction to the City by the end of business on the 7th day after the clsoe of the auction as outlined in the contract. No exceptions. The City does not guarantee a title to unclaimed vehicles sold at auction. All unclaimed vehicles are sold on a Missouri Department of Revenue form #4579, “Abandoned Property Bill of Sale”. Buyers will receive a bill of sale within 10 days of the auction date. Buyers that lose their original bill of sale will be charged $10.00 for a duplicate bill of sale. The bill of sale can be used to obtain a title in the state of Missouri following procedures established by the Missouri Department of Revenue. The bill of sale may not be accepted by other states. The purchaser must make application within 30 days of purchase for an original title, salvage title, or junking certificate. It is the responsibility of the buyer to obtain information on titling vehicles outside Missouri. Auction vehicles are not presumed safe for operation on streets and cannot be driven off the lot. A

  • API

    Citizen Satisfaction Survey Results Previous Years To Present

    data.kcmo.org | Last Updated 2023-08-23T17:37:21.000Z

    This data set contains citizen satisfaction survey results. The citizen survey is administered on a quarterly basis. See the report by visiting https://data.kcmo.org/dataset/2013-14-Kansas-City-Missouri-Citizen-Satisfaction-/m8hg-mhad.

  • API

    2021 Kansas City Energy and Water Consumption Benchmarking for Community-Wide Buildings

    data.kcmo.org | Last Updated 2022-08-09T17:14:11.000Z

    The 2021 Energy and Water consumption sent to the City by owners of buildings 50,000 SQFT or greater using the Energy Star Portfolio Manager tool. Data is required by the Energy Empowerment Ordinance in Kansas City, Missouri. The data was collected in 2022 and might be appended as new submissions come in.

  • API

    City-Level Descriptive Statistics for GHG Inventory

    data.kcmo.org | Last Updated 2023-12-28T16:26:45.000Z

    This data set contains community statistics that were used to calculate greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) for the purposes of the 2013 GHG inventory. Data sources include US Census Bureau, Mid-America Regional Council (MARC), Jackson County Assessor Office, KCP&L electric company, Missouri Gas/Laclede gas company, Federal Highway Administration Office of Highway Policy Information Highway Statistics Series, Climate Action and Climate Protection Software notes, Kansas City Area Transit Authority (KCATA), EPA flight and large emitter website (http://ghgdata.epa.gov), City of Kansas City PUblic Words and Water Services Departments

  • API

    Energy, Air & Climate Impacts of City-Owned Buildings in Kansas City, MO (2016)

    data.kcmo.org | Last Updated 2023-12-28T16:37:19.000Z

    2016 Energy and Water consumption for city owned buildings submitted in 2017. This data is part of the Energy Empowerment Program aimed at allowing building owners to use data to make energy efficient decisions.

  • API

    Liquefaction zones (HESS)

    data.bayareametro.gov | Last Updated 2023-06-09T23:59:16.000Z

    Liquefaction zones for development of the Parcel Inventory dataset for the Housing Element Site Selection (HESS) Pre-Screening Tool. This feature set is a subset of the complete feature set for the San Francisco Bay Region. It only provides features for areas at either High or Very High susceptibility to liquefaction. The features delineate different types and ages of Quaternary deposits for the region and their susceptibility to liquefaction. The data provides a framework for the architecture and history of the Quaternary sedimentary basins, which is used in estimating earthquake shaking. **This data set represents the entire San Francisco Bay Region by combining both Open-File Report 00-444 and Open-File Report 2006-1037 data. The area covered by Open-File Report 2006-1037 was erased from Open-File Report 00-444 and the two data sets were merged. A column has been added to the attribute table to label which report each polygon was originally from. Other than this supplemental information paragraph, all the metadata is from Open-File Report 2006-1037.** This report presents a map and database of Quaternary deposits and liquefaction susceptibility for the urban core of the San Francisco Bay region. It supercedes the equivalent area of U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 00-444 (Knudsen and others, 2000), which covers the larger nine-county San Francisco Bay region. The report consists of (1) a spatial database, (2) two small-scale colored maps (Quaternary deposits and liquefaction susceptibility), (3) a text describing the Quaternary map and liquefaction interpretation (part 3), and (4) a text introducing the report and describing the database (part 1). All parts of the report are digital; part 1 describes the database and digital files and how to obtain them by downloading across the internet. The nine counties surrounding San Francisco Bay straddle the San Andreas fault system, which exposes the region to serious earthquake hazard (Working Group on California Earthquake Probabilities, 1999). Much of the land adjacent to the Bay and the major rivers and streams is underlain by unconsolidated deposits that are particularly vulnerable to earthquake shaking and liquefaction of water-saturated granular sediment. This new map provides a consistent detailed treatment of the central part of the 9-county region in which much of the mapping of Open-File Report 00-444 was either at smaller (less detailed) scale or represented only preliminary revision of earlier work. Like Open-File Report 00-444, the current mapping uses geomorphic expression, pedogenic soils, inferred depositional environments, and geologic age to define and distinguish the map units. Further scrutiny of the factors controlling liquefaction susceptibility has led to some changes relative to Open-File Report 00-444: particularly the reclassification of San Francisco Bay mud (Qhbm) to have only MODERATE susceptibility and the rating of artificial fills according to the Quaternary map units inferred to underlie them (other than dams ? adf). The two colored maps provide a regional summary of the new mapping at a scale of 1:200,000, a scale that is sufficient to show the general distribution and relationships of the map units but not to distinguish the more detailed elements that are present in the database. The report is the product of cooperative work by the National Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program (NEHRP) and National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program of the U.S. Geological Survey, William Lettis & Associates, Inc. (WLA), and the California Geological Survey. An earlier version was submitted to the U.S. Geological Survey by WLA as a final report for a NEHRP grant (Witter and others, 2005). The mapping has been carried out by WLA geologists under contract to the NEHRP Earthquake Program (Grant 99-HQ-GR-0095) and by the California Geological Survey. The original reports and data are available at Open-File Report 2006-1037 (https://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2006/