Simple OGC WMS (Web Mapping Service) Client
Click on an area to zoom in, Control-click to zoom out, Shift-click and drag to pan

		                    Legend
  white circles  = commercial sample locations during June 2005
  green circles  = commercial tows, < 16 STX_equiv
  yellow circles = all NMFS tows tested by NOS
  red circles    = all NOS test results  > 40 STX_equiv
  orange circles = all NOS test results 16-40 STX_equiv
  purple circles = commercial sample locations, April/May, testing underway
  blue circles   = all NMFS scallop survey stations (use checkbox to view)
  
  To add or remove layers, click "Layers" window to open, check "Auto" at top 
  of window, then make any changes. Some layers may obstruct others.

  Scallop_Fleet_1998 layer indicates spatial range of the offshore fishery

                        Link to project proposal

 Open client in new window 900 pixels wide or 1200 pixels wide or 1500 pixels wide

You do not have to wait for all layers to display to continue zooming in, just click again. The JavaScript coding is currently set to increase or decrease the scale by a factor of 3.

These are 'live' pages, assembled on the fly from the various WMS servers. All servers are not mirrored and 'always' on-line. For instance, the Sea Surface Temperature (sst_northeast) layer is made from today's latest passes, and will not be there tomorrow. The MODIS "daily_aqua and "daily_terra" layers are subsets of the latest daily passes.

Click the "Layers" link to see and modify the various layers included in your map. The window may take a while to load. Layer names are determined at the server level. Check "Auto" first, then make any changes. At this point layers should appear or disappear when a checkbox is checked or unchecked. Some servers are faster than others. Use some care as the small "Layers" page must be closed before attempting to reopen it again. Clicking "Previous" will go out one layer only. Contol-click will continue to go out. Click "Full Extent" to return to the initial scale.

This is a modification of earlier efforts by Dave Vieglais
Inline Javascript copyright © 2002
The University of Kansas Natural History Museum and Biodiversity Research Center