USGS
South Florida Information Access


The South Florida Information Access (SOFIA) Website

http://sofia.usgs.gov/

The south Florida ecosystem, encompassing the Kissimmee River Valley, Everglades, Florida Bay, urban areas, developed agricultural areas, rangelands, and wetlands, has been altered greatly over the past 100 years. Resource managers, Federal, State, and local agencies, and other groups are seeking to reverse environmentally damaging actions taken during that period. The U. S. Geological Survey (USGS) began a research program in support of the restoration of the Everglades and South Florida ecosystem in 1995. USGS personnel have been conducting research projects designed to provide sound scientific information upon which resource managers can base their decisions. The USGS also has recognized the need for a central site to provide all interested parties with information from this research and access to these data. The South Florida Information Access web site (SOFIA) was created as a 'one-stop-shopping' access point for research on South Florida. All USGS South Florida Place-Based Studies research projects, ranging from mercury contamination in the Everglades to coral reef decline, are online at this site.

drawing showing the components of the sofia website including homepage, data, metadata, outreach, publications, and projects
SOFIA - your 'one-stop-shopping' access to greater Everglades information. [larger version]

What will you find on the SOFIA website? SOFIA provides project descriptions, proposals, publications, data (through our data exchange site), presentations, and contact information, as well as general interest items, such as photographs and posters. The SOFIA site also is a portal through which you can access our extensive database and internet map server (IMS).

The site also contains over 400 publications: circulars, fact sheets, open file reports, lectures, papers, posters, and reports. Included are not only publications created by the south Florida program, but historical documents dating to the early 1970's as well. This effort involves locating and digitally scanning historical documents from all disciplines. By 2003 we will have an extended search interface to our publications that will allow users to customize their searches based on a variety of parameters, such as date, location, keyword, and author.

Within the last year, we have enhanced our data exchange site and added new sections to the site, including the ability to view projects by topic, region, scientists or program. The data exchange site includes a variety of data, including hydrology, biology, ecology, mapping, and chemistry. We also maintain a robust metadata collection that is FGDC-compliant and acts as a member-node of the National Spatial Data Infrastructure (NSDI).

The SOFIA site has grown tremendously since it’s initial development in 1996. The site increased from fewer than 100 pages in 1996 to over 4600 webpages in 2003. In addition to the tremendous growth in content available online, the SOFIA website has shown an increase in the number of visitors it receives. Currently, over 1300 unique visitors use the SOFIA site every daty.

For more information about the SOFIA webisite, contact:
Heather Henkel
Webmaster
hhenkel@usgs.gov
(727) 803-8747 x3028
Ronnie Best
Program Coordinator
ronnie_best@usgs.gov
(305) 903-5743



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U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey
This page is: http://sofia.usgs.gov/geer/2003/posters/sofia/print.html
Comments and suggestions? Contact: Heather Henkel - Webmaster
Last updated: 19 February, 2004 @ 04:28 PM(HSH)