CA DPR Township and Range - Search By Latitude and Longitude.

A user account is not needed for the features on this web page.

Enter latitude and longitude.  Find the corresponding California Department of Pesticide Regulation township and section.  Not for survey use.

Latitude Examples:  38° 0'25.65"N,  38 0 25.65,  38.007124
Longitude Examples:  121°10'59.50"W,  121 10 59.50,  -121.183194

Free. User account is not needed.
If you want to see the surrounding townships, then once you have clicked the "Fly To" button, come back and click the BLM or National Atlas "View on Google Earth" button. Free. User account is not needed.

Hint

In mountainous areas it might be helpful to turn off the terrain layer in Google Earth.  Otherwise, the survey grid can look distorted as it shapes itself to the earth's surface.

Information: California Department of Pesticide Regulation Township and Range

California’s pesticide use reporting program is internationally recognized as the most comprehensive of its kind.  DPR annually collects and processes more than 2.5 million records of chemical applications....Reports include the amount and name of pesticide applied, date and location (section, township, range) of the application....

Excerpted from Regulating Pesticides: The California Story, a Guide to Pesticide Regulation in California available at www.cdpr.ca.gov/docs/pressrls/dprguide1.htm

Department of Pesticide Home Page - http://www.cdpr.ca.gov/

Data Source - http://projects.atlas.ca.gov/projects/dprplsfill/

EARTH POINT DISCLAIMER:
Not for survey use.  This data represents an extension of the federal PLSS prepared by the California Department of Pesticide Regulation.  Gaps and irregularities caused by civil land grants have been mathematically filled without the benefit of field surveys.  Townships, ranges, and sections are an extrapolation, and might not exist in the federal survey.

For illustration only.  User to verify all information.  Data produced by California Department of Pesticide Regulation is not guaranteed.  Federal PLSS gaps were filled mathematically without the benefit of field surveys.