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         Ohio Cities & Communities Geography:     more detail
  1. Urban land use for transport systems and city shapes.: An article from: Geographical Analysis by Francesca Medda, Peter Nijkamp, et all 2003-01-01
  2. Beyond Edge Cities (Garland Reference Library of Social Science) by Richard Bingham, 1997-10-01

41. Geography
1013453210.gif, City Directories from Southeastern ohio An index of citationsand abstracts on physical geography from 1989 to the present including
http://infotree.library.ohiou.edu/bysubject/social-sciences/geography/
Research Starter Kit
Titles A - Z

Newest Additions

About InfoTree
... Ask a Librarian You are here: Home Social Sciences > Geography Login to My Infotree Advanced Search QuickLinks > Library Catalogs ALICE Online Catalog OhioLINK Central Catalog WorldCat (OU only) Databases Academic Search Premier (OU only) Lexis-Nexis (OU only) E-Journal Gateway Web Searching Academic Info Google InfoMine Yahoo RefWorks Reference Tools American Heritage Dictionary Oxford English Dictionary Britannica Online (OU only) Reference Universe AnyWho Phone Directory Library Services Course Reserves Interlibrary Loan
Geography General
Showing 1 to 20 of 47 Previous Next
Current Geographical Publications
Article database with citations only
Access Info: Ohio U. - Athens campus only (including off-campus access)
An index of bibliographical references to books, periodical articles, pamphlets, government documents, maps, and atlases in the American Geographical Society Collection of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee from 1985 to the present... African American Migration Experience by NYPL Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
More than 16,500 pages of text, 8,300 illustrations, and 60 plus maps...

42. City Of Cuyahoga Falls :: Official Website
City Map. Churches. Community Calendar. Community Profile. Clubs Organizations Northeast ohio Summit County. Nearest Major cities Akron (abutting)
http://www.cityofcf.com/web2/index.asp?dir=about&page=transportation

43. Shaker Heights, Ohio: Information From Answers.com
Shaker Heights, city (1990 pop. 30831), Cuyahoga co., NE ohio, a residential geography. Location of Shaker Heights, ohio. Shaker Heights is located at
http://www.answers.com/topic/shaker-heights-ohio
showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Encyclopedia Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping Shaker Heights, Ohio Encyclopedia Shaker Heights, city (1990 pop. 30,831), Cuyahoga co., NE Ohio, a residential suburb of Cleveland; inc. 1912. Founded (1905) as a suburban development by Cleveland businessmen Oris and Mantis Van Sweringen, it takes its name from a Shaker community that once existed there (1822–89). It is a beautiful city of imposing houses, squares, and wide boulevards, part of “the Heights” area, which also includes the cities of Beachwood, Cleveland Heights, South Euclid, and University Heights. A museum documenting the Shakers is in the city. var tcdacmd="cc=edu;dt"; Wikipedia Shaker Heights, Ohio Shaker Heights is a city located in Cuyahoga County, Ohio . As of the census, the city had a total population of 29,405.
Geography
Shaker Heights is located at 41°28'35" North, 81°33'6" West (41.476502, -81.551620) According to the United States Census Bureau , the city has a total area of 16.4

44. Mansfield Ohio Resource Guide, City Or Community Of Mansfield
History, relocation info and City or community of Mansfield, ohio facts and The geography for Mansfield is Appalachian foothills of North Central ohio
http://www.usacitiesonline.com/ohcountymansfield.htm

Need a place

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Choose a new State Washington D.C. Our Nation's Capital Check out these Special Messages Find a place Get $100! Make Reservations Air, hotel,car Welcome to Key to the City's page for
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Zip Code
The Heart of Ohio
The Ohio state capital is Columbus. What would you like to know about Mansfield Location City Attractions Economy Mansfield Government Mansfield Organizations, Churches, and Sports. Mansfield Libraries. Mansfield Schools. Zip Codes Return to Index The population of Mansfield is approximately 50,627 (1990). The approximate number of families is 21,909 (1990). The amount of land area in Mansfield is 72.336 sq. kilometers. The amount of land area in Mansfield is 31.5 sq. miles. The amount of surface water is sq kilometers. The distance from Mansfield to Washington DC is 328 miles. The distance to the Ohio state capital is 59 miles. (as the crow flies) Mansfield is positioned 40.76 degrees north of the equator and 82.52 degrees west of the prime meridian.

45. SFU Geography Homepage
She will soon defend her doctoral dissertation in geography at ohio State Michael Modula (Ph.D., City and Regional Planning, ohio State University).
http://www.sfu.ca/geography/people/faculty/Faculty_sites/EugeneMcCann/grads.htm
sfu geography downloads links contact us Eugene McCann Assistant Professor Department of Geography
Robert C. Brown Hall (RCB) 7126
Phone: 604-291-4599 Fax: 604-291-5841
emccann@sfu.ca
graduate students background research publications teaching ... graduate students Current Advisees
Stephanie Campbell (Ph.D. candidate). Topic: The politics of urban transportation.
Rini Sumartojo (Ph.D. candidate). Topic: Indo-Canadian youth violence and the politics of Canadian Multiculturalism: the case of Greater Vancouver.
Past Advisees
Ongoing (SFU unless otherwise stated)
Completed
Completed at Ohio State University unless otherwise stated
background
research publications teaching ... graduate students

46. Geography Awareness Week 2000 @ Nationalgeographic.com
Green spaces in towns and cities may lack the ecological richness of true Volunteer to pick up trash around your school, community center, church,
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/gaw/pop/pop_58_teacher.html

Glossary
Relevant U.S.
National

Geography
...
Standards
Related
National
Geographic
Web Sites Habitats: The Growth of a Forest
Under-

ground Railroad
Related ...
Store
Venice Beach, California, Boardwalk Photograph by Nik Wheeler/CORBIS Through the process of mapping green spaces near their school, students will gain understanding of the different kinds of green spaces in urban areas, and of the functions and importance of these spaces. They also can predict the impact of population growth on the green spaces in their region. Your Mission Leave some green, please! urban and suburban areas that often are literally green: greenways, parks, gardens, median strips, greenbelts. Breathing Room Subjects: Geography, Earth Science Relevant U.S. National Geography Standards: 1, 3, 14, 18 Materials
  • Color pencils or markers
  • Paper
  • Population map of city or region of school very Wild Space U.S. Wilderness Act Have students research greenways. Teachers can find general information at most of the Web sites listed and a comprehensive overview of greenways in an online handbook at the Quebec-Labrador Foundation site ( http://www.qlf.org/greenways/
  • 47. Cleveland Digital Library: CLEVELAND CARTOGRAPHY: All About The Maps Of Greater
    ohio Historical Society Library the other big collection of historical maps of geography and Planning; Lakeland Community College geography department
    http://www.csuohio.edu/CUT/Clevmaps.htm
    Information about historical and contemporary maps and map-related happenings in and about Cleveland and the Western Reserve region of northeastern Ohio. Please note that this site has grown beyond its original organizational scheme and what you want may be under one of several possible headings. Surf creatively! "Use ideas as your map," as Bob Dylan said.
    ADDRESSES / INTERACTIVE MAPS
    HISTORY (of local maps)
    ART (maps used in)
    LINKS (to other sites)
    CARTOGRAPHERS
    NEWS (about maps)
    CHARTS
    NORTHERN OHIO MAP SOCIETY
    COLLECTIONS (and institutional holdings)
    OHIO (agencies)
    DEALERS
    PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION (RTA)
    EDUCATION (learning about maps)
    PUBLISHERS
    EVENTS
    WEATHER
    WHIMSY (fun with maps) The Cleveland Digital Library
    "Text, maps, and images about the history of greater Cleveland
    and the Western Reserve region of northeastern Ohio"
    Look up ADDRESSES in, or information about, Cleveland (and the U. S.) using INTERACTIVE, on-line maps
    • USGS 1900 era Ohio Quadrangle 15-minute topographic maps of Ohio in digital form. Requires simple plug-in. City of Cleveland Planning Department . The Planning Department's new GIS web server, furnishing great information on two topics: Cleveland census data and Cleveland planning maps. Note how more information appears as you zoom in on your chosen area.

    48. Course Descriptions: Cleveland State University Undergraduate Catalog
    UST 289 Physical geography (30-3). Discussions of physical environments, Social, economic, and political structures operating within cities;
    http://www.csuohio.edu/undergradcatalog/courses/courindex/ust.htm
    SKIP NAVIGATION CSU HOME A-Z INDEX CONTACT CSU ...
    Urban Studies Courses
    On this page:
    Faculty
    Link to Department Personnel Professors: Mark S. Rosentraub (Dean), William Bowen (Director, Ph.D. Program), Michael Gates, Edward Hill, Miron Kaufman, Sanda Kaufman, W. Dennis Keating (Associate Dean and Director, MSUS Program), Janet Kelly (Levin Chair), Norman Krumholz, Larry Ledebur, Walter Leedy, Helen Liggett, Sylvester Murray, Robert A. Simons, Michael Spicer, Roberta Steinbacher, Camilla Stivers, Michael Tevesz; Associate Professors: Jennifer Alexander, Virginia O. Benson, Mittie Olion Chandler (Director, Urban Child Research Center), Lawrence Keller, Wendy Kellogg, (Director, MAES and MUPDD Programs), Harry Margulis, Brenda Marshall, Heidi Gorovitz Robertson, Vera Vogelsang-Coombs (Director, MPA Program), Michael Walton, Alan Weinstein (Director, JD/MAES, JD/MPA and JD/MUPDD Programs), Michael V. Wells (Director, Undergraduate Programs); Assistant Professors: Shari Garmise, Jun Koo, Nancy Meyer-Emerick, Brian A. Mikelbank.

    49. Resource People
    The city and ohio State fund the center to provide design assistance to He is a senior, majoring in urban geography, and a workstudy student in the
    http://campuspartners.osu.edu/gateway/rfp/resour.html
    Request for Proposals
    Resource People

    City planning and economic development Steve McClary, Administrator, Planning Office, City of Columbus

    He supervises the city's planning office, has worked closely with Campus Partners' planning efforts and serves on the High Street steering committee. He is an excellent source for information on the city's planning and zoning policies. Patrick Grady, Administrator, Economic Development and Planning Services Division,
    City of Columbus Department of Trade and Development

    He supervises the city's efforts to retain and attract local businesses, including economic assistance and job training. The city's Planning Office reports to him. George Arnold, Director, Department of Trade and Development, City of Columbus
    He directs the city's planning, building regulation and economic development services. He also represents the city as a member of the Campus Partners Board of Trustees. Pete Cass, Economic Development Coordinator, Columbus City Council

    50. Newsletter
    Department of geography, The ohio State University, Email mccann.80@osu.edu 6.1.30 Physical geography of the City I Urban Climate and Energy Budget
    http://www.geog.buffalo.edu/ugsg/newsletter.html
    Next Issue: July, 2001. Urban Geography
    Specialty Group Newsletter
    Vol. 22 No. 1 February, 2001 ~Including a list of the UGSG Sponsored Sessions for the New York AAG Meeting~
    letter from the chair
    As usual the February newsletter brings a summary of those activities sponsored by the Urban Geography Specialty Group at the AAG conference. The significant difference from previous years is that this is the first newsletter issued electronically. Although those without an email address will receive a paper copy in the mail (as quickly as snail mail allows), the vast majority of our membership will have found theirs by following instructions emailed to them. Rising production costs and an early conference meeting date precipitated our experiment in conservation. As you will note in the letter from our editor Eugene McCann those who wish a paper newsletter in the future can receive one by contacting him. If you plan on attending the New York conference, please come and give your thoughts on the future of electronic newsletters at the UGSG Business Meeting (Thursday evening, March 1st, 6:40-8:00) – or sooner by email of course. In just a few weeks from now we will be meeting in New York. Although at the present time the excitement associated with that thought relates to the delayed progress of my paper, there will be many other sources upon arrival! Thanks to active members and the coordinating efforts of Board Members Sarah Elwood and Glen Elder we can promise 50 UGSG sponsored sessions. The themes represented in these sessions include a wide variety of issues reflecting the range of interests among urban geographers. New York figures centrally in some while others address the broader issues of changing geographies of citizenship, urban environments, the politics of urban development, and various scales of urban policy. You will find a detailed schedule and description of the sessions latter in the newsletter.

    51. MSN Encarta - Ohio
    The largest city in ohio is Columbus, with a population in 2003 of 728432.In the 1990s it experienced growth while other large ohio cities declined in
    http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761554961_7/Ohio.html
    Web Search: Encarta Home ... Upgrade your Encarta Experience Search Encarta Upgrade your Encarta Experience Spend less time searching and more time learning. Learn more Tasks Related Items more... Further Reading Editors' picks for Ohio
    Search for books and more related to
    Ohio Facts and Figures Quick information and statistics for Ohio Encarta Search Search Encarta about Ohio Editors' Picks Great books about your topic, Ohio ... Click here Advertisement document.write(' Page 7 of 15
    Ohio
    Encyclopedia Article Multimedia 19 items Dynamic Map Map of Ohio Article Outline Introduction Physical Geography Economic Activities The People of Ohio ... History B
    Principal Cities
    The largest city in Ohio is Columbus , with a population in 2003 of 728,432. In the 1990s it experienced growth while other large Ohio cities declined in population. However, the Columbus metropolitan region, with a population of 1.7 million in 2003, is smaller than the metropolitan regions of Cleveland and Cincinnati. Columbus, located in the central part of Ohio, is the state capital. In addition to serving as an administrative center, it is the industrial and commercial heart of the surrounding region. Cleveland is the second largest city in Ohio, with a population of 461,324. Cleveland’s population has been declining since the 1960s. The Cleveland metropolitan area consists of Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake, Lorain, and Medina counties, with a population of 2.9 million. Cleveland ranks as a principal industrial and commercial center in the Middle West and is one of the most important ports on the Great Lakes.

    52. MSN Encarta - Print Preview - Ohio
    The largest city in ohio is Columbus, with a population in 2003 of 728432. Assistant Professor, Department of geography, Miami University.
    http://encarta.msn.com/text_761554961___65/Ohio.html
    Print Print Preview Ohio Article View On the File menu, click Print to print the information. Ohio IV. The People of Ohio A. Population Patterns According to the 2000 national census, Ohio ranked seventh among the states in population. Its population of 11,459,011 represented a 4.7 percent increase over the 1990 population of 10,847,115. The population density is 108 persons per sq km (280 per sq mi). In 2000, 77 percent of Ohio’s population lived in urban areas. According to the 2000 census, whites constitute 85 percent of the population. Blacks, most of whom live in the Cleveland, Cincinnati, and Columbus metropolitan areas, make up 11.5 percent of the people. Asians are 1.2 percent, Native Americans 0.2 percent, and those of mixed heritage or not reporting race are 2.2 percent. Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders numbered 2,749 at the time of the census. Hispanics, who may be of any race, are 1.9 percent of the population. The heaviest concentration of population is in northeastern Ohio. Even the rural sections of northeastern Ohio are densely populated in comparison with most of the rural areas elsewhere in the state. The population in southwestern Ohio is concentrated in the Miami Valley corridor. On the rolling uplands away from the river valleys, the rural population is less dense than that of northeastern Ohio. The flatlands of northwestern Ohio are largely rural in character, with farmlands and many small villages and towns. Central Ohio has a rural population pattern similar to that of northwestern Ohio. It too is dominated by one large urban center. Southeastern Ohio has a relatively sparse population, and some of the counties in this area are losing inhabitants. There are a few small urban centers.

    53. CURRENT GEOGRAPHICAL PUBLICATIONS - REGIONAL SECTION
    Towards a geography of sustainable development and/or sustainability? Blair,William A. cities of the dead contesting the memory of the Civil War in
    http://leardo.lib.uwm.edu/cgp/hold/jan/regsect1.html
    CURRENT GEOGRAPHICAL PUBLICATIONS
    Vol. LXVIII January 2005 No. 1
    SECTION TWO: REGIONAL
    - Entries arranged in geographical order - - Clicking on ^ at end of entry will will return you to the top -
    REGIONAL TABLE OF CONTENTS
    NORTH AMERICA
  • Canada
      British Columbia
    • Alberta ...
    • Chile
      NORTH AMERICA
      McCalla, Robert J.; Slack, Brian; Comtois, Claude. Dealing with globalisation at the regional and local level: the case of contemporary containerization. The Canadian geographer [Ottawa] Vol. 48. No. 4. Winter 2004. p. 473-487. Maps.
      Canada
      Giannelli, Luciano and others. Per le lingue eschimesi. Il Polo [Fermo] Anno 59. Vol. 1. 2004. p. 13-27. (English summary.) Greer-Wootten, Bryn. Towards a geography of sustainable development and/or sustainability? Moravian geographical reports [Brno] Vol. 12. No. 1. 2004. p. 2-9. Marshall, Joan. Defining maritime boundaries: `the murky hand of history's oversight' in the Gulf of Maine.' The Canadian geographer [Ottawa] Vol. 48. No. 3. Fall 2004. p. 266-286. Maps. Peck, Barbara.
  • 54. Department Of Geography: Projects And Grants     ( College Of Arts And Scien
    Jennifer Mandel (Ph.D., ohio State University, 2001) Miami s Growth As AWorld City and Accompanying Social Structure As a Transient City .
    http://www.as.miami.edu/geography/grants.htm
    @import url(/template/includes/layout.css); @import url(/template/includes/style.css);
    Department of Geography
    Research
    Undergraduate
    Graduate
    Projects and Grants
    Thomas Boswell (Ph.D., Columbia University, 1973)
    Professor of Geography, University of Miami, has research and teaching interests in immigration, world population problems, ethnicity, and housing segregation and discrimination. He taught at the University of Northern Colorado and the University of Florida prior to coming to the University of Miami. He has just finished writing a book titled Facts About Immigration and Asking "Six Big Questions" for Florida and Miami-Dade County . The research for this work was funded ($138,000) by the Emma Lazarus Fund, the State of Florida's Department of Community Affairs, and the Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce. He is currently working on research dealing with immigration from the West Indies to the United States and with Non-Hispanic White flight from Miami-Dade County.
    Douglas O. Fuller

    55. Ohio History Central - History - Places - Railroads
    Most Ohioans initially in favor of railroads lived in communities without access to The city of Cincinnati also provided financial support for the
    http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/ohc/h/pla/rr.shtml

    56. Columns:: Professor Works To Promote Geography To ‘global’ Community
    Professor works to promote geography to ‘global’ community And in ohio, shenot only found a new countryshe discovered a new career as well.
    http://www.uga.edu/columns/030121/news8.html
    since 12/15/98
    Columns::January 21, 2003
    Common ground: Talking about race: UGA students explore sensitive topics

    Federal judge will give annual Holmes-Hunter Lecture

    Inaugural research grants awarded

    Teaching Academy inducts new members
    ...
    Floored by his own chair

    Campus News
    During the past 15 years, Kavita Pandit has made a name for herself as a researcher with work on migration and Third World development. Her research now focuses on the influx of high-tech workers from India to the United States. (Photo by Peter Frey)
    By Phil Williams
    phil@franklin.uga.edu In December 1978, Kavita Pandit left India for the first time and set off on her first airline flightone that took her a world away. From Bombay, where the temperature rarely drops below 60 degrees, she flew to Rome and London, then on to New York City, finally arriving in Columbus, Ohio, where she met America and winter about the same time. For Pandit, there is a great distance between her childhood in Bombay and an academic career in Athens. During the past 15 years, she has made her name as a researcher with work on migration and Third World development. Her research now focuses on the influx of high-tech workers from India to the United States. While India is rapidly now developing its own high-tech industries, the boom of the 1990s brought thousands of Indians to the United Statesmany highly paid engineers and managers, but also a great number of less-well-paid computer programmers. Pandit hopes to find out how immigrants in this dual track fared.

    57. Geography Objectives
    State of ohio Social Studies Standards. geography. Grade K geography Locate the local community, state and the United States on maps or globes.
    http://home.nwoca.org/Academy/StateObj/SocialStudies/Geography.html
    State of Ohio Social Studies Standards
    Geography
    Grade: K
    Geography
    Human Environmental Interaction
    Standard Number: 7.
    Identify key natural resources that are used in the students'
    Location
    Standard Number: 1.
    Identify and correctly use terms related to location, direction and distance including
    a. up/down
    b. over/under
    c. here/there d. front/back e. behind/in front of Standard Number: 2 Recite home address. Standard Number: 3. Make models and maps representing real places including the classroom. Standard Number: 4. Distinguish between land and water on maps and globes. Places and Regions Standard Number: 5. Standard Number: 6. Describe the immediate surroundings of home (e.g., streets, buildings, fields, woods or lakes). Grade: Gr. 1 Geography Human Environmental Interaction Standard Number: 7. Describe human adaptations to variations in the physical environment including a. food b. clothing

    58. Portfl_cle
    Developing a Training Program for ohio s GIS Practitioner Community. UST 290Urban geography Critical examination of the spatial structure of the
    http://www.geography.uc.edu/OHGISNET/Cleveland/portfl_cle.html
    Portfolio of the GIS program in Cleveland State University,
    Prepared for University Consortium of Geographic Information Science (UCGIS) I Research and Related Activities

  • Development of EcoCity Cleveland’s Citizens Bioregional Plan Web Site. The project is funded by USEPA and establishes a web site with Internet mapping.
    Development of a Spatial Urban Residential Land Use Population Growth Model. Funded by the NE Ohio Research Consortium. This project is a collaboration with Kent State University and the University of Akron.
    Northeast Ohio Environmental Data Exchange Network (NEOEDEN). Funded by the NE Ohio Research Consortium. The project is a collaboration with Kent State University, the University of Akron, and Youngstown State University.
    Preparing for Ohio's Elections in the Next Century: Phase I. Funded by the Ohio Legislative Services Commission. The project is a collaboration with Ohio University.
    Developing a Training Program for Ohio's GIS Practitioner Community. Funded by the Ohio Geographically Referenced Information Program and the Urban University Program. The project is a collaboration with the University of Cincinnati.
    How Many Brownfield Sites are There? and Developing a Brownfields Finance Workbook for Great Lakes Practitioners Funded by CSU Great Lakes Environmental Finance Center), for USEPA.
  • 59. Working-Class And Labor Geography
    Jonas, Andrew, Labor and Community in the Deindustrialization of Urban America Ward, David, cities and Immigrants A geography of Change in Nineteenth
    http://www.as.ysu.edu/~cwcs/Working-Class and Labor Geography.htm
    Working-Class and Labor Geography Compiled by Don Mitchell , Syracuse University For the most part this bibliography is limited to literature on North America and Britain. This is a function of my own knowledge. Contributions concerning the geography of work, working people and capital concerning other parts of the world are welcome. (Thanks to Theodore J. Hull of the National Archives, who kindly sent me a bibliography he compiled on the geography of plant closings) This bibliography is divided into the following sections: On Labor and Labor Unions Clark, Gordon, Unions and Communities under Siege: American Communities and the Crisis of Organized Labor . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989. Charlesworth, A, Gilbert, D, Randall, A, Southall, H, Wrigley, C, An Atlas of Industrial Protest in Britain, 1750-1990

    60. Subject Category - Immigration, Page 3
    At one time Cleveland was reputed to host the largest Slovak community in the Other ohio cities, particularly Toledo and Youngstown, also experienced a
    http://worlddmc.ohiolink.edu/OMP/Subject?subject=immigration&pg=3

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