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         Washington Geography:     more books (100)
  1. A montane rain-forest;: A contribution to the physiological plant geography of Jamaica, (Carnegie Institution of Washington publication) by Forrest Shreve, 1914
  2. Population management study, Washington County, Utah by Ken D Theis, 1994
  3. The physical and commercial geography of western Washington [microform]: A lecture delivered before the Geographical Society of the Pacific, August 12, 1890 by John S Hittell, 1890
  4. Washington (Tarr and McMurry geographies :) by Ralph S Tarr, 1906
  5. The geography of low-skilled work and workers in the Washington metropolitan region by Mark Rubin, 1998
  6. Physiography of the Skyomish Basin, Washington (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences) by Warren Slocum Smith, 1917
  7. Geography History and Government of Washington State
  8. Geographic ordering of information: An exploratory examination (Washington) by Waldo Rudolph Tobler, 1960
  9. Washington, District of Columbia, Streetmap: Including Alexandria, Berwyn Heights, Bladensburg, Brentwood ... & University Park (USA Maps) by Universal Map, 1997-01
  10. The National Map : Washington-Idaho pilot project (SuDoc I 19.127:114-01) by U.S. Geological Survey, 2001
  11. Washington date book: Incorporated municipalities and created counties by Gerald D Davenport, 2001
  12. The Rand-McNally grammar school geography by James A Bowen, 1900
  13. 1990 census atlas of Washington State by Richard Morrill, 1992
  14. Population change in Washington: Redistribution and forecasts by Richard L Morrill, 1982

61. USGS Geography: The National Map Partners
Strong commercial and cultural ties across the washington and Idaho State The geographic names layer of the project is a subset of data extracted from
http://nationalmap.gov/projects/wash-idaho.html

The National Map
Home Partners/Data Washington ... Idaho
Washington–Idaho Partnership Project
Summary of Project
Strong commercial and cultural ties across the Washington and Idaho State line unite the Washington-Idaho Partnership Project study area. The primary focus area is the Spokane to Coeur d'Alene urban corridor that extends from Spokane County, Washington, to Kootenai County, Idaho. Both counties have mature geographic information system (GIS) programs and can provide significant data to the project. Pend Oreille County, Washington, and Bonner County, Idaho, lie north of the primary focus area and are included in the project to investigate data-sharing opportunities in areas with less mature GIS programs.
Project Data Description
  • Digital Orthophoto Quadrangles
    Digital Orthophoto Quadrangles Countywide digital orthophoto quadrangle (DOQ) mosaics were created from available 1-m digital orthophotographs covering the project area. Most of the available DOQs were created from 1998-99 vintage aerial photographs, with a few from 1992. Under a partnership agreement with Kootenai County, Idaho, 32 quarter-quadrangles were updated. The metadata (see Layer Metadata link on the viewer) lists the original source dates for all DOQs used in the mosaics. The mosaics were compressed at 10:1 using MrSID compression software. Some speckling in the mosaic images resulted from this compression. Future plans include serving uncompressed DOQs directly from the data server to avoid the speckling.

62. USGS Geography: The National Map Partners
Partners/Data and The National Map washington Northwest Geographic Science Team 909 First Avenue, Suite 900 Seattle, WA 98104 Phone 206220-4563
http://nationalmap.gov/partners/wa.html

The National Map
Home Partners/Data
Washington
Partner Datasets —Below is information about the high-resolution datasets available for this State. Partners are listed below each dataset. To view the data displayed graphically, go to The National Map Viewer and click on the “Find Place” tool located on the left side of the Viewer and select from the “Zoom to a Partner Dataset” dropdown menu for desired State dataset.

63. UT Library Online - Social Sciences Guides - Geography
washington, DC Association of American Geographers, 1985. G 116 G44 1985 PCL Reference Dept G 116 G44 1985 PCL Map Collection Desk
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/subject/ss/geog/
@import url("/utlol-2nd.css"); Skip to Content Home Sitemap Help
SEARCH: choose an area to search Library Web Site Library Catalog How Do I...? Web

64. Jobs In Geography : Earthworks : Assistant Professor - Physical Geography - Nive
University of Mary washington. Department of geography. Assistant Professor Physical geography. The Department of geography seeks a physical geographer to
http://www.earthworks-jobs.com/geography/umw5071.html
Main Menu Geography Jobs
University of Mary Washington
Department of Geography
Assistant Professor - Physical Geography
The Department of Geography seeks a physical geographer to fill a tenure-track position at the Assistant Professor level beginning August 2006. A Ph.D. in geography is required at the time of appointment. The successful applicant will help build a physical geography program. Initial teaching responsibilities include an introductory level, two-semester physical geography course plus laboratory; GIS and/or remote sensing; and upper-level courses in his/her area of specialty. The normal teaching load is three 4-credit courses per semester. Please send letter of application, curriculum vitae, statement of teaching philosophy, evidence of teaching excellence, and three letters of reference by October 4, 2005 . Postmarks will not be honored. Apply: Dr. Stephen Hanna , Chair, Department of Geography, University of Mary Washington, 1301 College Avenue, Fredericksburg, VA 22401. Voice 540-654-1490. Fax 540-654-1074. Email In a continuing effort to enrich its academic environment and provide equal educational and employment opportunities, the University of Mary Washington actively encourages women and minorities to apply.

65. National Atlases: Presenting The Nation's Cultural Geography
At the national scale, this human geography has perhaps been captured best by the New York McGrawHill and washington, DC Library of Congress, 1997.
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/gmdhtml/census2.html
National Atlases Presenting the Nation's Cultural Geography: 1790-1920 Beginnings: 1790-1870 The First National Atlas: 1870 National Atlases: 1880-1920 References Beginnings: Top of Page Statistical Atlas issued by the Bureau of the Census with the 1870 census (Walker 1874); and the topographic mapping program established at the Geological Survey in 1882, the nation's mother map, to use the term employed by the program's first director (Gannett 1892), or what is today known as the national spatial data infrastructure (National Research Council 1993). By the time the 1860 census returns were ready for tabulation, the nation was sinking into internal conflict. As a result, superintendent of the census Joseph C. G. Kennedy and his staff produced only an abbreviated set of reports, which included no graphic or cartographic representations. Census staff did, however, assist in the cartographic display of this new round of statistics in several other ways. Most importantly, they aided the war effort by preparing maps of Southern states for Union field commanders that displayed militarily vital topics: white population, slave population, predominant agricultural products (all by county), and rail and post-road transportation routes. Thematic maps using census statistics were also published privately to raise funds for sick and wounded Union soldiers and for other war-related efforts (Friis 1974).
The First National Atlas: 1870 Top of Page The 1870 census provided the nation with an astounding array of graphic and cartographic depictions of its state of geographic knowledge, especially in superintendent of the census Francis A. Walker's grand folio of text, statistical graphics, and thematic maps, the

66. George Washington: Surveyor And Mapmaker
The geography and Map Division has two manuscript maps that washington drew of the land he purchased from Clifton. The earlier is a map washington copied in
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/gmdhtml/gwmaps.html
George Washington: Surveyor and Mapmaker
Tracing the Maps in George Washington's Life Boyhood and Beginnings The Fairfax Connection Culpeper, the Frontier, and Alexandria ... Acknowledgments Tracing the Maps in George Washington's Life "The want of accurate Maps of the Country which has hitherto been the Scene of War, has been a great disadvantage to me. I have in vain endeavored to procure them and have been obliged to make shift, with such sketches as I could trace from my own Observations . . . ."

The George Washington Atlas , initially published in 1932 by the George Washington Bicentennial Committee, was the first attempt to compile a bibliography of maps drawn or annotated by George Washington. The atlas was conceived as part of the nationwide observance of the two hundredth anniversary of Washington's birth and identified 110 extant maps or surveys drawn or annotated by Washington. The editor, Colonel Lawrence Martin, chief of the Geography and Map Division, Library of Congress, attempted to list all known Washington maps and brought more than twenty new items to light. These range from Washington's first survey exercise in 1747 to his last survey of the Mount Vernon lands and include pencil sketches, pen and ink drawings, roughly drawn field surveys, and finished survey plats. Recent research has uncovered additional items not included in the 1932 inventory.

67. Dr Richard Washington - School Of Geography And The Environment Academic Staff
Richard washington is a coPI on the BodEx field experiment to the Bodele Dr Richard washington is a University Lecturer and Fellow of Keble College.
http://www.geog.ox.ac.uk/staff/rwashington.html
HOME Research Staff IGS ...
Staff Index

Dr Richard Washington
Position(s): University Lecturer
Fellow and Tutor at Keble College
Contact Info: Telephone
e-mail
richard.washington(a)geog.ox.ac.uk
* Replace (a) with @ Research Interests Richard Washington's research interests are climate change and variability in Africa. He has been a member of the World Climate Research Program CLIVAR Africa panel ( VACS ) for the last three years. VACS serves as the scientific steering group for African climate science. Richard Washington is a co-PI on the BodEx field experiment to the Bodele Depression in Chad (the dustiest place on Earth), the subject of a recent article in Nature In 2004 the UK government, through a joint DEFRA and DFID initiative, commissioned Richard Washington to write a report on African climate:
Action to tackle climate change
[DEFRA website]
View the DFID Press Release
[DFID website]
View the full DFID Press Release
[DFID website PDF - 104KB] The report was co-authored with a dozen other scientists in the UK and drew on 40 experts worldwide. The report feeds into the ongoing G8 initiative through the Commission for Africa. View the Report [DFID website PDF - 178KB] Richard was a contributing author to the Africa chapter on the IPCC Third Assessment and is a contributing author to the observed climate chapter and a reviewer of the Africa chapter of the Fourth Assessment.

68. Embassy Of Finland, Washington, Consulates General Of Finland, New York And Los
geography Land of Lakes and Forests 2003 Embassy of Finland, washington © 2003 Consulates General of Finland, New York and Los Angeles
http://www.finland.org/doc/en/about/general/geography.asp
General information Geography Climate People ... For Travellers About Finland General information
Geography - Land of Lakes and Forests Finland is the fifth largest country in the European Union (EU) and is the most northerly state on the mainland of Europe. Approximately 130,500 square miles (338,000 sq. km), Finland is similar in size to the state of Montana. However, it is narrower and longer with 690 miles (1100 km) stretching between its southern and northern tips. Thousands of islands and small cliffs dot the southern and southwestern coast of Finland in the Baltic Sea. Åland, the most recognizable set of islands, is located between Finland and Sweden and boasts more than 6,500 isles and islands. Many important relics of the Stone, Iron and Bronze Ages have been found there. .
Map of Finland

Saimaa - the biggest lake of Finland

Åland islands

Finnish tourist board

Last update 3.10.2005 About this website
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69. The National Geography Content Standards. ERIC Digest.
washington, DC National Geographic Society, 1994. ED 375 073. geography ACROSS THE CURRICULUM. washington, DC National Education Association, 1990.
http://ericdigests.org/1996-1/geography.htm
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Source: ERIC Clearinghouse for Social Studies/Social Science Education Bloomington IN.
The National Geography Content Standards. ERIC Digest.
"Geography for Life: National Geography Standards 1994" is a major contribution to social studies and geographical education. It specifies what students in American schools should learn and be able to do with regard to geography. There are six essential elements of geography into which 18 standards are grouped. ELEMENT 1: THE WORLD IN SPATIAL TERMS Maps, photographs, and satellite images are principal tools for investigating the relationships between people, places, and environments. When information is shown using those tools, it is in a spatial context. The spatial context for geography is the Earth. The geographically informed person knows and understands: (Standard 1) How to use maps and other geographic representations, tools, and technologies to acquire, process, and report information from a spatial perspective. (Standard 2) How to use mental maps to organize information about people, places, and environments in a spatial context. (Standard 3) How to analyze the spatial organization of people, places, and environments on Earth's surface. ELEMENT 2: PLACES AND REGIONS People are attached to particular places and regions. Regions and places have been given meaning by people, and in turn those places and regions help people to organize and understand the complex world. The geographically informed person knows and understands: (Standard 4) The physical and human characteristics of places. (Standard 5) That people create regions to interpret Earth's complexity. (Standard 6) How culture and experience influence people's perceptions of places and regions.

70. Huxley College Of The Environment
Existing Bachelor of Arts Requirements degree programs in geography, Env. Education, Western washington University. (360) 650-3520 huxley@cc.wwu.edu
http://www.ac.wwu.edu/~huxley/
HUXLEY
COLLEGE
of the
ENVIRONMENT W E S T E R N W A S H I N G T O N U N I V E R S I T Y
Welcome to Huxley College Huxley College Power Point Presentation Huxley Alumni Newsletter 2005 Ernst Gayden Small Grants Information Facilities, Resources, Institutes Undergraduate Degree Programs Activities

71. Washington, D.C.: Lessons On Diversity And Change
This series of lessons explores the diversity of the washington, The Uses of geography. Students understands how to apply geography to interpret the
http://www.prb.org/Content/NavigationMenu/PRB/Educators/DC_Metro_Data/Washington
Educators Lesson Plans Resource Guides Human Population ... Build-A-Text
Focus/Topics Environment HIV/AIDS Population Trends Reproductive Health Aging Education Family Planning Fertility Gender Health Marriage/Family Migration Mortality Policy Poverty Race/Ethnicity Rural Population Youth
Regions Asia/Pacific Europe Latin America Middle East North America Sub-Saharan Africa
PRB Websites
Washington, D.C.: Lessons on Diversity and Change
The Washington, D.C., metropolitan area is a region of diversity and change. The District of Columbia and its surrounding counties are an example of demographic changes in U.S. metropolitan areas. This series of lessons explores the diversity of the Washington, D.C. area and focuses on the census data available to measure demographic change. Activities will explore immigration to the region, the diversity of the people who live there, the dynamics of families, and the impact of population growth. The 2000 Census provided researchers, policymakers, and the general public a wealth of data about our nation. This information complements this series by providing statistics for the D.C. metropolitan area on such topics as race and ethnicity, households, families, population size, and composition. These lessons were developed by Susan Dennis, a social studies teacher at Anacostia Senior High School, and Cheryl Lynn Stauffer, at the Population Reference Bureau. Lessons were developed with support from the Fowler Foundation.

72. Access To Social Services: The Changing Urban Geography Of Poverty And Service P
This paper analyzes the shifting geography of concentrated poverty and its and onequarter as many providers in metropolitan Chicago, washington, DC,
http://www.brookings.edu/metro/pubs/20040816_allard.htm

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Calendar of Events ... Site Map
Access to Social Services: The Changing Urban Geography of Poverty and Service Provision
by Scott W. Allard
August 2004
FullReport in PDF (475KB)
mailhide2('feedback', 'brookings', 'edu', 'Access to Social Services: The Changing Urban Geography of Poverty and Service Provision')
Additional Resources Poverty and Welfare Research
Findings
  • On average, poor populations in urban centers have greater spatial access to social services than poor populations living in suburban areas. In all three metropolitan areas, tracts with higher poverty rates are located in closer proximity to social service providers than tracts with lower poverty rates. On average, tracts with low poverty rates are within 1.5 miles of one-third, one-fifth, and one-quarter as many providers in metropolitan Chicago, Washington, D.C., and Los Angeles respectively, as tracts with high poverty rates. While spatial access to social service providers is greatest in central city areas, potential demand for services is also much greater in central city areas than in suburban areas. Service providers in the city of Chicago are in proximity to ten times as many poor households as providers in suburban Chicago. Social service providers located in the District of Columbia are proximate to about six times more poor households than service providers in suburban Washington, depending on the particular service area. Because poverty is less centralized in Los Angeles, however, potential demand facing social service providers in central city is only about twice that of the potential demand in suburban areas.

73. About The USA - Travel & Geography > Washington D.C.
Travel geography Travel to the United States The States Territories Situated on the Potomac River, washington, DC, was originally carved out of
http://usa.usembassy.de/washingtondc.htm

Travel to the United States

The Regions of the United States
The States, Districts and Territories of the United States
Flag

Washington D.C.. American FactFinder (U.S. Census) Washington D.C. is the capital of the United States. It is also one of the country's most beautiful and historic cities and the site of many of its most popular tourist attractions. These include the White House, where the President lives and works; the United States Capitol, where the Congress meets; the Washington Monument, the Lincoln Memorial and other historic structures; as well as a wide range of museums which together house an enormous collection of items from America's past. Am Potomac River gelegen, wurde Washington D.C. auf Land gebaut, dass ursprünglich zu Maryland und Virginia gehörte. Der in Frankreich geborene amerikanische Ingenieur, Architekt und Stadtplaner Pierre-Chalres L'Enfant entwarf den Grundriss der Stadt, mit breiten Strassen, die vom Kapitol ausgehen, und zahlreichen Kreisen und Parks. Die Bezeichnung "District of Columbia" ehrt Christopher Columbus, der bekanntere Name der Stadt, Washington, ehrt den ersten Präsidenten. Der Kongress traf sich 1800 zum ersten Mal in Washington, auch wenn der erste Bauabschnitt des Kapitols erst 1825 fertiggestellt wurde. Heute besuchen Millionen jedes Jahr Washington D.C. um das Kapitol, das Weisse Haus, die Library of Congress und die zahlreichen Museen und Monumente der Stadt zu besichtigen.

74. About The USA - Travel & Geography > Washington
Travel geography Travel to the United States The States Territories The States, Districts and Territories of the United States washington
http://usa.usembassy.de/washington.htm

Travel to the United States

The Regions of the United States
The States, Districts and Territories of the United States
State Flag

State Seal
Washington. American FactFinder (U.S. Census) Washington, the "Evergreen State"
Abbreviation:
WA Washington is famous for scenery of breathtaking beauty and sharp contrasts. High mountains rise above evergreen forests and sparkling coastal waters. The deep forests of the Olympic Peninsula are among the rainiest places in the world but the flat semi-desert land that lies east of the Cascade Mountains stretches for long distances without a single tree. Snow-covered peaks tower above the foothills and lowlands around them. Mount Rainier, the highest mountain, in the state, appears to "float" on the horizon, southeast of Seattle and Tacoma. In 1853, the Washington Territory was formed from part of the Oregon Territory. Its coastal location and Puget Sound harbors give it a leading role in trade with Alaska, Canada, and the Pacific Rim. The state has two major mountain rangesthe 7,000-foot Olympic Mountains surrounded by temperate rain forest on the peninsula west of Puget Sound, and the more majestic Cascade Range, which boasts the 14,410-foot Mount Rainier and the volcanic Mount St. Helens, which erupted twice in the 1980s.

75. Postcard Geography - Postcard From The Moderator, Washington, DC
Postcard geography is an online curriculum project linking schools, worldwide, in the exchange of picture postcards and greetings to learn about geography
http://pcg.cyberbee.com/dc.html
Dear Postcard Geography Participants, Greetings from Washington, D.C.! I have been enjoying the sites, monuments and buildings that mark the events of our nation's past and allow the conduct of its present. Let me tell you about my home for the last few years... Washington, D.C. is a city, district, and the capital of the United States of America. It was established in 1790 as the site of the new nation's permanent capital. Named after the first U.S. president, George Washington, the city has served since 1800 as the home of our federal government. The city is located on the Potomac and Anacostia Rivers. It is bordered on the north, east, and southeast by Maryland and on the southwest by Virginia. Washington's climate is hot and humid in the summer and cold and damp in the winter. It has a lovely spring, ushered in by glorious blooming of world famous cherry blossoms, and a spectacular fall marked by crisp temperatures and brilliant, paint box colors! Washington is home to many famous and interesting public buildings and monuments. The Capitol of the United States is located on a hill 88 feet above the Potomac. It consists of two wings that branch from a central rotunda.

76. Lost In Geography - The Washington Times: Metropolitan - March 21, 2005
A Roper poll commissioned by the National Geographic Society several years ago found that just 13 percent of Americans between the age of 18 and 24,
http://washingtontimes.com/metro/20050320-092253-7491r.htm
March 21, 2005 Washington D.C. Advertise Subscribe
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Front Page ... TWT Insider Stock Quotes Symbol Lookup Classifieds Home Guide Auto Weekend ... Somali pirates use hijacked ship as bait Lost in geography
By Ann Geracimos
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
A Roper poll commissioned by the National Geographic Society several years ago found that just 13 percent of Americans between the age of 18 and 24, or one in seven, could find Iraq on a map, and 83 percent could not locate Afghanistan. (Just over a third of the 18- to 24-year-olds polled, however, knew that the Marquesas Islands, featured in a previous season's "Survivor" television show, are in the South Pacific.)
As a result of this survey and similar reports, nonprofit organizations have taken up the cause of trying to improve Americans' awareness of geography and its importance; those people most concerned include some of the country's dedicated teachers.
One such teacher is Terri Simons, a sixth-grade teacher from Eugene, Ore., who is a consulting member of a state-based network of teachers and parents called the National Geographic Alliance (www.ngsednet.org), run by the education arm of the National Geographic Society. Mrs. Simons' efforts include providing teachers with the resources to implement geography in their curriculums.
"I say to colleagues: 'How do you learn about what happened if you don't know the where, because the where is practically the why?' I see geography as involving myself with the world," Mrs. Simons says, adding that "some of the best teaching methods are also the hardest to do. We have large class sizes, and it is almost suicidal to take 44 kids out on a mapping activity to go out and walk around and take notice of cultural and human characteristics of the environment."

77. MSN Encarta - Related Items - Washington (state)
geography and environment Rainier, Mount, dormant volcano of the Cascade Range in west central washington. At 4392 m (14410 ft), it is one of the
http://encarta.msn.com/related_761572009/Washington_(state).html
var fSendSelectEvents = true; var fSendExpandCollapseEvents = true; var fCallDisplayUAText = false; Web Search: Encarta Home ... Upgrade your Encarta Experience Search Encarta Related Items from Encarta Washington (state) Mount Rainier Olympia, capital Seattle, largest city Washington Facts and Figures ... , dormant volcano of the Cascade Range in west central Washington. At 4,392 m (14,410 ft), it is one of the highest mountains in the... View article Exclusively for MSN Encarta Premium Subscribers. Join Now

78. MSN Encarta - San Juan Islands
San Juan Islands, island group constituting San Juan County, northwestern washington, United States (geography) Search Encarta for San Juan Islands
http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761562898/San_Juan_Islands.html
Web Search: Encarta Home ... Upgrade your Encarta Experience Search Encarta
Subscription Article MSN Encarta Premium: Get this article, plus 60,000 other articles, an interactive atlas, dictionaries, thesaurus, articles from 100 leading magazines, homework tools, daily math help and more for $4.95/month or $29.95/year (plus applicable taxes.) Learn more. This article is exclusively available for MSN Encarta Premium Subscribers. Already a subscriber? Sign in above. San Juan Islands San Juan Islands , island group constituting San Juan County, northwestern Washington, at the entrance to Puget Sound. The islands lie to the east of... Related Items cities nearby Friday Harbor marina 5 items Dynamic Map View map of San Juan Islands Multimedia Selected Web Links The Journal of the San Juan Islands San Juan Island Chamber of Commerce 4 items Sidebars FROM THE POINTS OF THE COMPASS
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79. PSU Department Of Geography News Ph.D. Student Travels To
at the Society of Women Geographers Headquarters in washington, DC. Photo by Naser Khan. During her semester long stay in Gujarat in 2004,
http://www.geog.psu.edu/news/sabhlok.html

80. PSU Geography Alumni Where Are They Now Dr. Vaclav Smil (Ph.D
The University of washington s Department of geography has recognized David s commitment to excellence in undergraduate teaching on five separate occasions.
http://www.geog.psu.edu/alumni/hodge.html

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