Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_M - Maryland Geography Cities

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 93    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Maryland Geography Cities:     more detail
  1. Maryland's 157 - The Incorporated Cities and Towns
  2. Baltimore: Geography and Climate: An entry from Gale's <i>Cities of the United States</i>
  3. Annapolis: Geography and Climate: An entry from Gale's <i>Cities of the United States</i>
  4. Cities of the United States: The South : Alabama Arkansas Delaware Florida Georgia Kentucky Louisiana Maryland Mississippi North Carolina Oklahoma S (Cities of the United States Vol 1 the South) by Linda Schmittroth, 1994-03
  5. Ocean City, Maryland
  6. Pocomoke City, Maryland
  7. St. Mary's City, Maryland
  8. Ocean City Municipal Airport (Maryland)
  9. United States Capitol Cities Fact Files Annapolis, Maryland by Uscensus, 2010-01-09
  10. Geography and planning in the urban community;: A brief reconnaissance (University of Maryland. Bureau of Governmental Research. Studies in government) by John F Downs, 1961
  11. The geographic transformation of Prince George's County, Maryland by Sherman E Silverman, 2001

41. Human Geography - American Cities
That's what human geography is finally about. Small cities had interurban systems,too the one in Similar stories are told about Columbia, maryland, a planned
http://geography.ou.edu/courses/1103bw/19-cities.htm

Contents
Introduction Human Evolution, Diffusion, and Character The Long Baseline: Hunters and Gatherers ... Pollution, Biodiversity, and Climate Change American Cities Rural America Cities Abroad Countrysides Abroad (View slides for this lecture. 19. American Cities THE CENTRAL CITY THE SUBURBS THE NEW URBANISM ASSESSING THE AMERICAN CITY We're coming, finally, to a sequence of four portraits of the world's humanized landscapes. That's what human geography is finally about. You could say that we're looking at pattern now, rather than process. Or you could say that we're looking at the visible consequences of all the activities we've been tracing. I want to begin with American cities, because they're the places we know best. What comes to mind with this topic? One thing is downtown, that cluster of skyscrapers that immigrants first saw from the decks of liners coming into New York's harbor. Now we mostly see downtown through a car or plane window, but it still grabs our attention. Around it, there is the huge penumbra of suburbia: freeways, arterial streets, curvilinear residential streets, commercial strips, a carpet of houses with backyard pools, and a scattering of bigger buildingsshopping centerss, college campuses, hospitals, stadiums, warehouses, and factories. Those are the tangibles. There's something else, too. Maybe it's excitement. Maybe it's fear. Maybe it's a sense of a world with nothing worth doing or seeing. Maybe it's some of each.

42. CITY: Reading Cities As Cultural Documents
area along the Potomac River between maryland and Virginia location of a city chosen,particularly capital cities? which the analysis of city geography is an
http://macxserver.asap.um.maine.edu:16080/~mnkytree/city/city.htm
seven modules
for learning how to analyze
the geography of cities
for their cultural content by Ryan Bradeen
August 2002

designed for students of world history, geography and Asian studies at the secondary level and beyond.
  • Terracotta Clues (1 day)
  • The Migrating Jing (5 days) Abstract The geography of cities, particularly planned cities and capitals, are valuable historical documents that can be read to reveal what was important to a society, how the society saw itself in the world, what its priorities were and what it feared. This information can be seen both in the location chosen for cities and in the actual layout of the city plan. Cities are created by humans. Therefore city possess, in their location and design of their buildings and streets, a human logic. Decoding that logic gives powerful insight into the minds of the people who built these cities. This unit explores methods of reading cities that are applicable to ancient Rome, imperial China, modern Boston and any city of any time or place.
  • 43. History & Geography Web Sites Recommended By Harford County Public Library
    National Register of Historic Places (maryland) Addresses of geography World Governmentson the WWW - Information Travel maps and some international cities.
    http://www.harf.lib.md.us/HCPL/seeworthy/biography.htm
    Harford County Public Library Back to SeeWorthy General Information Index Updated Thursday, November 7, 2002
    Recommended Sites about
    History Biographies Local History Geography
    History
    AlternaTime - Contains a collection of timelines for History and Cultures, Science and Technology, Arts and Literature, Popular Culture and Science Fiction.
    American Treasures of the Library of Congress

    Black History Hotlist
    - A "hotlist" of African-American online resources.
    European Voyages of Exploration
    - Overview of 15th and 16th century exploration in a broad historical context.
    Great American Speeches
    - A PBS site that covers American history, speeches, trivia, student projects, and politics.
    Histor eSearch.com
    - Comprehensive history research resources. Holocaust Chronicle - This site contains every word and image that appears in the print edition of The Holocaust Chronicle . It can be searched and viewed in a variety of ways.
    PBS History
    - Links to various companion web sites to popular PBS TV series.

    44. Maryland Real Estate, Maryland Camping, Maryland State Job - ChooseMaryland.org
    of our special state, from maryland's geography to its Hopkins University and theUniversity System of maryland; synergies of two dynamic cities, Washington, DC
    http://www1.choosemaryland.org/orientation/index.asp
    Orientation Maps
    Economic Base

    Top 10 Reasons

    Quality of Life
    ...
    Research Tools

    Orientation to Maryland Maryland lies at the heart of cultural, educational and recreational activities on the Atlantic seaboard. The term "variety" captures the essence of our special state, from Maryland's geography to its economy to its distinct communities. It is also on the leading edge of economic and technological innovation. For example, the recent announcement of the successful completion of the human genome sequencing effort came jointly from two Maryland-based organizations. And Maryland is now home to some of the leading companies in the emerging photonics sector so critical to information technology and related applications.
    Maryland offers businesses a world of opportunities
    • The center of the Boston-Atlanta corridor on the Atlantic seaboard A position at the heart of affluent East Coast markets A site as close, by air, to London as Los Angeles Within overnight distance of approximately one-third of the nation's households, effective buying income, and retail sales

    45. Baseball Geography
    This activity will increase students' knowledge and understanding of cities' location,population, elevation, direction from Baltimore, maryland, and distance
    http://www.dcet.k12.de.us/wayne/baseball/overview.html
    Geographical Fun Facts
    Cities with Major League Baseball Parks
    Using Internet Web Sites
    Overview
    This activity will provide students with basic Geographic information about major cities in the United States and Canada. This activity will increase students' knowledge and understanding of cities' location, population, elevation, direction from Baltimore, Maryland, and distance in miles from Baltimore, Maryland. This activity will also provide students with the insight into the wide array of information that can be acquired from various web sites.
    Objectives
    Objective 1 Students will be able to identify and record locations for various major league ballparks using various web sites. Objective 2 Students will be able to acquire and record the distance and directions of major league ballparks from Baltimore. Objective 3 Students will be able to identify, locate, and mark selected major league ballparks on a U.S./Canada map. Objective 4 Students will be able to combine visual and text data from web sites to create a special-purpose map.

    46. Baseball Geography
    Seventh Grade geography Teacher. knowledge and understanding of cities' location,population elevation, direction from Baltimore, maryland, and distance in miles
    http://www.dcet.k12.de.us/wayne/baseball/
    Geographical Fun Facts
    Cities with Major League Baseball Parks
    Using Internet Web Sites
    Bill Fowler
    Seventh Grade Geography Teacher
    Delmar Junior/Senior High School
    Delmar, Delaware
    This activity will provide students with basic Geographic information about major cities in the United States and Canada. This activity will increase students' knowledge and understanding of cities' location, population, elevation, direction from Baltimore, Maryland, and distance in miles from Baltimore, Maryland. (Note: Baltimore is the closest city to Delmar, Delaware with a major league baseball team.) This activity will also provide students with the insight into the wide array of information that can be acquired from various web sites. Overview, Objectives, and Materials Activities (First Class Period) Activities (Second Class Period) Activities (Third Class Period) ... Evaluation

    47. 3DGeo
    region in part A and list the port cities and towns New Hampshire, New Jersey, maryland. ThirdGrade geography - Lesson 6 - geography of the English Settlements.
    http://www.cstone.net/~bcp/3/3DGeo.htm
    Third Grade - Geography - Lesson 6 - Geography of the English Settlements Objectives
    Locate the important colonial cities of Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Charleston.
    Recognize that proximity to water influenced the development of cities.
    List the colonies by region. Materials
    Classroom-size world map
    Classroom-size U. S. map
    Thirteen Colonies map for transparency (attached)
    1 per student
    Thirteen Colonies map (attached) Suggested Books
    Teacher Resource
    Strohl, Mary and Susan Schneck. Colonial America: Cooperative Learning Activities . New York: Scholastic, 1991. (0-590-49133-4) Procedure Tell the students that they are now going to look at the locations of the colonies in the New World. Explain to the students that the colonies can be divided by the region of the Atlantic coast in which they are located. Display the transparency of the map showing the thirteen colonies. Point to the following terms at the bottom of the transparency: New England, Middle Atlantic, and Southern. Tell the students that the New England colonies were made up of Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Connecticut, and Rhode Island. Encircle the group of colonies that made up New England using a green marker to trace the borders of the colonies that should be included. Make a green mark in the box next to the words, New England. Do the same using different color markers for the Middle Atlantic colonies: New York, New Jersey, Delaware, Pennsylvania; and the Southern colonies: Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia.

    48. Third Grade - Geography - Lesson 1 - Geography Review
    and have a student locate the state of maryland and the Third Grade geography -Lesson 2 - geography Review. A list of cities and countries is included below.
    http://www.cstone.net/~bcp/3/3SGeo.htm
    Third Grade - Geography - Lesson 1 - Geography Review Objectives
    Name the continent, country, state, and community in which the student lives.
    Locate Maryland and Baltimore on a map of the United States. Suggested Books
    Student Titles
    Hirst, Robin and Sally Hirst. My Place in Space . New York: Orchard, 1988. Materials
    Classroom size world map
    Classroom size U.S. map Teacher Note:
    This geography lesson will serve as a review of the geography topics that were covered in the Second Grade Core lessons. Be sure to reinforce topics if you have students in your class that are not firm on the material. Procedure
    Hold up an addressed envelope and/or an addressed postcard. Ask: If you wanted to send a letter or a postcard to someone what would you have to do to make sure that your message got to the right person and place? (You would have to write the person's name and address on the letter or postcard.) Write the following on the board:
    Name
    Street City State (Point to each item on the board as you talk about it.) Tell the students that the first two items listed would be different for each of us in this room, but the city and state would be the same. Have a student name the city in which they live and have another student name the state in which they live. Write Baltimore and Maryland next to City and State on the board. Ask the entire class to answer in unison the questions "What city do you live in?" and "What state do you live in?"

    49. ED393786 1996-02-00 Using Literature To Teach Geography In High Schools. ERIC Di
    Through which towns, cities, and states Fitzhugh, William P. geography AND LITERATURETHE LITERACY Conference of the State of maryland International Reading
    http://www.ericfacility.net/databases/ERIC_Digests/ed393786.html
    ERIC Identifier:
    Publication Date:
    Author:
    Hume, Susan E.
    Source: ERIC Clearinghouse for Social Studies/Social Science Education Bloomington IN.
    Using Literature To Teach Geography in High Schools. ERIC Digest.
    THIS DIGEST WAS CREATED BY ERIC, THE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES INFORMATION CENTER. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT ERIC, CONTACT ACCESS ERIC 1-800-LET-ERIC Traditionally, the high school curriculum has been rigidly compartmentalized. Yet, linkages between disciplines in the curriculum increasingly are being made, such as the connections of English to U.S. History courses in many high schools. Another connection may be English with World Geography courses. Students of every ability level could benefit from exploring the interrelationship between these two disciplines. In this ERIC Digest, the term literature refers to novels, short stories, poetry, plays, and folk tales. It consists of narrative as opposed to expository forms of writing that are found in traditional textbooks, reference books, and news articles. By no means, however, should literature be the sole tool used to teach geography or other subjects of the social studies. Rather, each form of narrative and expository writing has its place in the social studies curriculum.

    50. Department Of Geography Speaker Series
    Benton, Colgate University, A Tale of Two cities and the Spring 2000 Dr. Matt Hansen,Department of geography, University of maryland, Global Land
    http://www.gwu.edu/~geog/speakers.html
    Speaker Series
    All Speaker Series Events are held in the Spatial Analysis Laboratory (SAL)( Quigley's Pharmacy, Room 101
    located at 619 21st Street, NW, Washington, DC 20052. All events begin with a free pizza lunch at noon, in the SAL Lab (Quigley's Room 101) Spring 2003 Wednesday
    February 12
    Cooling the Urban Heat Island: Mitigation Strategies and EPA's Heat Island Reduction Initiative by Ms. Eva Wong Environmental Protection Agency Wednesday
    February 26
    Geography Graduate Student AAG Paper Presentations by Mr. Matt Jennings and Ms. Jill Wilson Department of Geography, The George Washington University Wednesday
    March 26
    Spring Valley Arsenic: a case study by Mr. Terry Slonecker Environmental Protection Agency on detail at the United States Geological Survey Wednesday
    April 2
    Promoting Civil Society and Ecosystem Management-a double edged sword to build a more secure world by Mr. Kirk Talbott Thursday
    April 3 Funding for Geography and Regional Science at the National Science Foundation by Dr. Richard Aspinall GRS Program Director, National Science Foundation The following Speakers provided special presentations through the Speaker Series in previous years.

    51. Honors Winter Term January 2003
    University of maryland HONR 209T cities and the World Globalization and UrbanDevelopment Monday Friday 2 - 5 pm Dr. Mila Zlatic, Department of geography.
    http://www.honors.umd.edu/COURSES/0212/
    University Honors Winter Term January 2003
    HONR 209T Cities and the World - Globalization and Urban Development
    Monday through Friday 2 - 5 p.m.
    Dr. Mila Zlatic, Department of Geography Globalization! An inherited buzz word from the 20th century. Is it really going to change the very texture of life in all of our cities and local communities? How is it going to influence me as a citizen of the world? and why? In this class we will investigate both questions. In remarkably short time, a world of "urban specks" was replaced by a predominantly "urban world." Today, more than 50 percent of the world's population lives in the cities. Cities, besides being our home-towns, are becoming crucial nodes for the international coordination and servicing of firms, markets, and even whole economies. These cities emerge as strategic places in the global economy. The development of the world urban system and the role of cities across the globe, with a special focus on world cities will be discussed. The world cities have become strategic sites for the management of the global economy and
    production of the most advanced services and financial operations. At the same time globalization is becoming a cause of inequality among cities, inequalities visible in the geography and characteristics of urban system.

    52. E-lynks Links To The States
    geography (World). FYIowa.com Iowa Iowa State University Iowa Quad cities Iowa Sioux PortlandMaine (state) Maine University of Maine maryland Annapolis Vistors
    http://www.e-lynks.com/states.htm
    Scroll down the menus:
    E-lynks at the right,
    Superlynks at the left. Alphabetized A Lynks Addictions Advertising Aerospace ... Zoos Super Lynks to U.S. states and related sites. Scroll down. You should find something about each of the 50 states in the following listings. If you fail to find what you seek below, use the search engine menu, or return to the e-lynks A-to-Z Index-Menu. Alabama: Alabama State Govt.
    Alabama:
    Alabama Football ...
    Click here for e-commerce listings.

    You should be aware that using a search engine can produce unpredictable and sometimes undesirable results.
  • About.com
  • All the web
  • AltaVista
  • BestPlaces.net ... Back to the top.
    To visit our e-commerce listings, click one of the following: (Note: e-business is categorized as "e-commerce." These listings include sites offering services to e-commerce companies.) Above.Net (internet tech help) accbusiness.com AHERN ... (free web mail) E-lynks cuts through time-wasting graphic interfaces and global searches to zero in on what you're looking for. Pass the word! Click here to return to the top of this column..
  • 53. Saving Farms By Saving Cities
    sprawl’s effect on the human geography of urban in many neighborhoods of centralcities and (more mandated urban growth boundaries to maryland’s “Smart
    http://www.msu.edu/~cua/Cnv Spring 99/Saving Farms Sp 99.htm
    Saving Farms by Saving Cities: Sprawl, Race, and Concentrated Poverty by David Rusk “To save our farms, we must save our cities.” Nobody has linked the future of rural and urban areas more succinctly than Jack Laurie, Michigan Farm Bureau president, speaking to the House Bi-Partisan Urban Caucus in January 1998.
    Many decry the impact of urban sprawl on the natural geography – polluted air and water, vanishing farmlands, shrinking forests and open spaces.
    However, urban sprawl’s effect on the human geography of urban areas has been even greater. Sprawl has accelerated the decline of central cities and older, built-out suburbs, increased economic segregation (even as racial barriers are slowly lowered), and widened fiscal disparities among local governments.
    One Man, One Acre
    The indices of urban sprawl and its social costs are particularly acute in Michigan. Between 1960 and 1990 Michigan’s ten expanding urbanized areas consumed land at six times the population growth rate. Michigan suburbanized more land (about 545,000 acres) for less population growth (another 630,00 suburban residents) than any state in the nation. Except in the greater Detroit area, Michigan suburbs average 1,000 to 1,600 persons per square mile – well below the national suburban average of 2,100 persons per square mile.
    Michigan’s six-to-one ratio of land-to-population growth reflects both very low-density development of the urban fringe and hollowing out of the urban core. Almost all of Michigan’s central cities have lost residents since past population peaks, most notably Detroit (-46%), Benton Harbor (-38%), Saginaw (-34%), Bay City and Flint (-32%), and Jackson (-30%). Since 1950 only Ann Arbor (+62%), Holland (+110%), and Midland (+179%), successfully annexing new subdivisions, are still growing.

    54. Population Estimates: Concepts And Geography
    In four states (maryland, Missouri, Nevada, and Virginia Consolidated cities includeButteSilver Bow, MT; Athens by the Census Bureau's geography Division.
    http://eire.census.gov/popest/archives/place/concepts.php
    vJSLevel = "../../" document.writeln(navigation); pre-1980s
    census
    population estimates text menu
    Population Estimates: Concepts and Geography
    What is a population estimate? The Census Bureau's Population Estimates Program (PEP) produces July 1 estimates for years after the last published decennial census (1990), as well as for past decades. Existing data series such as births, deaths, Federal tax returns, medicare enrollment, and immigration, are used to update the decennial census base counts. PEP estimates are used in Federal funding allocations, in setting the levels of national surveys, and in monitoring recent demographic changes. A methodology reference accompanies most of our population estimates offerings. How are estimates different from projections? There is not a distinct dichotomy between population estimates and population projections, but there are some differences in time reference and derivation. Estimates usually are for the past, while projections typically are for future dates. Estimates generally use existing symptomatic data, for example, (births, deaths, migration), collected from various sources. Projections must assume future trends for fertility, mortality, and other demographic processes. At the Census Bureau, the population projections use the latest available estimates as starting points. In our current product offerings the user may see both an estimate and a projection available for the same reference date, which may not agree because they were produced at different times. In such cases, estimates are the preferred data.

    55. Maryland Topics
    maryland Today A geography by Vera F. Rollo, Ph.D. Order an explanation of marylandgovernments in the counties, towns, cities, state and US government.
    http://www.avialantic.com/mhp/mhpmd1.html
    9205 Tuckerman Street, Lanham, MD 20706
    FAX (301) 577-8711 mhpress@erols.com
    Maryland Yesterday
    and Today
    by Dr. Richard Wilson and Dr. E.L. Bridner, Jr.
    234 pp Hardback. 5 th edition. 1999. $24.50 ISBN 0-927882-48-2
    Maryland, Delaware and the District of Columbia
    by Marion J. Kaminkow Now, at your fingertips, a first directory of names, locations, and information on the parks and open spaces of MaryIand, Delaware, and the District of Columbia. This book tells us where to go and what to do. 150 pp Perfectbound, 6" x 9" 1996 $7.75
    ISBN 0-9l7882-44-X YOUR MARYLAND: A HISTORY
    by Vera Foster Rollo, Ph.D. 414 pp Hardback ISBN 0-917882-35-0 Indians of the Tidewater Country of Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina and Delaware
    by Thelma G. Ruskin All elementary school children will enjoy this informative and fun-to-read book. 3rdEd. 1997 132 pp
    Hardback $15.00
    ISBN 0-917882-45-8 Maryland Today: A Geography by Vera F. Rollo, Ph.D.

    56. Zeal.com - United States - New - Library - Society - United States Local - Maryl
    com/encyclopedia/M/maryland.html Dig into details on Old Line State's facts, figures,geography, history, government, politics, education, economy, and cities.
    http://www.zeal.com/category/preview.jhtml?cid=1154733

    57. Maryland - Maryland Online Highways
    is the defining feature of maryland’s geography, splitting the it does with therest of maryland, a distinction On the mainland, the cities of Baltimore and
    http://www.ohwy.com/md/homepage.htm
    Travel Guide To
    Maryland Choose a Destination:
    Cities - Major Cities - Baltimore Dundalk Frederick Hagerstown Rockville - All Cities - Cities A-B Cities C-D Cities E-G Cities H-L Cities M-N Cities O-R Cities S-T Cities U-Z Regions Capital Central Eastern Shore Southern Western Counties Allegany Anne Arundel Baltimore City Baltimore County Calvert Caroline Carroll Cecil Charles Dorchester Frederick Garrett Harford Howard Kent Montgomery Prince George's Queen Anne's Somerset St. Mary's Talbot Washington Wicomico Worcester Choose a Topic:
    Art
    Education

    Entertainment

    History
    ... Advertising Info Search Maryland for... Search entire site for... Eastern Shore Baltimore The Eastern Shore occupies a part of the DelMarVa peninsula, a sliver of land which also hosts the entire state of Delaware and a small piece of Virginia Ocean City On the mainland, the cities of Baltimore and Annapolis have gradually spread out to merge with each other and nearby Washington DC , forming a sprawling megalopolis. With the seat of the national government so close, much of the economic activity in Maryland is government-related. Andrews Air Force Base, Fort George G. Meade, The National Institutes of Health, and the National Agricultural Research Center are all located in Maryland, as is the US Naval Academy , at Annapolis.

    58. "The New Geography" By Joel Kotkin
    To Kotkin, the new geography describes a transformation of cities, older suburbsand and biotechnology parks along Interstate 270 in maryland, the fastest
    http://www.newgeography.com/WashingtonPost_review.htm
    Washington Post
    December 11, 2000
    Where the High-Tech Growth Is By Peter Behr
    A
    fter a half-dozen years of charmed growth, the Washington region's young Internet and telecommunications industries have been caught in a long, harsh storm that has cut away billions of dollars in stock value and millions in expected revenue this year. It may be many months more before the storm passes and we see how much of the new growth is still standing and thriving. But however that battle winds up, the capital region will remain fundamentally changed by the uprising of technology start-ups and the migration of tens of thousands of technology workers to the region since the mid-1990s. The story of that migration is the subject of "The New Geography," a book by journalist and researcher Joel Kotkin, a senior fellow at Pepperdine University and the Milken Institute in California. To Kotkin, "the new geography" describes a transformation of cities, older suburbs and newly planted outer suburbs in places such as the Washington region where information technology industries have taken hold. In Kotkin's view, the power of information technology companies to attract and concentrate wealth will be the decisive factor in deciding which areas of the country prosper and which fall further by the wayside. "Workers in the information fieldwhose numbers are projected to nearly double between 1994 and 2005represent the ascendant new middle class of the twenty-first century, earning roughly twice as much as other private sector workers," he writes.

    59. Research Wizard - Listings For Maryland | Research | University Library
    jmm geography maryland Geological Survey http//www.mgs.md.gov states/md.html Travelinformation about maryland including weather, regions and cities.
    http://library.unomaha.edu/research/wizard/wizard.php3?knum=1706

    60. PAUL A GROVES
    concentrations in late nineteenth century cities. (with EK a link to the social geographyof Baltimore century. (with EK Muller) maryland Historical Magazine
    http://geography.berkeley.edu/PeopleHistory/History/60YrsGeog/Groves, Paul A.htm
    PAUL A. GROVES (Ph.D., 1969) "The intrametropolitan location of manufacturing in the San Francisco Bay Area." (Pred) b. 24 January 1935, Kingston, Surrey, United Kingdom. m. Phyllis; ch. David, Gareth. B.Sc. University College London (Economics); M.A. Univ. of Maryland 1961. University of Maryland (since 1965), Associate Professor of Geography. University of Hull, England (visiting) 1968-69. Monographs: Tactual Mapping: Design, Reproduction, Reading and Interpretation . (with J.W. Wiedel) Washington, D.C.: Department of Health, Education and Welfare. 116 pp., 1969. (Reprinted as Occasional Paper in Geography No. 2, Department of Geography, Univ. of Maryland, 1972.) Towards a Typology of Intrametropolitan Manufacturing Location: A Case Study of the San Francisco Bay Area . Hull: University of Hull, Occasional Papers in Geography, 89 pp., 1971. A Social and Economic Atlas of Maryland . (with R. Harper, J. Wiedel, and D. Thompson) Department of Economic Development for the State of Maryland College Park, Maryland: University Press, 126 pp., 1974. Washington Between the Wars . Washington, D.C.: ARE, 90 pp., 1980.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 3     41-60 of 93    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter