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         Wyoming Geography:     more books (100)
  1. Walcott, Wyoming
  2. Uinta County, Wyoming
  3. Aspen Mountain (Wyoming)
  4. Wyoming Valley: Pennsylvania, Ridge-and-Valley Appalachians, Appalachian Mountains, United States Metropolitan Area, Luzerne County,
  5. Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania: Northeastern Pennsylvania, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania,Wyoming Valley, Scranton, The Poconos, Endless Mountains
  6. Southern Rocky Mountains: Rocky Mountains, Rocky Mountain Region, Central Rocky Mountains, Western Rocky Mountains, Wyoming, Colorado Rockies (Disambiguation)
  7. Laramie, Wyoming
  8. Uranium Mining in Wyoming: Wyoming, Uranium Mining, Uranium Mining in the United States, Uraninite, Coffinite, Calcite
  9. Campbell County, Wyoming
  10. Wyoming County, New York
  11. Natrona County, Wyoming: Wyoming, Casper, Alcova, Johnson County, Medicine Bow,National Forest, Bar Nunn, Antelope Hills, Arminto, Hiland
  12. Yoder, Wyoming
  13. Albany County, Wyoming
  14. Wolf, Wyoming

81. CU Dept Of Geography Resources: State Agencies, Research Teams, And Organization
California Geographical Survey at the Department of geography, California State wyomingUniversity of wyoming, Spatial Data and Visualization Center wyoming
http://www.colorado.edu/geography/virtdept/resources/data/stateage/stateage.htm
Geography Resources Geospatial Datasets
State Agencies, Research Teams, and Organizations
To suggest additions to our list of geography and earth-science professional associations, please email Anita Howard California Colorado Georgia
Idaho Kentucky

82. Marston
OK. 199499, Professor, geography, University of wyoming. 1996 Southeast.1988-94, Associate Professor, geography, University of wyoming. 1986
http://www.okstate.edu/geology/faculty/marston.html
Meet Dr. Richard Marston Professor/Sun Chair
Specialty
Geomorphology and Environmental Geology
Degrees
P.H., Certified Professional Hydrologist, American Institute of Hydrology, St.Paul, MN Ph.D., in Geography, Oregon State University M.S., in Geography, Oregon State University B.A., in Geography-Ecosystems, University of California, Los Angeles, CA
Teaching Experience
Professor/Sun Chair, School of Geology, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK Professor, Geography, University of Wyoming Visiting Professor, Environmental Science, University of Alaska-Southeast Associate Professor, Geography, University of Wyoming Assistant Professor, Geography, University of Wyoming Assistant Professor, Geography, University of Texas, El Paso, TX Visiting Assistant Professor, Geography, University of Texas, El Paso, TX
Honors/Awards
  • 1998, 1991, Nominee, University of Wyoming, Presiden'ts Award 1997, Elected Fellow, Geological Society of America 1997, Appointed Member, President's Western Water Policy Review Advisory Commission 1996-97, International Man of the Year in Recognition of Services to Geography and Environmental Science

83. Digital Wyoming Atlas
of geography, 2002, Digital wyoming Atlas University of wyoming Dept. ofgeography, Laramie, wyoming. University of wyoming Dept. of geography.
http://www.sdvc.uwyo.edu/clearinghouse/metadata/atlas.faq.html
Clearinghouse How To Download Browse List Keyword Search ... Browse Atlas
Metadata
Digital Wyoming Atlas
Metadata also available as - [ Outline Parseable text SGML DIF
Frequently-anticipated questions:
What does this data set describe?
Title: Digital Wyoming Atlas Abstract:
The Digital Wyoming Atlas currently contains over 250 maps of Wyoming in many different categories. The maps are organized into several categories: Population/Society, Economy, History/Culture, Recreation/Tourism, and Transportation/Communication. A unique aspect of this Atlas is that most of the data comprising these maps is digital geospatial data and is available for download. Digital geospatial data contains not only database information, but spatial information as well. Because of the spatial component, any of the data comprising these maps can be "overlayed" and analyzed for relationships, using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) software.
  • How should this data set be cited?
  • 84. Yellowstone Park Traveler | Geography
    geography instead, is an empty space on the map surrounded by a small numberof Gateway Communities like Dubois, Cody, and Jackson, wyoming; Red Lodge
    http://www.yellowstoneparktraveler.com/science/geography.shtml
    Site Map Orientation Lodging Activities ... Summer Internet Rate Special! no notices were found no events were found Yellowstone Park Geography Geography Most areas of the United States are defined by the towns and cities that occupy the spaces on the map. Yellowstone National Park is distinct for absence of towns, cities, and those other landmarks of our increasingly urban world. Yellowstone, instead, is an empty space on the map surrounded by a small number of Gateway Communities like Dubois, Cody, and Jackson, Wyoming; Red Lodge, Livingston, Bozeman, Ennis, and West Yellowstone, Wyoming; and Island Park, Idaho. Inside this area is the core of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, an area including two national parks, parts of three states, and a host of different national forests, state parks, and national wildlife refuges. This system overlays parts of Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho. At the center lies Yellowstone National Park, defined, in large part, by the barriers that separate it from the rest of the world. All the states are highly reliant on public lands for their economies, whether for tourism and recreation, ranching, mining, forestry, or a combination of them all.

    85. The US50 - A Guide To The Fifty States
    History geography Outdoors Tourism Events Information State Links Copyright
    http://www.theus50.com/wyoming/geography.shtml
    Wyoming State
    Select State Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming
    FAST FACTS
    FREE Wallpaper Guestbook document.write (''); Send a friend this link Website Map
    [The US50 Home]

    State Location
    Highest Elevation: 13,804 (Gannett Peak)
    Lowest Elevation: 3,099 (Belle Fourche River)
    [Return to top]

    State Map
    [Return to top]

    State Quiz
    Photo Contest History ... Online Policies

    86. Geography Network - Download Census 2000 TIGER/Line Shapefiles
    You have selected the state of wyoming. If you would like to download a singledata layer for one or more counties in wyoming, then select a layer below.
    http://arcdata.esri.com/data/tiger2000/tiger_statelayer.cfm?sfips=56

    87. An Outline Of American Geography - Chapter 11
    An Outline of American geography. MAP. CHAPTER 11. THE GREAT PLAINS AND PRAIRIES. Themost obvious exception are the Black Hills of South Dakota and wyoming.
    http://usinfo.state.gov/products/pubs/geography/geog11.htm
    Warning : Failed opening '/ans/content/usia/usia/web/docs/products/pubs/old.breadcrumb.inc' for inclusion (include_path='.:/local/apache/aws/php/lib/php') in /iip/content/usia/usia/web/docs/include/pubs/old.header.inc on line
    An Outline of
    American Geography MAP
    CHAPTER 11
    THE GREAT PLAINS AND PRAIRIES
      T he historian Walter Prescott Webb, in his book The Great Plains , suggested that the northwest Europeans who settled much of the United States faced three great "environmental encounters"areas where climatic conditions were so unlike those of their home region that the agricultural crops and settlement patterns developed in Europe were inappropriate. The first of these encounters was with the high summer temperatures and humidity levels of the Southeast. The second was the arid Southwest and interior West. The third was the great continuous grasslands located astride the center of the country ( Map 10 Among the problems on the grasslands, average annual precipitation was much less than in the East, although violent storms accompanied by high winds, hail, and tornadoes were common. Blizzards with wintry blasts intensifying the cold drove the snow into immense drifts. The hot, dry winds of summer parched the soil and sometimes carried it away in great billowing clouds of dust. The region's sparse natural water supply would not support tree vegetation except along the stream courses. Many of these streams were small and flowed only intermittently. Eastern farmers, accustomed to a plentiful supply of water for crops and animals, as well as ample wood for building, fencing, and heating, had to adapt to quite different conditions in their attempts to settle the Great Plains.

    88. Broken Link
    go to University of wyoming homepage, UW Information Technology,
    http://uwadmnweb.uwyo.edu/A&S/geog/default.html

    89. Broken Link
    Sorry, the page HTTP//UWADMNWEB.UWYO.EDU/A S/GEOG could not be found. It's possible you typed the address incorrectly or that the page no longer exists. Please use the links to the left to help find the pages you are looking for. University. of wyoming. Homepage. Search UW
    http://www.uwyo.edu/a&s/geog

    90. Person-Centered Supports In Wyoming
    Making PersonCentered Supports a Reality in wyoming The Equality States Experience Human Services Research Institute The National Association of State Directors of Developmental Disabilities Services FACTS AND FIGURES SAY ABOUT wyoming. wyomingS PERSON-CENTERED AND HEARD ABOUT THE wyoming EXPERIENCE. CHALLENGES. CONCLUDING
    http://ddd.state.wy.us/Documents/nasdds01.htm
    Making Per son-Centered Supports a Reality in Wyoming:
    The Equality State’s Experience
    Prepared By:
    Human Services Research Institute
    and
    The National Association of State Directors of Developmental Disabilities Services
    Gary Smith
    Sarah Taub
    Minona Heaviland
    Val Bradley
    Mike Cheek
    August 2001
    Prepared for “Reinventing Quality: Fostering Promising Practices in Person-Centered Community Services and Quality Assurance for People with Developmental Disabilities,” a three-year grant project funded by the federal Administration on Developmental Disabilities (ADD) to evaluate and disseminate information on service delivery and quality assurance approaches that promote flexibility and innovation in publicly-financed services for persons with developmental disabilities.
    CONTENTS
    PREFACE
    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
    BRIEF HISTORY OF THE STATE SYSTEM
    THE ORGANIZATION OF WYOMING’S PUBLIC SYSTEM
    WHAT FACTS AND FIGURES SAY ABOUT WYOMING
    WYOMING’S PERSON-CENTERED SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE
    CASE STUDY FINDINGS: WHAT WE SAW AND HEARD ABOUT THE WYOMING EXPERIENCE
    CHALLENGES CONCLUDING THOUGHTS APPENDIX A: CONSENSUS STATEMENT APPENDIX B: SOURCES CONSULTED Note: All footnote references can be found at the end of this report
    Preface
    This case study is part of a larger project called Reinventing Quality, sponsored by the Administration on Developmental Disabilities and conducted by the National Association of State Directors of Developmental Disabilities Services (NASDDDS) in collaboration with the University of Minnesota’s Institute for Community Integration and the Human Services Research Institute (HSRI). The project has three major goals:

    91. Wyoming: Facts, Map And State Symbols - EnchantedLearning.com
    EnchantedLearning.com wyoming Facts, Map and State Symbols, wyoming FlagPrintout/Quiz. State Flag wyoming's official flag was adopted in 1917.
    http://www.enchantedlearning.com/usa/states/wyoming/
    EnchantedLearning.com is a user-supported site. Click here to learn more.
    Wyoming Map Quiz/Printout
    Wyoming Outline Map Printout
    EnchantedLearning.com
    Wyoming
    Facts, Map and State Symbols
    Wyoming Flag Printout/Quiz
    Wyoming was the 44 th state in the USA; it became a state on July 10, 1890 . State Abbreviation - WY
    State Capital - Cheyenne
    Largest City - Cheyenne
    Area - 97,818 square miles [Wyoming is the 10th biggest state in the USA]
    Population (as of 2000) [Wyoming is the least populous state in the USA] Major Industries - farming (cattle, sheep), mining (coal, uranium), oil, natural gas, tourism Major Rivers - Bighorn River, Green River, Belle Fourche River, Powder River, North Platte River Major Lakes - Yellowstone Lake, Glendo Reservoir, Bighorn Lake, Boysen Reservoir, Flaming Gorge Reservoir, Seminoe Reservoir, Alcova Reservoir, Keyhole Reservoir Highest Point - Gannett Peak - 13,804 feet (4,207 m) above sea level Lowest Point - Belle Fourche River - 3,099 feet (944 m) above sea level Bordering States Colorado Montana Nebraska South Dakota ... Idaho Origin of the Name Wyoming - The name Wyoming may be derived from the Delaware Indian word "Maughwauwama," which means "large plains."

    92. Wyoming Map/Quiz Answers Printout - EnchantedLearning.com
    Zoobooks magazine for kids! EnchantedLearning.com isa usersupported site. Click here to learn more.
    http://www.enchantedlearning.com/usa/statesbw/wyanswers.shtml
    EnchantedLearning.com is a user-supported site. Click here to learn more.
    Wyoming Facts, Map and Symbols
    EnchantedLearning.com
    Wyoming Map/Quiz Printout

    Answers
    US States: Map/Quizzes
    US Regional Map/Quizzes

    US Flag Quiz Printouts

    1. Cheyenne 2. Montana 3. South Dakota and Nebraska 4. Utah and Colorado 5. Utah, Montana, and Idaho 6. North Platte River 7. Yellowstone National Park 8. Grand Teton National Park 9. 13,802 feet 10. The Equality State Enchanted Learning
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    93. Wyoming Climate Summaries
    wyoming Climate Summaries. Alphabetical Station List Afton; Albin;Alta; Archer; Basin; Buffalo Bill Dam; Big Piney; Billy Creek; Bitter
    http://www.wrcc.dri.edu/summary/climsmwy.html
    Wyoming Climate Summaries
    Alphabetical Station List ...back to Home Page. Western Regional Climate Center, wrcc@dri.edu

    94. Wind River Reservation Geography
    and Arapahoe Tribes. The reservation is located in west central Wyomingand is a vast part of Fremont County. The reservation known
    http://www.easternshoshone.net/WindRiverReservation.html

    95. Geology Books
    (1988). DL Blackstone, Jr. This comprehensive guide provides descriptions ofWyoming's geography, geology, mineral resources, and scenic highlights.
    http://www.fs.fed.us/btnf/geology.htm
    GEOLOGY
    BRIDGER-TETON NATIONAL FOREST USDA FOREST SERVICE P.O. Box 1888 Jackson, WY 83001 Telephone: (307) 739-5500 TDDY: (307) 739-5503 Fax: (307) 739-5010 E-Mail: r4_bt_info@fs.fed.us
    Book Order Form
    Grand Teton Natural History Association

    Books and Trail Guide Menu

    Return to: Bridger-Teton National Forest (1996) John M. Good and Kenneth L. Pierce. This book takes you into the landscape of Grand Teton and Yellowstone, illustrating the formation of the Teton Range and Yellowstone Caldera. Informative text, photography, and graphics combine to demonstrate the geologic processes at work. 58 pp. $12.95 Roadside Geology of Wyoming. (1988). David R. Lageson and R. Spearing. The story of Wyoming's geologic history, told from clues left in the rocks. This concise well written book contains many illustrations. It was written for those, seeking to understand the geology of Wyoming, including Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks. 271 pp. $18.00 Travelers Guide to the Geology of Wyoming. (1988). D.L. Blackstone, Jr. This comprehensive guide provides descriptions of Wyoming's geography, geology, mineral resources, and scenic highlights. An ideal book for the traveler interested in learning more about the fascinating landscapes of the Cowboy State. 130 pp. $8.00 Document URL: http://www.fs.fed.us/btnf/geology.htm

    96. KidsTown CityHall School Library Zoo ToyStore CityPark TownShip
    wyoming, Here are some interesting facts about wyoming. Capital Cheyenne,Flower Indian Paintbrush. Nickname Equality State, Song wyoming.
    http://www.jugband.org/kidstown/cgi-bin/kt.cgi?KEY=6100&state=50

    97. Field Camps
    TENNESSEE Austin Peay State University. Department of Geology andGeography wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico; University of Memphis.
    http://www.geneseo.edu/~gsci/pages/student/information/field_camps/field_camps.h
    Field Camps (Selected)
    ALABAMA ALASKA ARIZONA ARKANSAS CALIFORNIA COLORADO FLORIDA GEORGIA

    98. Untitled
    Programs cover aspects of Social Studies, Language Arts as well as WyomingGeography. InClassroom programs are offered throughout the school year.
    http://www.fortlaramie.com/in_class_programs.htm
    Fort Laramie National Historic Site Project West IN-CLASSROOM PROGRAMS Serving Southeast Wyoming and the Western Panhandle of Nebraska In addition to field trip opportunities at Fort Laramie, the park offers four prepared in-classroom programs presented by members of the Fort Laramie NHS staff. Designed as 45 to 60 minute programs, they actively relate historic aspects of Wyoming through the Fort Laramie experience, with role-playing, use of costuming, historic props and other classroom activities. Programs are available throughout the school season, by calling (307) 837-2221.. The following programs are available:
    • Wagon Trails in Wyoming
    The Oregon, California and Mormon Trails are examined. Students will learn about the motivations, experiences and life of the emigrants as they traveled the trails that crossed Wyoming.
    • Mountain Men in Wyoming
    The contributions of the Mountain Men are the focus of this program, which looks at the people and events of the fur trade era in Wyoming, and how this shaped westward expansion.
    • Indian Nations of Wyoming
    Historic Native American tribes of Wyoming are examined. Students will learn about traditional ways of life among the Lakota, Cheyenne and Arapaho and other tribes, and how their cultures changed in the Fort Laramie era.

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