418 results returned
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Title: Boundary lines between northern New England states and Canada, 1843 (Raster Image)
Contributors:- Raster data
- 2007
- Harvard Map Collection, Harvard College Library
- Lee, Thomas Jefferson, 1808-1891.
- Fairfax, Wilson M. C.
Summary: This layer is a georeferenced raster image of the historic paper map entitled: Map of the boundary lines between the United States and the adjacent British provinces : from the mouth of the river St. Croix to the intersections of the parallel of 45 degrees of north latitude with the river St. Lawrence near St. Regis, shewing the lines as respectively claimed by the United States and Great Britain under the Treaty of 1783, as awarded by the King of the Netherlands, and as settled in 1842 by the Treaty of Washington, compiled by Lieut.T.J. Lee, topl. engineers and W.M.C. Fairfax, civil engr. It was published in Mar. 1843 by the United States House of Representatives. Scale [ca. 1:1,020,000]. Shows in different colors: claimed boundaries of 1783, boundary awarded by the King of the Netherlands, and boundary under the Treaty of 1842. Covers northern Maine and portions of New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and the provinces of Quebec and New Brunswick, Canada. The image inside the map neatline is georeferenced to the surface of the earth and fit to Universal Transverse Mercator projection (UTM Zone 19N, meters, NAD 83). All map collar and inset information is also available as part of the raster image, including any inset maps, profiles, statistical tables, directories, text, illustrations, or other information associated with the principal map. This map shows features such as roads, drainage, boundaries between the United States and Canada, and more. Inset: Rouse's Point and its vicinity on Lake Champlain. Scale 1:33,780. This layer is part of a selection of digitally scanned and georeferenced historic maps of New England from the Harvard Map Collection. These maps typically portray both natural and manmade features. The selection represents a range of regions, originators, ground condition dates, scales, and map purposes.
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Title: Map of the river Sabine from its mouth on the Gulf of Mexico in the Sea to Logan's Ferry in latitude 31° .58'.24". north : shewing the boundary between the United States and the Republic of Texas between said points, as marked and laid down by Survey in 1840, under the direction of the Commissioners appointed for that purpose, under the 1st Article of the Convention signed at Washington April 25th 1838
Contributors:- Not specified
- 1840
Summary: Depths shown by soundings.; Prime meridian: Greenwich.; Includes chart and text regarding latitude and longitude and a statement of the correctness of map by J.H. Overton, United States Commissioner. 87 x 18 centimeters
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Title: Chart of the mouth of Susquehanna River and head waters of Chesapeake Bay, Maryland
Contributors:- Nautical charts
- 1836
Summary: Scale 1:15,840. Scale of four in. to one mile; 1 map; 61 x 83 cm. Nautical charts--Susquehanna River Estuary
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Title: Michigan territory; drawn by J. Finlayson; Engrav'd by Young & Delleker.
Contributors:- Not specified
- 1822
Summary: Shows portions of Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and Ontario. Relief shown by hachures. Title in upper margin: Geographical, statistical, and historical map of Michigan Territory. Text in side panels. "No. 36." From A complete historical, chronological, and geographical American atlas ... / H.C. Carey and I. Lea, 1822. 1 map: photocopy; 36 x 26 cm., on sheet 45 x 57 cm.
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Title: Hazardous Materials Routes: United States, 2012
Contributors:- Line data
- 2014
- Miller, David
- John A. Volpe National Transportation Systems Center (U.S.)
- United States. Bureau of Transportation Statistics
Summary: This polyline shapefile depicts FMCSA Hazardous Material Routes that were developed using the 2004 First Edition Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing (TIGER/Line) database files. The routes are described in the National Hazardous Material Route Registry (NMHRR). With the exception of 13 features that were not identified with the TIGER/Line shapefiles, Hazmat routes were created by extracting the TIGER/Line segments that corresponded to each individual route. Hazmat routes in the National Transporation Atlas Database (NTAD), are organized into 3 database files, hazmat.shp, hmroutes.dbf and hmstcnty.dbf. Each record in each database represents a unique TIGER/Line segment. These TIGER/Line segments are grouped into routes identified as character strings in the ROUTE_ID field in the hmroutes.dbf table. The route name appearing in the ROUTE_ID is assigned by FMCSA and is unique for each state. The hmstcnty.dbf table allows the user to select routes by state and county. A single shapefile, called hazmat.shp, represents geometry for all routes in the United States. This layer is part of the 2014 National Transportation Atlas Database. The National Transportation Atlas Databases 2014 (NTAD2014) is a set of nationwide geographic datasets of transportation facilities, transportation networks, associated infrastructure and other political and administrative entities. These datasets include spatial information for transportation modal networks and intermodal terminals, as well as the re¬lated attribute information for these features. This data supports research, analysis, and decision-making across all transportation modes. It is most useful at the national level, but has major applications at regional, state and local scales throughout the transportation community. The data used to compile NTAD2014 was provided by our partners within the United States Department of Transportation (USDOT) and by other agencies throughout the United States Federal Government. These contributors are the actual data stewards and are ultimately responsible for the maintenance and accuracy of their data. The mission of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) is to improve truck and bus safety on our nation's highways. That includes reducing the number of transportation incidents that involve hazardous materials and could potentially harm the public and the environment. Developing programs to accomplish these goals and increase the safety of hazardous material transportation is the responsibility of the FMCSA Hazardous Materials (HM) Program. United States. Department of Transportation. Research and Innovative Technology Administration. (2014). Hazardous Materials Routes: United States, 2012. National Transportation Atlas Database 2014. Available at: http://purl.stanford.edu/wq515wj4269. The data provided is in the native Latitude/Longitude coordinate system inherited from the TIGER/Line data.
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Title: Manhattan, New York, N.Y., 1857 (Raster Image)
Contributors:- Raster data
- 2007
Summary: This layer is a georeferenced raster image of the historic paper map entitled: New York city map. It was published by J. Miller ca. 1857. Scale not given. Covers Manhattan below 131st St. and adjacent portions of Queens, Brooklyn, Jersey City, and Hoboken. The image inside the map neatline is georeferenced to the surface of the earth and fit to the Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) Zone 18N NAD83 projection. All map collar and inset information is also available as part of the raster image, including any inset maps, profiles, statistical tables, directories, text, illustrations, index maps, legends, or other information associated with the principal map. This map shows features such as roads, railroads, ferry lines, drainage, parks, city wards, fire districts, wharves, selected public buildings, and more. Shows also radial distances from City Hall. Relief is shown by hachures. Includes indexes. This layer is part of a selection of digitally scanned and georeferenced historic maps from The Harvard Map Collection as part of the Imaging the Urban Environment project. Maps selected for this project represent major urban areas and cities of the world, at various time periods. These maps typically portray both natural and manmade features at a large scale. The selection represents a range of regions, originators, ground condition dates, scales, and purposes.
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Title: City of Ann Arbor, Washtenaw County. Michigan; surveyed & published by Henry Hart.
Contributors:- Not specified
- 1853
Summary: Cadastral map showing land ownership and buildings. "Miller's Lith., N.Y." Includes inset of Phoenix block of subdivision of block 1 south, range 4 east. 1 map: hand col.; 77 x 104 cm
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Title: Map of the city of Saint Paul : capital of Minnesota
Contributors:- Not specified
- 1851
Summary: Cartographic Details: Scale 1:4,200. 350 ft. to an in. (W 93¬∞05 π48 ∫--W 93¬∞05 π48 ∫/N 44¬∞57 π21 ∫--N 44¬∞57 π21 ∫). Relief shown by hachures. 62 x 101 centimeters
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Title: Zoshu kaisei Sesshu Osaka chizu : zen / Okada Gyokuzan shazu; Ooka Shoken teisei; Soshii hosei; Akamatsu Zeno kosei. Bunka 3 [1806] (Raster Image)
Contributors:- Raster data
- 2015
Summary: This layer is a georeferenced image of a map of Osaka from 1806. The original map is a woodblock print oriented with north to the left. Includes legend, distance chart and text. In Japanese. Because Google Earth enables correlation of historic with contemporary sites, the version of this map that appears in Google Earth has the names of a few areas removed to protect the privacy of cultural groups. The unaltered historic map can be seen from the link above. This historical cartographic image is part of the Japanese Map Collection of the UC Berkeley East Asian Library. The historic map layers in the Google Earth Rumsey Map Collection have been selected by David Rumsey from his large collection of historical maps, as well as some from other collections with which he collaborates. All the maps contain rich information about the past and represent a sampling of time periods, scales, and cartographic art, resulting in visual history stories that only old maps can tell. Each map has been georeferenced by Rumsey, thus creating unique digital map images that allow the old maps to appear in their correct places on the modern globe. Some of the maps fit perfectly in their modern spaces, while othersgenerally earlier period mapsreveal interesting geographical misconceptions of their time. Cultural features on the maps can be compared to the modern satellite views using the slider bars to adjust transparency. The result is an exploration of time as well as space, a marriage of historic cartographic masterpieces with innovative contemporary software tools.
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Title: Map of Anoka and Ramsey counties : with adjacent portions of Hennepin, Carver, Wright, Sherburne, Chisago, Washington and Dakota
Contributors:- Not specified
- 1888
Summary: Cartographic Details: Scale 1:36,205 ; 1 3/4 in. to a mile (W 93‚Å∞42 π--W 92‚Å∞57 π/N 45‚Å∞25 π--N 44‚Å∞50 π). Cadastral map showing landowners. 156 x 182 centimeters
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Title: Map of Stearns County, Minnesota
Contributors:- Not specified
- 1880
Summary: Cartographic Details: Scale approximately 1:57,000. Facsimile: location of original and date of reproduction unknown. Scale of original [1:45,258], engraved by William Bracher and printed by F. Bourquin, Philadelphia, hand colored by C. Kaufmann and mounted by Smith & Stroup. Summary: Shows land ownership. 1 map on 2 sheets; east sheet and west sheet. 101 x 160 centimeters
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Title: A new map of New England, New York, New Iarsey, Pensilvania, Maryland, and Virginia; by Philip Lea.
Contributors:- Not specified
- 1715
Summary: Covers Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, southeastern New York, New Jersey, eastern Pennsylvania, Delaware, eastern Maryland, and eastern Virginia. Relief shown pictorially. Depths shown by soundings. Watermark. Includes inset of New York Harbor area. State 4 with addition of Lea as author and change of publisher. 1 map; 45 x 54 cm.
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Title: A new map of Ireland according to Sr. W. Petty (but supplied wth. many additions which are not in his survey nor in any other map) divided into its provinces, counties & barronies where in are distinguished not only the bishopricks & boroughs but also all the bogs, passes, bridges, &c yt are in Sr. W.P. 32 county maps
Contributors:- Image data
- 1690
Summary: Relief shown pictorially. Dedicated to King William and Queen Mary by P. Lea and H. Moll. Inset: The sea-coast of England, Scotland and Ireland also Holland part of France &c. Date of publication from Tooley's dictionary of mapmakers.
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Title: A new map of New England, New York, New Iarsey, Pensilvania, Maryland, and Virginia
Contributors:- Image data
- 1690
Summary: Covers Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, southeastern New York, New Jersey, eastern Pennsylvania, Delaware, eastern Maryland, and eastern Virginia. Relief shown pictorially. Depths shown by soundings. Includes inset of New York Harbor area.
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Title: Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom, 1825 (Raster Image)
Contributors:- Raster data
- 2014
- Harvard Map Collection, Harvard College Library
- Knox, James.
- Scott, Robert, 1777-1841.
- Manners and Miller.
- Anderson, John, fl. 1810-1840.
- Fairbairn, John, fl. 1812-1854.
Summary: This layer is a georeferenced raster image of the historic paper map entitled: Plan of Edinburgh and its environs, from a survey by James Knox ; engd. by R. Scott. It was published by John Fairbairn 13, Waterloo Place, Manners & Miller, ... and John Anderson, Junr. in 1825. Scale [ca. 1:6,000]. The image inside the map neatline is georeferenced to the surface of the earth and fit to the 'British National Grid' coordinate system. All map collar and inset information is also available as part of the raster image, including any inset maps, profiles, statistical tables, directories, text, illustrations, index maps, legends, or other information associated with the principal map. This map shows features such as roads, drainage, built-up areas and selected buildings, selected names of property owners, parks, ground cover, and more. Relief shown by hachures and spot heights. Includes population statistics from 1821 and note.This layer is part of a selection of digitally scanned and georeferenced historic maps from the Harvard Map Collection. These maps typically portray both natural and manmade features. The selection represents a range of originators, ground condition dates, scales, and map purposes.
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Title: Kelp Canopy: Southern California, 2012
Contributors:- Polygon data
- 2013
Summary: This polygon shapefile is a thematic map representing mosaicked multi-spectral imagery targeting both exposed and submerged giant kelp beds along the Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR) Point Mugu Sea Range. The imagery used to create this classification was acquired at a spatial resolution of 0.3 meters using a Microsoft UltraCam-X digital camera acquiring in the red, green, blue and near-infrared bands. The image mosaic product used for the classification is a result of the resampling of the 0.3 meter data to 2 meter GSD. Surface kelp canopy and subsurface kelp classifications are seperate. The imagery was collected on October 14-16, November 13-14 and December 9-10, 2012. This dataset is complete at this time, although the user should note any omissions. The data are projected in California Teale Albers using North American Datum 1983. File reindexed to match CDFW kelp administrative kelp bed boundaries modified by changes to California Code of Regulations, Title 14, Section 165, effective April 1, 2014. This dataset is used to assess the extent of kelp resources along the Southern California coast (Point Loma to approximately 3.8 miles north of Point Conception) and includes the Channel Islands. Surface kelp canopy and subsurface kelp classifications are seperate. The data was collected and processed by Ocean Imaging under contract by the Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR). The user is cautioned against making direct comparisons between the various kelp surveys for the following reasons: (1)Timing of the survey is important, particularly with respect to growing season, conditions in the ocean, storms, and harvest levels preceding the dates of imagery collection. Season variability may account for differences in surveys which may not reflect a change in the bed's extent, productivity, or harvest level. (2) Statisical significance in change of area should be evaluated. To do this, a variance parameter is needed, which is obtained by repeated measurements. (3) Survey methods may not be consistent. Some method of calibration between the methods should be performed in order to insure a change of area is not due to survey instrumentation and not misinterpreted as a biological change. (4) An area where no kelp data are present may represent an area devoid of kelp, or may represent an area where kelp was not detected due to poor photo quality, missing photo coverage, or other issues with data collection and processing. Image coverage is extensive for the state, but the user is advised to consult the supplementary information for each year to determine whether imagery were acquired for an area of interest. California Department of Fish and Wildlife Marine Resources Region. (2013). Kelp Canopy: Southern California, 2012. California Department of Fish and Wildlife. Marine Resources Region. Available at: http://purl.stanford.edu/xk635rd3987. DISCLAIMER The user is cautioned against making direct comparisons between the various kelp surveys for the following reasons: (1)Timing of the survey is important, particularly with respect to growing season, conditions in the ocean, storms, and harvest levels preceding the dates of imagery collection. Season variability may account for differences in surveys which may not reflect a change in the bed's extent, productivity, or harvest level. (2) Statisical significance in change of area should be evaluated. To do this, a variance parameter is needed, which is obtained by repeated measurements. (3) Survey methods may not be consistent. Some method of calibration between the methods should be performed in order to insure a change of area is not due to survey instrumentation and not misinterpreted as a biological change. (4) An area where no kelp data are present may represent an area devoid of kelp, or may represent an area where kelp was not detected due to poor photo quality, missing photo coverage, or other issues with data collection and processing. Image coverage is extensive for the state, but the user is advised to consult the supplementary information for each year to determine whether imagery were acquired for an area of interest. Please cite the Originators in any reference to the data. NAVAIR and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife must be credited with the distribution of these data. This layer is presented in the WGS84 coordinate system for web display purposes. Downloadable data are provided in native coordinate system or projection.
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Title: Geologic map of the 1° x 2° Cincinnati Quadrangle, Indiana and Ohio, showing bedrock and unconsolidated deposits
Contributors:- Geological maps
- 1972
- Forsyth, Jane L. (Jane Louise), 1921-
- Gooding, Ansel Miller
- Gray, Henry Hamilton,1922-cartographer.
- Schneider, Allan F. (Allan Frank),1926-cartographer.
Summary: By Henry H. Gray, Jane L. Forsyth, Allan F. Schneider, and Ansel M. Gooding. Transverse Mercator projection. "Base map modified from Army Map Service, Map NJ 16-3, 1964." Includes text, cross section, columnar section, diagram, schematic section, ancillary map, and index map. Imprint: [Bloomington, Ind.] : Indiana Geological Survey, 1972 Dimensions: 73 x 66 cm; Scale: 1:250,000 Coordinates: W0860000 W0840000 N0400000 N0390000
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Title: Railroad commissioners' map of Minnesota corrected to Sept. 1, 1904
Contributors:- Not specified
- 1904
- Clausen, A. C.
- Cram, George Franklin, 1841-1928
- George F. Cram Company
- Miller, Joseph G.
- Mills, Ira B.
- Railroad and Warehouse Commission of the State of Minnesota
- Staples, Chas. F.
Summary: Cartographic Details: Scale [1:633,600]. Also shows congressional districts. "Ira B. Mills, Joseph G. Miller, C.F. Staples, Railroad and Warehouse Commissioners; A.C. Clausen, Secretary." Insets: Vicinity of Duluth & Superior, Wis. Scale [1:506,880] -- Vicinity of Saint Paul & Minneapolis. Scale [1:316,800] -- Mesaba Range. Scale [1:506,880] -- Cook County. Scale [1:663,600]. Index on verso. Index on verso obscured by cloth backing. 120 x 75 centimeters
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Title: New pictorial map of Glasgow
Contributors:- Image data
- 1865
Summary: Includes views of Glasgow Cathedral, Glasgow Bridge, Royal Exchange, New Post Office, and Queen's Statue. From: Miller's new and complete illustrated guide through Glasgow ... Glasgow : J. Davis Miller, [1865].