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Geotimes April 2003 Randall Orndorff |
Mapping Colorado Currently, only 24 percent of Colorado's spectacular geology has been mapped at the fine scale of 1:24,000. At the same time, the state hosts many geologic hazards. |
Geotimes October 2004 Ron Kind |
Geologic Mapping for the Future Recognizing the diverse roles mapping plays in society, Congress recently voted to reauthorize the National Geologic Mapping Act. |
Geotimes November 2003 |
Geomedia Book Review: The Fossils of Florissant... Areal mapping applications... |
Geotimes December 2004 |
Quakes, Shakes and Fakes New Maps from the U.S. Geological Survey MF-2327-D. NEVADA. Geologic insights and suggestions on mineral potential... MF-2413. ALASKA. Geologic and fossil locality maps ... I-2655. UTAH and ARIZONA. Geologic map of the Kanab 30' X 60' quadrangle, Utah and Arizona... etc. |
Geotimes June 2003 |
Geomedia Ten years of mapping Utah... |
Geotimes March 2003 |
Geomedia Relatively few people know that groundwater pumping affects streams, lakes, wetlands and springs. Robert Glennon's book, Water Follies, sets to turn this situation around... Magnetic anomaly map of North America by the North American Magnetic Anomaly Group |
Geotimes September 2003 |
Geomedia Book Review: The Chicago Guide to Communicating Science... Maps: Lewis and Clark, USGS maps... DVD: Glacier DVD accolade |
Geotimes October 2005 Jon L. Rau |
Teaching Urban Geology From the Bottom Up Middle- and High School-level textbooks do not contain sufficient geological data to illustrate interesting problems and natural hazards that are related to local geological urban settings, thus forcing teachers to do their own research. |
D-Lib Mar/Apr 2015 Justin B. Sorensen |
Reconstructing the Past Through Utah Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps: A Geospatial Approach to Library Resources This article describes the Digital Scholarship Lab's endeavor to convert these valuable resources into research driven geospatial datasets, providing a new format for how the library information is presented. |
Geotimes September 2004 |
Geomedia Earthquakes, Climate Change and Reel Disasters... Geotimes on the Set... Glen Canyon Dammed: Inventing Lake Powell and the Canyon Country... Mapping Mining Impacts in Missouri... |
Geotimes April 2003 Lisa M. Pinsker |
Mapping secure boundaries for data In deciding what geospatial information could pose harm to the country if made public, government agencies must think like terrorists. |
Geotimes March 2004 E-an Zen |
The Marriage of Geology and Philosophy This slim volume deals with the public role of earth science in contemporary society. What it has to say should concern not only public-minded earth scientists and those engaged in policy-making, but those who care about the relations between science and the humanities |
D-Lib June 2001 |
Tapestry of Time and Terrain Through computer processing and enhancement, a production team from USGS has brought together into digital tapestry existing images of the nation's lower 48 states... |
Geotimes December 2003 |
Geomedia On the Shelf for the Holidays... Books for the western traveler... |
Search Engine Watch November 3, 2005 Chris Sherman |
Yahoo Enhances Maps, Integrates Local Search In a major overhaul, Yahoo has significantly upgraded its Maps offering with cleaner maps and integrated local search results. |
Geotimes April 2006 Naomi Lubick |
Minerals Cut Again Again, the President's proposed budget for 2007 scuttled the USGS's Mineral Resources Program. The requested cuts affect the collection of data on everything from mineral formation to the extent of worldwide deposits of economic commodities. |
Geotimes September 2003 Jan Childress |
Jim Davis: Lessons from Josiah Whitney Jim Davis stepped down this summer from his position as California's state geologist. Davis describes with relish the experiences of California's first state geologist, Josiah Whitney. |
Searcher June 2002 Irene E. McDermott |
Where was I? Maps on the Web There is a tremendous amount of spatial data on the World Wide Web: multitudes of maps; armfuls of atlases; cartloads of cartography. Enough to keep a map nerd like myself clicking and dreaming for years. Maps on the Web are designed for many uses, and many of them are free... |
Geotimes October 2003 Lisa Rossbacher |
Searching for The Map One geologist's quest to see "The Map that Changed the World," William Smith's original 1815 geologic map of Britain, which radically changed the way people understood Earth's subsurface and made Smith the "father of modern geology." |
Geotimes April 2004 Kamilli & Barton |
New Collaboration in Minerals Research Responsible and sustainable utilization of mineral resources is critical to societal well-being in the 21st century. Recognizing the opportunities that can come from cooperative interactions, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has increased its involvement with universities and other organizations. |
CIO May 11, 2009 Kristin Burnham |
Mind Maps Fuel Productivity Mind mapping should top your list of personal productivity tools. |
Chemistry World June 19, 2013 Jaco Baas |
Earth materials: introduction to mineralogy and petrology This book by Cornelis Klein and Anthony Philpotts promises a comprehensive text on mineralogy and petrology for single-semester university courses in geology, earth science and environmental science. |
Geotimes March 2007 |
Geomedia Movies: Footprints: Flexing the rules of filmmaking... Maps: Mineralogy 101: Photo-Atlas of Minerals 2.0... Earth, interactive: This Dynamic Planet... |
Financial Advisor April 2008 Joel Bruckenstein |
Mind Mapping The concept of mind mapping is a technique that seems particularly well suited to the financial advisory practice. Read on for more information. |
InternetNews February 9, 2005 Sean Michael Kerner |
Mapping Google's Latest Direction Search engine now also helps you see where you're going with a new map service. |
PC World August 20, 2007 Steve Bass |
The Web's Best Mapping Sites At the top map services, driving directions are just the beginning. |
Geotimes January 2005 |
Geomedia Forensic Geology on the Small Screen... "Evidence From the Earth," by Raymond C. Murray... "Earth Colors," by Sarah Andrews... South Dakota Mapping... |
Geotimes October 2007 Jim Gibeaut |
Coastal Development: The Galveston Case, Part I Even following the disastrous 2005 hurricane season, barrier islands remain under increasing pressure from development in Texas and elsewhere. |
Geotimes October 2003 |
Geomedia Book Review: Krakatoa... DVD: Revisiting The Core... Maps: Annotated list of references for geologic mapping in Iraq... etc. |
CRM December 2014 David Myron |
Why You Should Consider Customer Journey Maps While creating a customer journey map that accounts for experiences across multiple channels might sound difficult, it is possible. |
Searcher April 2002 Marylaine Block |
Mapping the Information Landscape Why is it worth identifying our mental maps and thinking about them? To remind ourselves when we get bogged down in a question, that we can reorient ourselves to a different map and a different strategy for finding answers... |
Military & Aerospace Electronics June 2008 |
U.S. Marine Corps installs advanced geospatial technology across 65,000 desktops U.S. Marine Corps officers wanted to help their personnel use and share digital maps online, so they turned to TerraGo Technologies in Atlanta. |
Geotimes April 2004 Naomi Lubick |
Minerals on the Line In January, President Bush delivered a blow to the geosciences with his proposed budget for fiscal year 2005, effectively cutting the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) by about $18 million. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2007 Paul McFedries |
The New Geographers The new arts of neogeography and neocartography are thriving in their stead, and they will soon be annotating, augmenting, tagging, coding, and parsing your reality. |
New Architect August 2002 Jane Wells |
For the Web Application developers and new project managers are wanted, according to Web Project Management: Delivering Successful Commercial Web Sites, by Ashley Friedlein. |
Information Today May 20, 2010 |
ProQuest's New Sanborn Maps Geo Edition ProQuest is using a proprietary geo-referencing technology to enhance discovery in its Sanborn Map collection, one of libraries' most consulted sources of historical maps. |