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

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 95    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  

         Michigan Geography Cities:     more books (22)
  1. An Accompaniment to Mitchell's Map of the World on Mercator's Projection: Containing an Index to the Various Countries, Cities, Towns, Islands, &C., Represented ... With Their Several Empires, Kingdoms, Sta by S. Augustus Mitchell, 2009-04-27
  2. Historical collections of Ohio ... an encyclopedia of the state: History both general and local, geography with descriptions of its counties, cities and ... etc., with notes of a tour over it in 1886. by Henry Howe, 1890-01-01
  3. The Chicago Auditorium Building: Adler and Sullivan's Architecture and the City (Chicago Architecture and Urbanism) by Joseph M. Siry, 2002-11-01
  4. Turkish Cologne: The mental maps of migrant workers in a German city (Michigan geographical publication) by John Rosslyn Clark, 1977
  5. Regional characteristics and resources: Part one of the master plan for community development, Alma, Michigan by Myles Boylan, 1956
  6. Turkish Cologne : The Mental Maps of Migrant Workers in a German City by John Rosslyn Clark, 1977
  7. Population-Environment Dynamics: Ideas and Observations
  8. No Horizon Is So Far: Two Women And Their Extraordinary Journey Across Antarctica by Ann Bancroft, Liv Arnesen, 2003-09-17

21. Physical Geography Of Michigan And The Great Lakes Region
more pipelines from the Great Lakes to interior cities, and keeping page have beenmodified from LM Sommers' book entitled, michigan A geography , and from
http://www.earthscape.org/t2/scr01/scr01e.html

22. Justin Philip Crable,Jodi Berlin, Courtney Piotrowski,Corey Brooks - Michigan St
RETENTION OF LOCAL TOWNS AND cities. for Urban Development was located through theGeographic Information System MapFactory, on michigan geography Maps compiled
http://www.ssc.msu.edu/~la/justincrable/p6city.html
RETENTION OF LOCAL TOWNS AND CITIES
INTRODUCTION
The National Forest Service, as a precursor to Elk introduction, has offered to purchase public land to create continuous habitat for migration.
METHODS
Research data for Urban Development was located through the Geographic Information System MapFactory, on Michigan Geography Maps compiled by Jennifer Stefannaci. These maps are available through the Michigan State University server. Specific methods used for the production of the Urban Development map were extremely simple, yet this particular map proved very valuable in the construction of additional maps used within this study. The original disturbance map was modified, as one town, measuring less than a kilometer square was removed from the map. This deletion was in response to purchase agreements that will possibly be made between the town and the Michigan Department of Natural Resources or the United States Forest Service.
FINDINGS
Any cities less than 1km were deleted on original maps found on the University GIS systems. An additional city was deleted, as it will be purchased by the United States Forest Service when development ensues.
  • m.s.u.homepage
  • 23. Joanne M. Westphal - Michigan State University - Dept. Of Geography - LA 492 - B
    Department of geography Landscape Architecture Program College extension agent inMichigan to develop Designing Healthy cities Prescriptions, Principles, and
    http://www.ssc.msu.edu/~la/westphal/00la492review.html
    LA 492 Senior Research
    Dr. Joanne M. Westphal
    Department of Geography
    Landscape Architecture Program
    College of Social Science
    Office Telephone: (517) 353-7880 Email: westphal@pilot.msu.edu
    Spring Semester LA 492 Book Review
    Blindly accepting all this is written on a subject, however, without critically evaluating the context and/or content can be devastating to a field. In this course, as a part of your last semester as an undergraduate, I hope to introduce you to the concept of research in part through critical evaluation of books. This is to give you practice in critically evaluating the work of others, and to help you think about ways to improve your own writing and reporting style. The book reviews also should help you to develop the confidence and experience in performing critical reviews in the future. In the end, you should read, review, and write better when it comes to technical material of a written nature. Finally, landscape architecture is a very broad field of study. By reviewing the literature, both past and present, one can gain an appreciation of the depth and breadth of issues, affecting landscape design, planning, and management. Whether one examines landscapes through the romantic eyes of the fictional writers or the scientific eyes of the researcher, all of these works contribute to our understanding, as Americans, of the landscape and its impact on humankind. Some of the books listed will be fun to read, while others will be more technical in nature. I hope you enjoy this opportunity to investigate the literature that surrounds us as landscape architects.

    24. Turn JavaScript On 612/ 625-8532 432 Social Sciences Scott003@
    Education Ph.D., University of michigan (geography), 1974 MA Geog 5143 geographyof West Africa. Informal Enterprises in African cities Women Street
    http://www.geog.umn.edu/Faculty/Scott.html
    Turn JavaScript On document.write(myTitle);
    432 Social Sciences
    scott003@umn.edu
    Mailing Address:
    414 Social Sciences
    267 - 19th Avenue South
    Minneapolis, MN 55455
    USA Earl P. Scott, Professor, and Adjunct Professor of Afro-American and African studies Education
    Ph.D., University of Michigan (Geography), 1974
    MA, Louisiana State University (Geography), 1963
    BA, Southern University (Geography), 1959 Statement of Interests:
    I was born in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. My Ph.D. dissertation is in the Carl Sauer-Roy Rapaport traditions. My teaching and reporting are grounded in foreign area research and social science survey methods. My objectives are to understand the lives of "ordinary" people and how they advance their own well-being, to understand the participation of ordinary citizens in urban and rural-based economies and how their participation can be assured through democratic rights, and to understand how households and small-scale enterprises, as the lowest units of civil society, empower themselves. In pursuit of my objectives, I have conducted field research on small-scale enterprises in Zambia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Uganda and I have visited many other sub-Saharan African countries. Current Research: Presently, I am a Professor of geography and Adjunct Professor of

    25. An Outline Of American Geography - Largest Cities
    An Outline of American geography, Population of the 25 Largest US cities,1994. 1 ~ New York, New York 7,333,253 10 ~ Detroit, michigan 992,038.
    http://usinfo.state.gov/products/pubs/geography/cities.htm
    An Outline of
    American Geography Population of the 25 Largest
    U.S. Cities, 1994
    1 ~ New York, New York: 7,333,253 2 ~ Los Angeles, California: 3,448,613 3 ~ Chicago, Illinois: 2,731,743 4 ~ Houston, Texas: 1,702,086 5 ~ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: 1,524,249 6 ~ San Diego, California: 1,151,977 7 ~ Phoenix, Arizona: 1,048,949 8 ~ Dallas, Texas: 1,022,830 9 ~ San Antonio, Texas: 998,905 10 ~ Detroit, Michigan: 992,038 11 ~ San Jose, California: 816,884 12 ~ Indianapolis, Indiana: 752,279 13 ~ San Francisco, California: 734,676 14 ~ Baltimore, Maryland: 702,979 15 ~ Jacksonville, Florida: 665,070 16 ~ Columbus, Ohio: 635,913 17 ~ Milwaukee, Wisconsin: 617,044 18 ~ Memphis, Tennessee: 614,289 19 ~ El Paso, Texas: 579,307 20 ~ Washington, D.C: 567,094 21 ~ Boston, Massachusetts: 547,725 22 ~ Seattle, Washington: 520,947 23 ~ Austin, Texas: 514,013 24 ~ Nashville, Tennessee: 504,505 25 ~ Denver, Colorado: 493,559 Back to State Capitals
    Back to Contents Continue to Glossary

    26. An Outline Of American Geography - Chapter 5
    locks at Sault Sainte Marie, michigan, first opened that directly affected the manufacturinggeography of the During this period, almost all cities and towns
    http://usinfo.state.gov/products/pubs/geography/geog05.htm
    An Outline of
    American Geography MAP
    CHAPTER 5
    THE MANUFACTURING CORE
      M anufacturing is an important economic activity in the United States. The evidence of this is everywherein articles of clothing, items of preserved food, residential structures, means of transport and communication, and many other things. In spite of the presence of items manufactured outside the country, domestic industry remains paramount, and it is rare for any medium-sized U.S. town to be without at least some local employment in manufacturing. The northeastern United States, excluding northern New England, is the country's single most significant region of manufacturing ( Map 4 : 45K). This region is loosely defined on three sides by the Ohio River Valley, Megalopolis, and the southern Great Lakes. The western margin of the region is less clear; it blends gradually with agriculture-dominant landscapes across southern Indiana, Illinois, and beyond. In spite of the region's moderate extent and the growth of manufacturing elsewhere, the Manufacturing Core continues to be of tremendous economic significance in American geography. Its factories produce most of the country's steel, as well as a significant percentage of its motor vehicles and motor vehicle parts. Most of the important ports, the main centers of communication, and the primary financial centers are within or near the region, and the country's political capital is on the immediate margins. The region includes the two largest clusters of coalescing metropolitan areas: Megalopolis, and the group of large urban regions between Milwaukee (Wisconsin) and Chicago (Illinois) on the west, and Cleveland (Ohio) and Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania) on the east.

    27. WSU > CULMA > Department Of Geography And Urban Planning
    michigan Planner (Winter, 1993 Sands) Wayne State University Department of Geographyand Urban of Change Factors Affecting Our cities. michigan Planner, (Fall
    http://www.culma.wayne.edu/gup/publications.htm

    Master of Urban Planning (MUP)

    Urban Planning Courses

    B.A. Geography Major (BA)

    Geography Courses
    ...
    Send Us E-mail

    LAURA A. REESE, Professor
    226.1 State Hall; (313) 577-0194
    Local Economic Development Policy: The U.S. and Canada. (1997) New York: Garland Publishing.
    "Sharing the Benefits of Economic Development: What Cities Utilize Type II Policies?", Urban Affairs Review (forthcoming).
    "What Do Businesses Want?: Some Thoughts on Job Training for Local Development Officials" (with Joseph Ohren), Public Administration Quarterly (forthcoming).
    "Modeling Economic Development Decision-Making: The Case of Tax Abatements", Policy Studies Review (forthcoming). "The Use of Planning Methodologies in Local Economic Development Policy-Making", Environment and Planning C (15, 1997): 285-303. "More of the Same: Local Economic Development Policies Over Time" (with David Fasenfest), Economic Development Quarterly (August, 1996): 280-289. "Local Economic Development Policy in Canada and the U.S.: Similarities and Differences" (with David Fasenfest), Canadian Journal of Urban Research (June, 1996): 100 - 121. "Community Development Block Grant Spending Revisited: Patterns of Benefit and Program Institutionalization" (with Raymond Rosenfeld, Vicki Georgeau, and Scott Wamsley), Publius: The Journal of Federalism (Fall, 1995): 55-72.

    28. WSU > CULMA > Department Of Geography And Urban Planning
    and developmental patterns and problems of the State of michigan. (I). 3130 (SS) IntroductoryUrban geography. to the geographer's view of cities, with emphasis
    http://www.culma.wayne.edu/gup/geography_courses.htm
    Geography (B.A. Program) Courses
    Master of Urban Planning (MUP)

    Urban Planning Courses

    B.A. Geography Major (BA)

    Geography Courses
    ...
    Send Us E-mail

    The following courses, numbered 0900-6999, are offered for undergraduate credit. Courses numbered 7000-9999, which are offered for graduate credit only, may be found in the graduate bulletin. Courses in the following list numbered 5000-6999 may be taken for graduate credit unless specifically restricted to undergraduate students by individual course limitations. For interpretation of numbering system, signs and abbreviations, see Signs and Abbreviations Used in this Bulletin. 1100 (SS) World Regional Patterns. Cr. 4
    Concepts and theory in analyzing areal relationships and distinguishing regional patterns of human activity; cultural factors and physical conditions (climate, landforms) as factors in regional delineations; comparisons and contrasts in regional economic development; analysis of concentrations/dispersals of human activity; local, national and regional phenomena in the interpretation of global patterns. (T) 2000 (U S 2000) (SS) Introduction to Urban Studies. (HIS 2000) (P S 2000) (SOC 2500) Cr. 4

    29. General Data And Information On Michigan
    of geographic studies regional geography systematic/thematic geography. and land coverGreat Lakes' basin michigan's boundaries major cities road and
    http://www.geo.msu.edu/geo333/part-one.html
    GEO 333 : Geography of Michigan and the Great Lakes Region Course Syllabus Related Links Part I. Introduction to the Geography of Michigan What is Geography?
    What is geography concerned with?
    Types of geographic studies
    regional geography
    systematic/thematic geography
    General Physical and Cultural Data for Michigan

    miscellaneous information about Michigan

    Michigan rivers and lakes: maps

    QUIZ #2 locational materials
    ...
    population

    The Michigan DNR's regional landscape maps for Michigan Lower peninsula Upper peninsula relief land uses and land cover ... Land uses

    30. WorldBook General Reference Encyclopedia > Geography > North America > Cities >
    WorldBook General Reference Encyclopedia geography North America Sub Topics ofCities Maine; Manitoba; Maryland; Massachusetts; michigan; Minnesota; Mississippi;
    http://www.surfablebooks.com/worldbookgeneral/Geography/North America/Cities/1.h

    WorldBook General Reference Encyclopedia
    Geography North America Cities Cities Search the Web with WorldBook All of Surfable Books Match: All Any Boolean
    Sub Topics of Cities

    31. Linguistic Geography Of The United States
    nucleus in ow, eg aout (out); more northerly Midland cities tend not to. AmericanRegional Dialects A Word geography. Ann ArborUniversity of michigan Press.
    http://www.evolpub.com/Americandialects/AmDialMap.html
    Evolution Evolution Publishing
    c/o Arx Publishing, LLC
    10 Canal Street, Suite, 231
    Bristol PA 19007-3900
    Tel.: (215) 781-8600
    Fax: (215) 781-8602
    Email: info@arxpub.com
    Linguistic Geography of the Mainland United States
    Traditionally, dialectologists have listed three dialect groups in the United States: Northern, Midland, and Southernalthough some scholars prefer a two-way classification of simply Northern and Southern, and one may also find significant difference on the boundaries of each area. The map shown above represents a synthesis of various independent field studies this century. These are in chronological order: the Linguistic Atlas fieldwork begun under the direction of Hans Kurath in the 1930's; the informal but extensive personal observations of Charles Thomas in the 1940's; the DARE fieldwork of the 1960's under Frederic Cassidy; and the Phonological Atlas fieldwork of William Labov during the 1990's.
    Although it may seem that a great amount of data has been collected over a short time span, the shifts in American dialects this century have been rapid enough to outpace the data collection. What appears to be a well-entrenched dialect marker today such as the Northern Cities Shift, may barely appear in earlier studiesaffecting both classification and mapping. Nevertheless, some basic observations on current American linguistic geography can be made.

    32. Linguistic Geography Of Pennsylvania
    Philadelphia and Baltimore are the only port cities on the Atlantic to American RegionalDialects A Word geography. Ann Arbor University of michigan Press.
    http://www.evolpub.com/Americandialects/PennaDialMap.html
    Evolution Evolution Publishing
    c/o Arx Publishing, LLC
    10 Canal Street, Suite, 231
    Bristol PA 19007-3900
    Tel.: (215) 781-8600
    Fax: (215) 781-8602
    Email: info@arxpub.com
    Linguistic Geography of Pennsylvania
    The above map is historically skewed, in that boundaries follow the most modern studies when possible, but where current information is not available the boundaries must often reflect the 1939 LAMSAS data. At certain points the modern and older studies clearly conflict: Schuylkill County with its consistent monophthongization would have been better classified with the Lehigh Valley and Reading in 1939; today, its acceptance of the low back merger shows that it clearly belongs to the Anthracite region.
    Hudson Valley
    Geographical extent
    : Pike, Monroe, Carbon counties. Might also include Wayne and northeastern Northampton counties.

    33. History & Geography Of St. Clair County
    michigan also ceded the Toledo Strip to Ohio, establishing the current border withthe Buckeye State geography of St Clair River, cities such as Port Huron, St
    http://www.rootsweb.com/~mistclai/maphistory.html
    History Geography of St. Clair County St. Clair County Townships A Brief History of Michigan and St. Clair County
    by Tom Kephart French explorers, looking for a passage to China through the unexplored North American continent, visited what is now Michigan in the early 1600s. The native people gave the visitors some much-needed assistance during their journeys, building and navigating canoes, protecting and teaching them about the environment, and helping them forage and hunt for food. The Indians also traded animal furs for guns, powder, ammunition and other tools that moved their culture into the dawn of the Industrial Revolution. In 1679, the French explorer Robert Cavelier de la Salle and French missionary Père Louis Hennepin entered a body of water while sailing on the Griffon up from Lake Erie on what is now the Detroit River. The date was 12 August 1679, which was the day of the religious festival of Sainte-Claire, who founded the order of Franciscan nuns in the 13th century. Ste.-Claire was a contemporary and friend of St. Francis of Assisi. Père (Father) Hennepin held a mass, during which the newly-discovered lake was given the name Lac Sainte-Claire. In time, the river leading north out of Lac Sainte-Claire, the county that developed along it, and a city on the river all took the same name St. Clair. (The name was often spelled St. Clare in English in the 1700s, but most mapmakers had settled on the current spelling by 1840.)

    34. Geography: Midwest Region Of The United States
    Learn...... Includes a link to climates for 100 US cities. URL http//www.geographygames.com/GRUSA.htmLink ID L00014299 Title Geobop michigan
    http://emints.more.net/ethemes/resources/S00000399.html
    Questions or comments about this resource?
    Contact eThemes@more.net
    Printer-friendly version
    Please preview all links before sharing in class with students.
    Resource Information Title Geography: Midwest Region of the United States Description These sites focus on the states in the Midwest. Learn more about the history, land, economy, industries, and animals of this region. Includes many photographs plus statistics that can be graphed. The following states are included: North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio. Also has links to eThemes Resources on the West, South and Northeast. Grade Level Performance Standards Knowledge Standards Resource Links Link ID:
    Title:
    U.S. States
    Description: Click on a state to learn more about it including the history, symbols, population, and famous people.
    URL: http://www.infoplease.com/states.html
    Link ID:
    Title:
    The Official U.S. Time
    Description: See the official time for each of the different time zones in the United States. Click on a region to check the time.
    URL: http://www.time.gov/

    35. CyberSleuthkids United States - Michigan
    Home geography United States michigan RESULTS 1 12 of 13 Excite Travel DestinationsUnited States michigan Discover city Links to cities in michigan.
    http://cybersleuth-kids.com/sleuth/Geography/United_States/Michigan/

    36. Interesting Places In Michigan
    Home geography United States michigan Interesting Places. SEARCH RESULTS1 4 of 4 cities of michigan Community Websites Directory of links to
    http://cybersleuth-kids.com/sleuth/Geography/United_States/Michigan/Interesting_

    37. Cities And Geography
    13.30 – 14.30, Asset Strippers Nauro F Campos (University of Newcastle, WDI Universityof michigan and CEPR) * Francesco Giovannoni (University of Newcastle
    http://www.cepr.org/meets/wkcn/7/759/papers/
    Search CEPR/ESRC Transition Economics Workshop London, 4 December 2002 Thursday 12 December Coffee Patching Up the Pact: Some Suggestions for Enhancing Fiscal Sustainability and Macroeconomic Stability in an Enlarged EU
    Willem Buiter (EBRD and CEPR)
    Clemens Grafe (Birkbeck College) Lunch Asset Strippers
    Nauro F Campos (University of Newcastle, WDI - University of Michigan and CEPR)
    * Francesco Giovannoni (University of Newcastle) Agriculture in the Russian Transition: Reform and Retrenchment Figure 1 Figure 2 Figure 3 and Table 2 also available. Carol Leonard (St. Anthony's College, Oxford) Coffee Electoral Participation and Attitudes to the Transition Process in Central and Eastern Europe
    John Hudson (University of Bath) Each presenter has 50 minutes and there will be 10 minutes for general discussion. * denotes Speaker Organizer: Mark E. Schaffer (Heriot-Watt University and CEPR) This workshop has been organised under the auspices of the ESRC Resource Centre, established in 1993 at the Centre for Economic Policy Research to provide networking, dissemination, support and training services to the UK economics community.

    38. Geography World (US Cities)
    USA CityLink Home Page Links to US cities USA Urbanized Land Maine Augusta PortlandMaryland Annapolis Baltimore Massachusetts Boston michigan Detroit Lansing
    http://members.aol.com/bowermanb/cities.html
    US Cities
    Select by state from table below
    For alphabetical listing of all available cities, click here.
    AL AK AZ ... Best Places to Live, 2000 - from Money.com
    Cities Unlimited
    - click on state for list of cities
    Cities in the United States of America

    Cities From Space Collection
    - NASA
    ePodunk
    - 25,000 communities profiled
    LookSmart
    - information on 71 US Cities
    Profiles of the 50 Largest Cities of the United States

    Sprawl City
    - urban sprawl in US
    US Cities: 2000
    - from Demographia
    US Cities by Density: 2000
    - from Demographia USA CityLink Home Page - Links to US Cities USA Urbanized Land: 2000 Census - Demographia Alabama Huntsville Mobile Montgomery Alaska Anchorage Juneau Arizona Flagstaff Phoenix Tuscon Yuma Arkansas Little Rock California Bakersfield Concord Los Angeles Orange County ... Silicon Valley Colorado Colorado Springs Denver Pueblo Connecticut Hartford New Haven Delaware Dover Wilmington District of Columbia Washington DC Washington DC Sightseeing Map Florida Ft. Lauderdale

    39. GITN Demo--Statistics For Michigan - Reference Atlas
    name from an Ojibwa (Chippewa) Indian word meaning large lake. michigan has an geography. 10largest cities (1999 est.) 10 largest cities (1999 est.) Detroit
    http://www.geographyinthenews.com/DOCS/michiganusraf.html

    Subscribe Today!
    About GITN Archives Lesson Plans ... GITN Home
    Reference Atlas Demo
    Michigan
    Miscellaneous Geography People Government ... Economy Introduction [Top of Page] Michigan was the 26th state, admitted into the Union in 1837. Called the "Great Lakes State" because its shores touch four of the five Great Lakes, Michigan gets its name from an Ojibwa (Chippewa) Indian word meaning "large lake." Michigan has an unusual geography, as it consists of two land massesthe sparsely populated Upper Peninsula and the mitten-shaped Lower Peninsula, home to most of the state's residents. Detroit, its largest city, is known worldwide as the center of the American auto industry. The apple blossom is the state flower, the robin is the state bird and Lansing is the capital. Miscellaneous [Top of Page] State Flower: Apple Blossom State Motto: If you seek a pleasant peninsula, look around you

    40. About The USA - Travel & Geography > Michigan
    michigan has an unusual geography, as it consists of die Sport und Natur mögen, hatmichigan das ganze mi.; National Rank 11 10 largest cities (2000) Detroit
    http://www.usembassy.de/usa/michigan.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
    Michigan. American FactFinder (U.S. Census) Michigan, the " Great Lakes State " "Wolverine State"
    Abbreviation:
    MI Michigan gets its name from an Ojibwa (Chippewa) Indian word meaning "large lake." in 1837, Michigan became the 26th state in the Union. Michigan is one of the nation's leading manufacturing states and it leads in the production of automobiles. Detroit, Michigan's largest city, is called the Automobile Capital of the World or Motor City . Michigan touches four of the five Great Lakes - Erie, Huron, Michigan and Superior. It also has an additional 11,000 smaller lakes. The state's 5,000 kilometer shoreline is longer than that of any other state except Alaska. Michigan has year-round activities for people who enjoy sports and the outdoors. Michigan has an unusual geography, as it consists of two land masses - the sparsely populated Upper Peninsula and the mitten-shaped Lower Peninsula, home to most of the state's residents.

    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 2     21-40 of 95    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter