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ESRI Press

Cartographica Extraordinaire: The Historical Map Transformed
David Rumsey’s collection of historical maps is one of the largest and most complete of its kind. The maps selected for Cartographica Extraordinaire tell a hundred distinct, exciting, important, and sometimes controversial stories.
By David Rumsey and Edith M. Punt
ESRI Press, 2004, 160 pages

Past Time, Past Place: GIS for History
This pioneering book shows how GIS technology can illuminate the study of history, from the Greek and Roman eras to 20th century New York City.
By Anne Kelly Knowles
ESRI Press, 2002, 250 pages

More books from ESRI Press

Other

Archaeology and GIS: A European Perspective [Amazon.com]
This book describes the work of leading European researchers, from intra site analysis through landscape analysis to cultural resource management.
By Gary Lock and Zoran Stancic
Taylor & Francis, 1995, 392 pages

The Geographical Imagination in America, 1880-1950 [Amazon.com]
Susan Schulten examins how ideas and images shaped understandings of world geography from the 1880s to the 1950s. The book is abundantly illustrated with maps and photographs.
By Susan Schulten
University of Chicago Press, 2001, 319 pages

Practical Applications of GIS for Archaeologists [Amazon.com]
This text focuses on the use of GIS for archaeological predictive modeling, and the contributors include internationally recognized researchers in the field.
Edited by Konnie Westcott and R. Joe Brandon
Taylor & Francis, 2000, 160 pages

Statistical Analysis with ArcView GIS [Amazon.com]
Employing points, lines, and polygons to model real-world geographic forms, this easy-to-use resource provides geographers with a valuable bridge between theory and the software necessary to apply it.
By Jay Lee and David Wong
John Wiley & Sons, 2001, 192 pages

Anthropology, Space, and Geographic Information Systems [Amazon.com]
This book explores major advances in the use of GIS for anthropology and archaeology, showing how they have been successfully deployed to pursue research previously considered too difficult—or impossible—to undertake.
Edited by Mark Aldenderfer and Herbert Maschner
Oxford University Press, 1996, 294 pages

More GIS Books


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