Use of remotely sensed data has resulted in improved mapping techniques,
and much greater accuracy and detail, especially for areas such as arctic
shorelines where frozen land and sea ice meet. Thematic maps, on
scales from local to global, allow us to monitor the earth's vegetation,
soils, water, climate, human impact and the changes that occur over time.
The "bible" of map projections is often considered to be:
Snyder, J. P. 1987, Map projections--a working manual: U.S. Geological
Survey Prof. Paper 1395, 383 p. Reprinted 1989 and 1994 with corrections.
Available for $32 + 3.50 S/H from: USGS Information Services, Box 25286,
Building 810, Denver Federal Center, Denver, CO 80225, 303-202-4700; Fax
303-202-4693.
Large selection of data and maps as well as links to government
and NGO sources of spatial information. The library (http://library.berkeley.edu/EART/)
also contains collections for earth sciences, geography, climate and aerial
photography.
National network that links natural resource agencies, academia
and land planners with localcommunities primarilythrough schools. The goal
is to keep common animals common and to maintain our quality of life. The
approach is to train individuals to become aware of their natural resources
and to provide the tools to inventory and monitor resources.
Woodrow Wilson Leadership Program in Environmental Science
lpt@www.woodrow.org
The Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation
webmaster@woodrow.org
CN 5281, Princeton NJ 08543-5281
Tel:(609)452-7007
Fax:(609)452-0066