Death rates : 1959-1961 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Death rates for selected causes. (with) Infant-mortality international comparisons -- Health profession schools : 1964-1965 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Physicians, M. D. and D. O. active, non-federal : 1965 -- Dentists, active, non-federal : 1965.

Chart and statistical map representing the United States, featuring the geographic density of death rates from 1959 to 1961. Map also shows political boundaries, bodies of water, coastlines and islands. Map includes legend, as well as bar scales and scale statement. Presented with Albers Equal Area...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Geological Survey (U.S.), United States. Public Health Service, Pecora, William T., Gerlach, Arch C., Overstreet, William B.
Format: Map
Language:unknown
Published: United States Department of the Interior Geological Survey 1965
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~341435~90109583
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institution Open Polar
collection David Rumsey Historical Map Collection (Cartography Associates)
op_collection_id ftdavidrumseyc
language unknown
topic Statistical
Population
Health
Disease
Historical
spellingShingle Statistical
Population
Health
Disease
Historical
Geological Survey (U.S.)
United States. Public Health Service
Pecora, William T.
Gerlach, Arch C.
Overstreet, William B.
Death rates : 1959-1961 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Death rates for selected causes. (with) Infant-mortality international comparisons -- Health profession schools : 1964-1965 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Physicians, M. D. and D. O. active, non-federal : 1965 -- Dentists, active, non-federal : 1965.
topic_facet Statistical
Population
Health
Disease
Historical
description Chart and statistical map representing the United States, featuring the geographic density of death rates from 1959 to 1961. Map also shows political boundaries, bodies of water, coastlines and islands. Map includes legend, as well as bar scales and scale statement. Presented with Albers Equal Area Projection. With two inset maps: Principal islands of Hawaii -- Alaska. Chart death rates for selected causes, according to different races, from 1910 to 1965. Colored lithograph. Together, chart and map are 42 x 31 cm, on sheet 49 x 35 cm. Chart and map appear in Special subject maps section, subsection Socio-Cultural. (with) Chart and three statistical maps representing the United States, featuring the geographic density of health profession schools from 1964 to 1965, as well as the number of physicians and dentists, as of 1965. Maps also show political boundaries, bodies of water, coastlines and islands. Maps include legends and explanatory notes, as well as bar scales and scale statements (scales differ). Presented with Albers Equal Area Projection. With two inset maps within each map: Principal islands of Hawaii -- Alaska. Chart shows infant mortality rates across the world, from 1946 to 1964. Colored lithograph. Together, chart and maps are 42 x 31 cm, on sheet 49 x 35 cm. Chart and maps appear in Special subject maps section, subsection Socio-Cultural. The national atlas of the United States of America, by the United States Geological Survey; published in Washington D. C., 1970. Bound in navy blue board, with title printed in silver on both front cover and spine. Accompanied by envelope with six overlay sheets, tucked between final page and back cover of volume. Collation: [i-vi], vii-xiii, [1], 2-417, A1, A2, B1, B2, C, D. Atlas contains 770 maps and 18 charts. Includes a dedication, foreward, list of contributors, introduction, table of contents and index to map subjects. Topic covered: physical geography, history, economics, culture, administrative boundaries and cartography. In addition, atlas also provides maps of the world, as related to the United States. Maps show political boundaries, cities, railways, roads, topography, bodies of water, glaciers, drainage, coastlines, islands, water depths and time zones. Topical maps feature other details, such as history, geology, climate, agriculture, population, racial demographics (including indigenous peoples), religion, language and transportation. Some maps use data visualization to further illustrate geographical information, with charts overlaid upon the landscape. "Adapted from "About The National Atlas of the United States of America," by the U.S. Geological Survey: The National Atlas of the United States of America was published in 1970. It was designed to be of practical use to decision makers in government and business, and for planners and research scholars as well as others needing to visualize country-wide distributional patterns and relationships between environmental phenomena and human activities. The National Atlas represents the principal characteristics of the country in 1970, including its physical features, historical evolution, economic activities, sociocultural conditions, administrative subdivisions, and place in world affairs. Various federal agencies, professional organizations, and commercial firms had advocated producing a National Atlas of the United States of America, but the magnitude of the task and the scope of the research required deterred those who would begin it. Late in 1954, the National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council established a Committee on the National Atlas of the United States, with representatives from several federal mapmaking agencies. The committee's primary responsibilities were to coordinate all federal agencies that would be involved in producing the atlas and to ensure uniform quality in its cartography. This proved to be a nearly impossible task, and consequently in 1961 the committee terminated itself. In so doing it recommended that the atlas be completed by one federal agency, preferably the Geological Survey in the U.S. Department of the Interior. In March of 1961, the Secretary of the Interior accepted the challenge. Congress appropriated funds to begin work on the National Atlas in 1963, and on reimbursable loan the Library of Congress made available the chief of its Geography and Map Division, Dr. Arch C. Gerlach, to serve as editor. Eighty-four agencies and bureaus appointed liaison officers to the National Atlas Project, base maps were prepared at four scales, and an advisory group of eminent cartographers and geographers collaborated to formulate fundamental design principles and specifications. The first part of the National Atlas is devoted to general reference maps that contain most of the forty-one thousand place names recorded in the index. These maps were included for the convenience of readers wanting basic locational information. In the thematic section of the National Atlas, separate subdivisions deal with the country's physical, historical, economic, and socio-cultural characteristics. The maps in this portion of the atlas represent the relationships between human beings and their environment while offering scientific bases for analyzing the nation's economic development in 1970. The National Atlas proved to be the last paper atlas of this magnitude produced by the federal government."
format Map
author Geological Survey (U.S.)
United States. Public Health Service
Pecora, William T.
Gerlach, Arch C.
Overstreet, William B.
author_facet Geological Survey (U.S.)
United States. Public Health Service
Pecora, William T.
Gerlach, Arch C.
Overstreet, William B.
author_sort Geological Survey (U.S.)
title Death rates : 1959-1961 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Death rates for selected causes. (with) Infant-mortality international comparisons -- Health profession schools : 1964-1965 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Physicians, M. D. and D. O. active, non-federal : 1965 -- Dentists, active, non-federal : 1965.
title_short Death rates : 1959-1961 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Death rates for selected causes. (with) Infant-mortality international comparisons -- Health profession schools : 1964-1965 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Physicians, M. D. and D. O. active, non-federal : 1965 -- Dentists, active, non-federal : 1965.
title_full Death rates : 1959-1961 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Death rates for selected causes. (with) Infant-mortality international comparisons -- Health profession schools : 1964-1965 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Physicians, M. D. and D. O. active, non-federal : 1965 -- Dentists, active, non-federal : 1965.
title_fullStr Death rates : 1959-1961 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Death rates for selected causes. (with) Infant-mortality international comparisons -- Health profession schools : 1964-1965 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Physicians, M. D. and D. O. active, non-federal : 1965 -- Dentists, active, non-federal : 1965.
title_full_unstemmed Death rates : 1959-1961 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Death rates for selected causes. (with) Infant-mortality international comparisons -- Health profession schools : 1964-1965 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Physicians, M. D. and D. O. active, non-federal : 1965 -- Dentists, active, non-federal : 1965.
title_sort death rates : 1959-1961 / compiled from information provided by u. s. public health service, 1967 -- death rates for selected causes. (with) infant-mortality international comparisons -- health profession schools : 1964-1965 / compiled from information provided by u. s. public health service, 1967 -- physicians, m. d. and d. o. active, non-federal : 1965 -- dentists, active, non-federal : 1965.
publisher United States Department of the Interior Geological Survey
publishDate 1965
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op_coverage United States
genre glaciers
Alaska
genre_facet glaciers
Alaska
op_relation 14359.000
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spelling ftdavidrumseyc:oai:N/A:RUMSEY~8~1~341435~90109583 2023-05-15T16:22:39+02:00 Death rates : 1959-1961 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Death rates for selected causes. (with) Infant-mortality international comparisons -- Health profession schools : 1964-1965 / compiled from information provided by U. S. Public Health Service, 1967 -- Physicians, M. D. and D. O. active, non-federal : 1965 -- Dentists, active, non-federal : 1965. The national atlas of the United States of America. United States Department of the Interior Geological Survey, Washington, D. C. 1970. Death rates : 1959-1961 . Infant-mortality international comparisons . Geological Survey (U.S.) United States. Public Health Service Pecora, William T. Gerlach, Arch C. Overstreet, William B. United States 1965 Full Image Download in JP2 Format 42 62 https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~341435~90109583 https://media.davidrumsey.com/rumsey/Size4/RUMSEY~8~1/199/14359190.jpg unknown United States Department of the Interior Geological Survey Washington D.C. 14359.000 https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~341435~90109583 https://media.davidrumsey.com/rumsey/Size4/RUMSEY~8~1/199/14359190.jpg 14359.190 Statistical Population Health Disease Historical National Atlas Atlas Map Chart 1965 ftdavidrumseyc 2022-03-19T23:49:03Z Chart and statistical map representing the United States, featuring the geographic density of death rates from 1959 to 1961. Map also shows political boundaries, bodies of water, coastlines and islands. Map includes legend, as well as bar scales and scale statement. Presented with Albers Equal Area Projection. With two inset maps: Principal islands of Hawaii -- Alaska. Chart death rates for selected causes, according to different races, from 1910 to 1965. Colored lithograph. Together, chart and map are 42 x 31 cm, on sheet 49 x 35 cm. Chart and map appear in Special subject maps section, subsection Socio-Cultural. (with) Chart and three statistical maps representing the United States, featuring the geographic density of health profession schools from 1964 to 1965, as well as the number of physicians and dentists, as of 1965. Maps also show political boundaries, bodies of water, coastlines and islands. Maps include legends and explanatory notes, as well as bar scales and scale statements (scales differ). Presented with Albers Equal Area Projection. With two inset maps within each map: Principal islands of Hawaii -- Alaska. Chart shows infant mortality rates across the world, from 1946 to 1964. Colored lithograph. Together, chart and maps are 42 x 31 cm, on sheet 49 x 35 cm. Chart and maps appear in Special subject maps section, subsection Socio-Cultural. The national atlas of the United States of America, by the United States Geological Survey; published in Washington D. C., 1970. Bound in navy blue board, with title printed in silver on both front cover and spine. Accompanied by envelope with six overlay sheets, tucked between final page and back cover of volume. Collation: [i-vi], vii-xiii, [1], 2-417, A1, A2, B1, B2, C, D. Atlas contains 770 maps and 18 charts. Includes a dedication, foreward, list of contributors, introduction, table of contents and index to map subjects. Topic covered: physical geography, history, economics, culture, administrative boundaries and cartography. In addition, atlas also provides maps of the world, as related to the United States. Maps show political boundaries, cities, railways, roads, topography, bodies of water, glaciers, drainage, coastlines, islands, water depths and time zones. Topical maps feature other details, such as history, geology, climate, agriculture, population, racial demographics (including indigenous peoples), religion, language and transportation. Some maps use data visualization to further illustrate geographical information, with charts overlaid upon the landscape. "Adapted from "About The National Atlas of the United States of America," by the U.S. Geological Survey: The National Atlas of the United States of America was published in 1970. It was designed to be of practical use to decision makers in government and business, and for planners and research scholars as well as others needing to visualize country-wide distributional patterns and relationships between environmental phenomena and human activities. The National Atlas represents the principal characteristics of the country in 1970, including its physical features, historical evolution, economic activities, sociocultural conditions, administrative subdivisions, and place in world affairs. Various federal agencies, professional organizations, and commercial firms had advocated producing a National Atlas of the United States of America, but the magnitude of the task and the scope of the research required deterred those who would begin it. Late in 1954, the National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council established a Committee on the National Atlas of the United States, with representatives from several federal mapmaking agencies. The committee's primary responsibilities were to coordinate all federal agencies that would be involved in producing the atlas and to ensure uniform quality in its cartography. This proved to be a nearly impossible task, and consequently in 1961 the committee terminated itself. In so doing it recommended that the atlas be completed by one federal agency, preferably the Geological Survey in the U.S. Department of the Interior. In March of 1961, the Secretary of the Interior accepted the challenge. Congress appropriated funds to begin work on the National Atlas in 1963, and on reimbursable loan the Library of Congress made available the chief of its Geography and Map Division, Dr. Arch C. Gerlach, to serve as editor. Eighty-four agencies and bureaus appointed liaison officers to the National Atlas Project, base maps were prepared at four scales, and an advisory group of eminent cartographers and geographers collaborated to formulate fundamental design principles and specifications. The first part of the National Atlas is devoted to general reference maps that contain most of the forty-one thousand place names recorded in the index. These maps were included for the convenience of readers wanting basic locational information. In the thematic section of the National Atlas, separate subdivisions deal with the country's physical, historical, economic, and socio-cultural characteristics. The maps in this portion of the atlas represent the relationships between human beings and their environment while offering scientific bases for analyzing the nation's economic development in 1970. The National Atlas proved to be the last paper atlas of this magnitude produced by the federal government." Map glaciers Alaska David Rumsey Historical Map Collection (Cartography Associates)