Alaskan Maps: A Cartobibliography of Alaska to 1900

Published maps of Alaska provide a rich but underutilized historical resource. There have been several major bibliographies done in the past. Two of these are still in use today: Wagner's Cartography o f the Northwest Coast of America published in 1937 and Phillips' Alaska and the Northwes...

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Main Author: Falk, Marvin W.
Format: Book
Language:unknown
Published: Garland Publishing, Inc. 1983
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/5433
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spelling ftunivalaska:oai:scholarworks.alaska.edu:11122/5433 2023-05-15T18:48:37+02:00 Alaskan Maps: A Cartobibliography of Alaska to 1900 Garland reference library of the humanities: v. 409 Falk, Marvin W. 1983 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/5433 unknown Garland Publishing, Inc. http://hdl.handle.net/11122/5433 Book 1983 ftunivalaska 2023-02-23T21:36:26Z Published maps of Alaska provide a rich but underutilized historical resource. There have been several major bibliographies done in the past. Two of these are still in use today: Wagner's Cartography o f the Northwest Coast of America published in 1937 and Phillips' Alaska and the Northwest Part of North America, 1588-1898, published in 1898. A third major resource is A.V. Efimov's Atlas o f Geographical Discoveries in Siberia and North-western America, XVII-XV111 Centuries, published in 1964. The Efimov Atlas is a masterfully annotated compilation of early maps, primarily from Soviet archives. It covers 194 key maps. The Wagner cartobibliography is concerned more with California and the Pacific Northwest than it is with Alaska. His coverage ends in 1800, well before the full development of official Russian cartography of Alaska. The oldest of the bibliographies still in use is that of Phillip Lee Phillips. It is essentially a list of materials available in the Library of Congress and does not take account of other repositories. It also does not reflect the m any additions of early maps made to the Library of Congress in more recent years. A number of perimeters were adopted in deciding on how to handle this mass of information. The cartobibliography only lists published maps. This includes manuscript maps that were subsequently published in facsimile. Unpublished maps require an entirely different research strategy and a separate system of annotations. In addition, a work that included unpublished maps would be a very large undertaking, requiring a number of years of additional work to bring to fruition. Another major decision was to provide a guide to the location of map images, not an exhaustive bibliographic description of each map. I believe that the rigorous examination of states of a copper engraving plate, say, would prove of great value for some sub-sets in this bibliography, but it would not be feasible for the entire work. In addition, some of this work has already been done for some of the older ... Book Alaska Siberia University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA
op_collection_id ftunivalaska
language unknown
description Published maps of Alaska provide a rich but underutilized historical resource. There have been several major bibliographies done in the past. Two of these are still in use today: Wagner's Cartography o f the Northwest Coast of America published in 1937 and Phillips' Alaska and the Northwest Part of North America, 1588-1898, published in 1898. A third major resource is A.V. Efimov's Atlas o f Geographical Discoveries in Siberia and North-western America, XVII-XV111 Centuries, published in 1964. The Efimov Atlas is a masterfully annotated compilation of early maps, primarily from Soviet archives. It covers 194 key maps. The Wagner cartobibliography is concerned more with California and the Pacific Northwest than it is with Alaska. His coverage ends in 1800, well before the full development of official Russian cartography of Alaska. The oldest of the bibliographies still in use is that of Phillip Lee Phillips. It is essentially a list of materials available in the Library of Congress and does not take account of other repositories. It also does not reflect the m any additions of early maps made to the Library of Congress in more recent years. A number of perimeters were adopted in deciding on how to handle this mass of information. The cartobibliography only lists published maps. This includes manuscript maps that were subsequently published in facsimile. Unpublished maps require an entirely different research strategy and a separate system of annotations. In addition, a work that included unpublished maps would be a very large undertaking, requiring a number of years of additional work to bring to fruition. Another major decision was to provide a guide to the location of map images, not an exhaustive bibliographic description of each map. I believe that the rigorous examination of states of a copper engraving plate, say, would prove of great value for some sub-sets in this bibliography, but it would not be feasible for the entire work. In addition, some of this work has already been done for some of the older ...
format Book
author Falk, Marvin W.
spellingShingle Falk, Marvin W.
Alaskan Maps: A Cartobibliography of Alaska to 1900
author_facet Falk, Marvin W.
author_sort Falk, Marvin W.
title Alaskan Maps: A Cartobibliography of Alaska to 1900
title_short Alaskan Maps: A Cartobibliography of Alaska to 1900
title_full Alaskan Maps: A Cartobibliography of Alaska to 1900
title_fullStr Alaskan Maps: A Cartobibliography of Alaska to 1900
title_full_unstemmed Alaskan Maps: A Cartobibliography of Alaska to 1900
title_sort alaskan maps: a cartobibliography of alaska to 1900
publisher Garland Publishing, Inc.
publishDate 1983
url http://hdl.handle.net/11122/5433
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Alaska
Siberia
genre_facet Alaska
Siberia
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11122/5433
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