This is a remarkable volume. The ninety-first of 107 figures is a good example of what makes this book so remarkable. Figure 91 has a baker\u27s dozen (13) small hand-drawn sketches that show how different landowners went back to the land office and claimed an additional 480 acres (Kincaid additions) to expand their 160-acre homesteads into units that might be more viable in the semi-arid climate of central Nebraska. These 13 examples come from ten different counties, which sprawl over an area larger than three of the original 13 colonies (as illustrated in Figure 1, which goes the extra step of superimposing New England state borders on a standard Nebraska location map to give a subtle but welcomed increase in perspective). The other 105 m...
Groundwater Levels in Nebraska, 1989, continues the excellent record of Nebraska Water Survey Papers...
Co-authors O.J. Reichman (text) and Steve Mulligan (photography) have produced a book illustrating t...
When one first opens a book one never quite knows what to expect (one of the joys of reading!). That...
This is a remarkable volume. The ninety-first of 107 figures is a good example of what makes this bo...
The Sand Hills region, the largest stabilized sand dune formation in the western hemisphere, present...
Books like this are rarely written. Today, most writings about natural features and charismatic land...
Although the goal of this Resource Atlas is to describe the largest region of sand dunes in the we...
Like many of the fly-over states, Nebraska suffers from a bad reputation when it comes to scenery. B...
Many of us are interested in the landscape around us. We ask: Why is this hill so steep or why is th...
Review of: "Atlas of the Great Plains," by Stephen J. Lavin, Fred M. Shelley, and J. Clark Archer
Douglas Bamforth and his colleagues demonstrate in this edited volume the valuable role in modern ar...
Michael Forsberg’s magnificent photos of land, animals, and people compelled me initially to turn pa...
This Fragile Land, though written for a popular audience, is not intended for children or for light ...
In this delightful book, historian Craig Miner of Wichita State University narrates the history of w...
In his introduction, Peter Miller declares of the Great Plains: This is a metaphysical land. By th...
Groundwater Levels in Nebraska, 1989, continues the excellent record of Nebraska Water Survey Papers...
Co-authors O.J. Reichman (text) and Steve Mulligan (photography) have produced a book illustrating t...
When one first opens a book one never quite knows what to expect (one of the joys of reading!). That...
This is a remarkable volume. The ninety-first of 107 figures is a good example of what makes this bo...
The Sand Hills region, the largest stabilized sand dune formation in the western hemisphere, present...
Books like this are rarely written. Today, most writings about natural features and charismatic land...
Although the goal of this Resource Atlas is to describe the largest region of sand dunes in the we...
Like many of the fly-over states, Nebraska suffers from a bad reputation when it comes to scenery. B...
Many of us are interested in the landscape around us. We ask: Why is this hill so steep or why is th...
Review of: "Atlas of the Great Plains," by Stephen J. Lavin, Fred M. Shelley, and J. Clark Archer
Douglas Bamforth and his colleagues demonstrate in this edited volume the valuable role in modern ar...
Michael Forsberg’s magnificent photos of land, animals, and people compelled me initially to turn pa...
This Fragile Land, though written for a popular audience, is not intended for children or for light ...
In this delightful book, historian Craig Miner of Wichita State University narrates the history of w...
In his introduction, Peter Miller declares of the Great Plains: This is a metaphysical land. By th...
Groundwater Levels in Nebraska, 1989, continues the excellent record of Nebraska Water Survey Papers...
Co-authors O.J. Reichman (text) and Steve Mulligan (photography) have produced a book illustrating t...
When one first opens a book one never quite knows what to expect (one of the joys of reading!). That...