Come To Fairbanks - Geography, Fairbanks, Alaska Helpful information about visiting, moving to or doing business in Fairbanks, alaska! Come to Fairbanks, providing a comprehensive look at what it's really like to visit or live in Fairbanks, Main Business / geography. Click for larger Fairbanks is alaska's second largest community and are two cities, Fairbanks and North Pole as well as several unincorporated communities http://www.cometofairbanks.com/bgeography.php
Extractions: Fairbanks is Alaska's second largest community and residents commonly refer to it as the "Golden Heart of Alaska." Due to its central location Fairbanks has become the transportation, trade and service center for the vast Interior region encompassing some 200,000 square miles. The community was founded a century ago on the banks of the winding Chena River, which drains into the Tanana River immediately south of town. The Chatinika, Chena, and Salcha River drainages define the area surrounded by rolling hills to the north, east and west of the urban centers. The Fairbanks North Star Borough (FNSB), a local government unit similar to a county, covers 7,361 square miles and has 82,840 residents. Within the Borough are two cities, Fairbanks and North Pole as well as several unincorporated communities. The Tanana Valley surrounds Fairbanks at an elevation of 436 feet above sea level and rises east to about 2,000 feet at the Canadian border. Fairbanks has stunning views of the Alaska Range to the south, including
The Largest City And Cities In Area In The U.S.A. - Geography The largest city in the U.S. in area, from your About.com Guide. the United States, Juneau, alaska is the largest city of the beach communities (Atlantic Beach, Neptune Beach geography collection of articles. cities Urban geography collection of http://geography.about.com/library/misc/bllgcity.htm?terms=city area
10/12 Alaska History Geography 10/12 alaska History geography StandardKey Element glaciers, major cities and. villages of alaska.Exploration of place current roles of alaska. Native communities.( 5) understand the http://www.kodiak.k12.ak.us/curric/ss/ssakhistgeog.pdf
Geography - Lesson Plans Webquests geography Biomes - Climate - Countries - Flags - Map students about the state of alaska. Activities used in apply concepts of communities, cities, states, countries, continents http://www.edhelper.com/cat42.htm
Community Purchase Of Halibut And Sablefish Individual Fishing Gulf of alaska Coastal communities Coalition. P. O Given community caps and geography limitations as well as market class cities and others are home rule cities. Because of these http://www.goac3.org/prop1.htm
Extractions: Community IFQ Purchase Draft Elements and Options For Analysis Executive Summary National Standard 8 of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation Management Act directs that "Conservation and management measures shall, consistent with the conservation requirements of this Act (including the prevention of overfishing and rebuilding of overfished stocks ), take into account the importance of fishery resources to fishing communities in order to (A) provide for the sustained participation of such communities, and (B) to the extent practicable, minimize adverse economic impacts in such communities." The Oceans Studies Board of the National Academy of Science's National Research Council (NRC) report on Individual Fishing Quotas, Sharing the Fish: Toward a National Policy on IFQs , explicitly recommends that "For existing IFQ programs, councils should be permitted to authorize the purchase, holding, management and sale of IFQ by communities."
The Threat Of Climate Change To Arctic Human Communities communities to modern industrial cities. 2 Indigenous cultures include Aleuts, who live primarily in coastal southwest alaska Wall, ed., Department of geography Occasional Paper no http://www.greenpeace.org/~comms/97/arctic/library/region/people.html
Extractions: The Threat of Climate Change to Arctic Human Communities Introduction The Arctic is home to some of the world's most distinctive mammals, millions of migratory and resident birds, a rich ice-edge community, and some of the world's major fisheries. It a biologically and culturally unique environment and one of the last places on Earth where natural conditions still prevail over much of the region. Unlike the ice-bound Antarctic, however, the Arctic has also been home to humans for more than 10,000 years. Today the region is culturally, politically, demographically and economically diverse, with settlements ranging from small indigenous communities to modern industrial cities. Indigenous cultures include Aleuts, who live primarily in coastal southwest Alaska; Inuit, who live on the coast and inland from northwestern Alaska east to Greenland; and Athabascans, who live mainly inland in eastern Alaska, the central Yukon, and the Northwest Territories of Canada; Dene, Saami, and Native groups in northern Russia. The environment and human cultures of the Arctic are inextricably linked.
US Dept Of State - Publications Only the alaska Highway and some of its branches Nearly all of the larger cities aredominated by a Far northern communities are extremely isolated, often with http://usinfo.state.gov/products/pubs/geography/geog16.htm
Extractions: American Geography MAP T he United States is in many ways a creation of a frontier experience. The push westward remains part of recent American history, and many still live who remember the days of early settlement, of the often heroic struggle with the land. The American frontier is largely gone today. Although humans presumably have the technology to live anywhere on the earth's surface, those areas of the United States that can be occupied with moderate physical and economic effort are already staked out. Extending as far south as the northern Great Lakes states and including the interior to the Canadian border, as well as parts of Alaska, the Northlands ( Map 15 : 19K) remains sparsely settled. The inhospitable nature of the physical environment plus the consequent thinness of settlement give the Northlands its special character. A HARSH ENVIRONMENT Not only are winter temperatures low across most of the region, but winters are long. The average time between the last frost in the spring and the first in the fall is roughly 135 days at the southern margins of the area but little more than 14 days along parts of the Arctic Ocean. Because virtually all major food crops need a growing season of longer than 90 days, they can be grown in only a few small areas along the southern margins. Summers, generally short and cool, can have surprisingly warm days. Maritime moderation is significant only along the peripheries, mainly in the east and west.
Alabama Geography Course Of Study Truck farming communities. Port cities. Single industry city. 21. How people in Siberia,alaska, and other high latitude places deal with the characteristics of http://www2.una.edu/geography/statedepted/courseofstudy.html
Extractions: ALABAMA COURSE OF STUDY: GEOGRAPHY "This one-semester study of geography in the Seventh Grade emphasizes the knowledge and skills necessary to develop a geographic perspective. By the end of this course, students should understand the fundamental physical and human patterns on the Earth's surface as well as the processes that created these patterns. Representative areas of the world should be selected for detailed studies of the content standards. In this course students learn how to apply a geographic perspective to the past, present, and future. This Seventh Grade study of geography supports the study of world history in the Eighth and Ninth Grades as well as the study of U.S. history in the Tenth and Eleventh Grades. The six essential elements of geography are used to organize the content standards. Geographic skills and perspectives ( Geography for Life , 1994) are interwoven throughout the content standards." ( Alabama Course of Study Social Studies , Bulletin 1998, No 18, p. 72.) Geographic Elements The World in Spatial Terms The structuring of geographic information, the ordering of knowledge into real and mental maps, and the spatial analysis of that information.
CENSUS GEOGRAPHY Incorporated places, eg, cities, villages, and so forth; alaska Native Regional Corporations(ANRCs). a large population nucleus and nearby communities that have http://www.uic.edu/sph/dataskills/skillbytes/census/census9.htm
Extractions: CENSUS GEOGRAPHY Understanding the geographic components of the census is crucial when we are using census data. Since many of our planning and programming decisions are based on political or legal definitions of a region or area, we need to be aware of the geography by which census data is reported. For example one can estimate population denominators for city-based data (a political area) using the census but in order to examine the city by smaller geographic areas statistical area data must be examined (e.g., block, census tracts, etc.). Political and statistical areas are not subsets of each other. Although a large city may be composed of multiple census tracts, tracts near the city borders would overlap those borders. Special algorithms must be developed when attempting to combine data from political and statistical areas. One area of geography not considered census geography are postal codes or zip codes. The Census Bureau does report data in STF3 by zip code but does not collect data by this geographic level. In addition zip code level data is reported at least a couple of years post release of other censes data. Following is a description of the political and the statistical areas as defined by the Census Bureau.
US Cities Access some of the best educational information on specific US cities. from Money.com. cities Unlimited click on state for 25 000 communities profiled. LookSmart - information on 71 US cities Huntsville. Mobile. Montgomery. alaska. Anchorage. Juneau. Arizona http://members.aol.com/bowermanb/cities.html
Alaskan Cities, Alaska Cities, Cities In Alaska alaska cities covered in detail including shopping, accommodations and what to alaskais large, and extremely diverse and its communities reflect this http://www.bellsalaska.com/alaska.htm
Extractions: Alaska cities covered in detail including shopping, accommodations and what to see and do. Hotels Car Rentals Air Tickets Hot Deals ... Click here for help in planning your trip to Alaska "Alayeska" The Great Land the natives called it - with good reason. Alaska is the last state where a man can travel 600 miles in a straight line and never cross a barbwire fence.
Lane Community College Library - Geography And Map Links cities, Towns and Villages Alaskan Center AlaWeb Galapagos Edinburgh Scotland sCapital City Egypt Egypt Canada Atlas of Canadian communities GeoNet World http://www.lanecc.edu/library/don/geog.htm
City Information Directory Of Alaska Come join us and explore our seaside community. to be the most beautiful of southeastAlaska cities. access to facts about people, business, and geography. http://alaska.uscity.net/City_Information/
Extractions: HOME FEATURED LINKS CITY GUIDES SITE MAP ... NEWS Select a Web Site Link Directory . . . Virtual Directory Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Alaska City Information Directory Home City Information ADD YOUR SITE Select A City or County ALL CITIES Akiachak Alakanuk Anchor Point Anchorage Anderson Angoon Aniak Barrow Bethel Chevak College Cooper Landing Cordova Craig Delta Junction Dillingham Eagle River Emmonak Fairbanks Ft. Yukon Galena Gambell Glennallen Haines Homer Hoonah Hooper Bay Juneau Kake Kenai Ketchikan Kiana King Cove King Salmon Kipruk Kodiak Kotzebue Kwethluk McGrath Metlakatla Mountian Vil Naknek Nenana Nikishka Ninilchik Nome Noorvik North Pole Nulato Old Harbor Palmer Petersburg Pilot Sta.
Travel Alaska - Explore Southcentral Alaska Cities And Towns Talkeetna alaska cities and Towns Talkeetna, Click on a community from the map above to learnmore. Talkeetna Few other places are blessed with such incredible geography http://www.travelalaska.com/Regions/CommunityDetail.aspx?LocationID=71&RegionID=
Extractions: Click the link for more information. Territory, Canada Canada , the northernmost country on the North American continent, is a federation governed as a constitutional monarchy. It is bordered by the United States to the south as well as in the northwest. The Canada-U.S. border is the world's longest undefended border. The country stretches from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west. Canada also reaches the Arctic Ocean in the north where Canada's territorial claim extends to the North Pole. Click the link for more information. Beaver Creek, Yukon Beaver Creek is a community in Yukon, Canada. Located at Kilometre 1,934 of the Alaska Highway, on the Alaska-Yukon border, it is Canada's westernmost community. The community's main employers are a Canada Customs post and some tourist lodges.
MSN Encarta - United States (Geography) population and economic center in alaska, contains approximately of land, displacedentire communities, and disrupted growth occurring in the city of Honolulu http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_1741500822_7/United_States_(Geography).html
Extractions: MSN Home My MSN Hotmail Shopping ... Money Web Search: logoImg('http://sc.msn.com'); Encarta Subscriber Sign In Help Home ... Upgrade to Encarta Premium Search Encarta Tasks Find in this article Print Preview Send us feedback Related Items Continent of North America Great Lakes, largest bodies of freshwater in North America more... Magazines Search the Encarta Magazine Center for magazine and news articles about this topic Further Reading Editors' Picks United States (Geography) News Search MSNBC for news about United States (Geography) Internet Search Search Encarta about United States (Geography) Search MSN for Web sites about United States (Geography) Also on Encarta Editor's picks: Good books about Iraq Compare top online degrees What's so funny? The history of humor Also on MSN Summer shopping: From grills to home decor D-Day remembered on Discovery Switch to MSN in 3 easy steps Our Partners Capella University: Online degrees LearnitToday: Computer courses CollegeBound Network: ReadySetGo Kaplan Test Prep and Admissions Encyclopedia Article from Encarta Advertisement document.write('');
Alaska History Toolbox links to historical sites, science, geography, and other alaska Community InformationSummaries EXCELLENT source of information about alaska cities and towns http://www.kpbsd.k12.ak.us/akhistory/aktools.htm
Extractions: Welcome to the Alaska Studies Teacher's Toolbox; a place to start your internet search for resources to help teach Alaska related subjects to your students. You'll find links to historical sites, science, geography, and other subject areas as well as museums and government agencies with valuable information. Don't miss the lesson plans written by teachers, and watch for this area to grow steadily. A growing number of Alaska related sites are becoming more and more interactive and change on a regular basis. You'll want to have a computer in the classroom when you use these, and be sure to check back often! Alaska: The Greatland from National Geographic Alaska Weather Information and Forecasts for Nearly Everywhere! Current Alaska Weather (interactive map from UAF) Ask a Historian Do you have a question about then national parks, the National Park Service or American history? Ask one of our historians listed below. Just click on the name of the person you want to contact and send your question by e. mail. Filson's "Pan for Gold" Database Our Pan for Gold databases contain information on individuals who were in the Yukon during the Gold Rush years.