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         Missouri Geography Maps:     more detail
  1. The National Map : Missouri pilot project (SuDoc I 19.127:115-01) by U.S. Geological Survey, 2001
  2. Settlement Patterns in Missouri: A Study of Population Origins With a Wall Map by Russel L. Gerlach, 1986-06
  3. An intermediate geography with lessons in map drawing (Eclectic series of geographies) by A. von Steinwehr, 1898
  4. A user's guide to Missouri maps by Terry W Barney, 1978
  5. Flora of Missouri by Julian A. Steyermark, 1963-11-30
  6. Historical Atlas of Missouri by Milton D. Rafferty, 1982-03
  7. Atlas of Lewis & Clark in Missouri by James D. Harlan, James M. Denny, 2003-11
  8. Natural advanced geography (Natural geographies) by Jacques W Redway, 1901
  9. Missouri & Iowa Maury's New Complete Geography, Revised (1903) (The Maury Geographical Series) by M.F. Maury, 1903
  10. Missouri county coordinates (Open file report) by Allen P Wilson, 1988

81. Lewis And Clark 200
maps Lewis and Clark used to prepare for the journey, maps they made along the way,and other historical maps and information about the geography of the Lewis
http://www.esri.com/lewisandclark/historicalmaps.html
@import url(/styles/standards_menu.css); Store Contact Us Careers Mapping Through Time

82. Ballwin City Maps
the integration of a database with geographic information, essentially Other mapswill be added as they are 14811 Manchester Road, Ballwin, missouri 63011 (636
http://www.ballwin.mo.us/city_maps.html
Interactive Map Service (IMS) page Printable Maps Links Overview of GIS Mapping How are maps created? Ballwin city maps are created using technology called GIS. Geographic information system (GIS) is a computer-based tool for mapping and analyzing things that exist and happen on the surface of the Earth. GIS technology integrates common database operations such as query and statistical analysis with the unique visualization offered by maps. These abilities distinguish GIS from other information systems and make it valuable for explaining events, predicting outcomes, and planning strategies. Mapmaking and geographic analysis are not new, rather a GIS performs these tasks better and faster than conventional manual methods. Before GIS technology, few people had the skills necessary to use geographic information to help with decision-making and problem solving. What makes up a GIS? A GIS stores information about the world as a collection of layers that can be linked together by geography. This simple but extremely powerful and versatile concept has proven invaluable for solving many real-world problems such as the tracking of delivery vehicles, recording details of planning applications, as well as modeling global atmospheric circulation. A working GIS also integrates five key components: hardware, software, data, people, and methods. Hardware is the computer on which a GIS operates. GIS software, ESRI ArcGIS, provides the functions and tools needed to store, analyze, and display geographic information. Geographic data (layers) and related tabular data are necessary in order to perform work in GIS software. This technology is of limited value without the people who manage the system and develop plans for applying it to real-world problems. Lastly, a successful GIS operates according to well-designed plans and business methods, which are the models and operating practices unique to each organization, such as local government.

83. VIRTUAL REALITY: A New World For Geographic Exploration
3CENTRAL missouriUSGS Topographic how textures can be any image - even a simplemap. educational potential VR can have for geography instructors teaching
http://www.utexas.edu/depts/grg/eworks/wie/ludwig/earthwor.html
VIRTUAL REALITY: A New World for Geographic Exploration
Gail S. Ludwig University of Missouri-Columbia New worlds, or new areas in cyberspace, are being discovered and being applied to education at breakneck speed. The Internet, 3D graphics, QuickTime Movies, Quicktime VR and a multitude of new concepts and ideas are now being promoted on the internet and in leading educational journals throughout the world. It is a major undertaking just to keep abreast of this technological revolution, but the ideas and methods evolving are impacting education in ways no one could foresee just a year or two ago. As a geographer, I have struggled for years trying to teach students to visualize what an environment is like using only flat maps and photographs. A flat map is a wonderful tool for looking at spatial patterns, distributions and relationships, but it does little to convey how the physical landscape and the mapped phenomena relate to each other. Two dimensional images such as maps and photographs can convey what an area looks like, but nothing is as good as actually being there. Not being there is the problem. How can an entire class be transported to remote locations throughout the world without sending an entire school district or university department into bankruptcy? How can the relationship between topographic relief, land use and people be visualized and studied in a manner that is understandable? The answer, potentially, is Virtual Reality (VR), a low cost, second-best way to experience an environment without actually traveling to the site.

84. National Geographic: Lewis & Clark—Riding The Missouri
1, 1806 Journal excerpts and maps from Original a more eliagiable Spot on the Missouribelow at
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/lewisandclark/journals_maps_20.html

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SHOWING RECORDS: 1 - 5 of 5
Journal excerpts and maps from Original Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, edited by Reuben Gold Thwaites
WILLIAM CLARK Wednesday, August 4, 1806
WILLIAM CLARK Sunday, August 8, 1806
"Shields and Gibson returned at 10 A.M. with the Skins and part of the flesh of three deer which they had killed in this bottom. I derected them to take one of the Skin Canoes and proceed down to the next bottom and [hunt] untill my arrival.... My object is to precure as many skins as possible for the purpose of purchaseing Corn and Beans of the Mandans. as we have now no article of Merchandize nor horses to purchase with, our only resort is Skins which those people were very fond [of] the winter we were Stationed near them."
WILLIAM CLARK Thursday, August 12, 1806

85. National Geographic: Lewis & Clark—Parting Ways, Skirmishing With Blackfeet
27, 1806 Journal excerpts and maps from Original and the falls of the missouri wherewe
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/lewisandclark/journals_maps_19.html

Home
Site Index Customer Service Shop MAGAZINES: National Traveler Adventure NG Kids NG Explorer TV AND FILM: Channel (U.S.) Channel (Intl) Explorer GUIDES: Adventure and Animals and History and Maps and News Photography Travel For Kids For Students For Teachers Complete Site Complete Site Index Subscribe Shop
SHOWING RECORDS: 1 - 11 of 24
Journal excerpts and maps from Original Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, edited by Reuben Gold Thwaites
MERIWETHER LEWIS Thursday, July 3, 1806
"All arrangements being now compleated for carrying into effect the several scheemes we had planed for execution on our return, we saddled our horses and set out. I took leave of my worthy friend and companion Capt. Clark and the party that accompanyed him. I could not avoid feeling much concern on this occasion although I hoped this seperation was only momentary. I proceeded down Clark’s river seven miles [11 kilometers] with my party of nine men and five Indians.... These people now informed me that the road which they shewed me at no great distance from our Camp would lead us up the East branch of Clark’s river and [to] a river they called Cokahlarishkit or the river of the road to buffaloe and thence to medicine river and the falls of the Missouri where we wished to go.... I directed the hunters to turn out early in the morning and indeavour to kill some more meat for these people whom I was unwilling to leave without giving them a good supply of provision after their having been so obliging as to conduct us through those tremendious mountains."

86. Lewis And Clark: Maps Of Exploration 1507 -1814
as superintendent of Indian Affairs and then governor of the missouri Territory thewinter of 18031804 he studied the maps and geographic information that
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/speccol/exhibits/lewis_clark/planning4.html
To the Western Ocean: Planning the Lewis and Clark Expedition
part 4
Courtesy of the Geography and Map Division, Library of Congress
Click here to go to a Library of Congress

English-born Nicholas King came to the United States in 1794 and worked as a surveyor in Philadelphia. In 1796 and 1797 he served as the first surveyor of Washington, D.C. Over the course of his career, King prepared maps related to the expeditions of Lewis and Clark, William Dunbar, Zebulon Pike, and others.
Portrait of William Clark by Charles Willson Peale, ca. 1810. Courtesy of Independence National Historical Park, National Park Service
In preparation for the expedition, Clark trained himself to be an able cartographer. During the winter of 1803-1804 he studied the maps and geographic information that Lewis brought to Camp Dubois near St. Louis and practiced using the sextant and the octant. Before the Corps of Discovery left the St. Louis area, Clark produced a map of part of upper Louisiana and a table of distances to the Pacific coast. By the spring of 1805, when the expedition team had advanced as far as Fort Mandan, Clark had produced the route maps of the Missouri River from St. Louis and a general map of the Missouri River system and the Northwest.

87. Exploring The West From Monticello: Chapter 4
new geographic information on the missouri and Columbia river theories such as symmetricalgeography, pyramidal heightof many of the new publications and maps.
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/speccol/exhibits/lewis_clark/exploring/ch4.html
IV.
T O THE W ESTERN O CEAN:
P LANNING THE
L EWIS AND C LARK E XPEDITION
During the latter half of the eighteenth century, English, Spanish, and American explorers replaced their French counterparts as the leaders of exploration in the Mississippi and Missouri river valleys. As before, sensational accounts of western voyages continued to generate interest in the region. Widely read works by Le Page du Pratz, Robert Rogers, and Jonathan Carver enriched the tradition of popular reporting about the region. Increasingly, however, improved scientific methods of surveying, cartography, and natural description allowed for a more accurate picture of the West. By the end of the century the exact latitudes and longitudes of several important points in the West had been determined. The latest maps and journals of the explorers and cartographers influenced significantly the planning of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. In the lore of American exploration, the idea of finding a great river leading from the Pacific coast into the interior of the continent never lost currency. Mapmakers had long postulated a great “River of the West”—or “Oregan River” as it was also called. Martin d’Aguilar of Spain was probably the first European to see the Columbia River in 1603, but his claims remained unsubstantiated for nearly 175 years. Another Spaniard, Bruno de Hezeta, upon reaching turbulent waters along the Northwest coast in 1775 said: “These currents and eddies of water cause me to believe that the place is the mouth of some great river, or of some passage to another sea.” And yet the river still proved elusive. The greatest English explorer of all, Captain James Cook, missed the Columbia River entirely during his voyages along the West coast in 1778.

88. Missouri Census 2000 Map Viewer
The ftp site link directs you to the MSDIS ftp (ftp//msdis.missouri.edu/pub/)site where you can download the maps as pdf files.
http://msdisweb.missouri.edu/census2000indexmaps/
Site Map Site Keyword Search
Search for GIS Data
Theme List MSDIS Dataset List ICREST Dataset List Data Resources DRG Data DOQQ Data NAIP Data Census Geography Data ... Dataset List Go To 2001 Redistricting Info GZip Help Page Dataset List Join MSDIS News Group ... Useful Links
county/county_name/utm/censusmaps/ subdirectory. The .pdf files prefixed 'PB' are block outline maps, those prefixed 'CT' are tract outline maps and those prefixed 'PV' are voting precinct outline maps. These maps are now available to view and navigate as clickable image maps for drill down navigation. You must have Adobe Acrobat Reader software to view the .pdf files. This software is available free from Adobe Systems.

89. Missouri USGS 1:100 000 Topo! Maps
made possible through a special license agreement with National Geographic maps andWildflower GRC in cooperation with the Office of the missouri Secretary of
http://msdisweb.missouri.edu/data/topo/
Site Map Site Keyword Search
Search for GIS Data
Theme List MSDIS Dataset List ICREST Dataset List Data Resources DRG Data DOQQ Data NAIP Data Census Geography Data ... Dataset List Go To 2001 Redistricting Info GZip Help Page Dataset List Join MSDIS News Group ... Useful Links USGS 1:100 000 Topo! Maps This page provides links to the FTP directory containing county-wide, seamless, and hill-shaded mosaics of USGS 1:100,000 topographic maps. These have been created using and TOPO! GIS extension along with the compression software at the Geographic Resources Center (GRC). This production has been made possible through a special license agreement with National Geographic Maps and Wildflower Productions as part of an augmentation to the Lewis and Clark Historic Landscape Project conducted at the GRC in cooperation with the Office of the Missouri Secretary of State and the Missouri State Archives Click HERE to view a sample clipped from the Boone County mosaic

90. Missouri State Unit Study - Geography, State Symbols & Facts
State Unit Study missouri. unit studies are designed to help children learn thegeography of the Print the United States map and color each state as you study
http://homeschooling.about.com/library/weekly/aa030700a.htm
zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Education Homeschooling Home ... Product Reviews zau(256,152,180,'gob','http://z.about.com/5/ad/go.htm?gs='+gs,''); Getting Started Finding Support Staying Legal Homeschool Methods ... Help zau(256,138,125,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/0.htm','');w(xb+xb);
Stay Current
Subscribe to the About Homeschooling newsletter. Search Homeschooling Graphic Maps Graphic Maps Email to a friend Print this page Stay Current Subscribe to the About Homeschooling newsletter. More About Missouri Missouri History Books Missouri Homeschool Info More About Unit Studies More State Studies Province Unit Studies Online Unit Study Directory Elsewhere on the Web State of Missouri Jefferson City Most Popular 6th Annual Summer Reading Club for Homeschoolers - Summer 20... Steps to Getting Started in Homeschooling Homeschooling Information 101 - Homeschool Resources for Get... Homeschooling Fun - Flag Day Quiz ... Homeschooling Fun - Father's Day Quiz What's Hot 6th Annual Summer Reading Club for Homeschoolers - Summer 20... Recommended Reading List Back to School - Starting the Year off Right - Setting up a ... Homeschoolers Trading Zone - A forum for buying and selling ... ... Summer Outdoor Learning Ideas
State Unit Study - Missouri
From Beverly Hernandez
Your Guide to Homeschooling
FREE Newsletter.

91. MABLE/Geocorr 2K Vers. 1.1
as a long list of geographic codes (and of interest try the Reference maps featureof
http://mcdc2.missouri.edu/websas/geocorr2k.html
MABLE/Geocorr : Geographic Correspondence Engine with Census 2000 Geography
Version 1.1 (Aug, 2003)
Accesses the MABLE2k data base with 2000 (and later) geographic codes. Generates "correlation list" reports / files. Links: What's new Previous Version Direct access mable2k
Note: Help and Examples pages have not been updated for the new 2k version but you can still access the original 1990 versions. Most of what was true then is still true now. This form has 5 main sections. Only the first 2 are required.
Input
Output Geographic Filter Bounding Box
Input Options
Select state(s) to process.
Missouri 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 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 For background information and help with any of the geographic codes
used in the MABLE database (source/target geocodes) consult the file:
MAGGOT

(Master Area Geographic Glossary Of Terms) Select 1 or more "SOURCE" Geocode(s) Select 1 or more "TARGET" Geocode(s)
Entire Universe [no code] State (2000) County (2000) County Subdivision: MCD (2000) Place: City, Town, Village, etc. (2000)

92. MBGnet
MBGnet This missouri Botanical Garden site for kids offers colorful, focused information based on themes of Biomes of the World, Marine Ecosystems and Freshwater Ecosystems.
http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://mbgnet.mobot.org/&y=02D4EF4542D1FE4E

93. Osage
2). You could use the previous issues of GeoTeacher to develop a unit on Missourigeography, using the maps to have students first outline the regions of the
http://www.umsl.edu/~mga/osage.htm

94. Missouri Energy: Oil, Petroleum Products, Natural Gas, Coal, Electricity, Nuclea
Energy Information Administration, US Department of Energy,missouri Energy Page missouri Energy Data production, consumption, prices, oil, petroleum,
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/states/main_mo.html
Home Geography States Missouri Renewable Potential Map Residential Energy Map Renewable Energy Issues Missouri Energy Resources Authority ... Missouri Energy assistance Center DOE's Renewable Energy: Projects National Priorities Alternatives PNLs Wind Power Maps: Wind Energy Map South Central Region (Geographical Map) Overview MTBE Ban Prices * Sales Transportation Fuels (Monthly) Other Fuels (Monthly) Consumption Stocks ... Electric Utilities Consumption Total Residential Commercial Industrial ... Appliance Report GO TO ANOTHER STATE:
Select a State Alabama Alaska Arkansas Arizona 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 North Carolina North Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming United States Additional information on this state may be found under the MULTI-STATE tab above.
For questions about content, please contact the National Energy Information Center:

95. Yale Peabody Museum: GNIS Database
on the 124,000 scale topographic maps of the The Geographic Names Information
http://george.peabody.yale.edu/gnis/
Geographic Names Information System (GNIS)
Enter some place term(s) of interest to you in the field above CONNECTICUT 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 ANY FEATURE POPULATED PLACE airport arch area arroyo bar basin bay beach bench bend bridge building canal cape cemetery channel church civil cliff crater crossing dam falls flat forest gap geyser glacier gut harbor hospital island isthmus lake lava levee locale mine oilfield other park pillar plain ppl range rapids reserve reservoir ridge school sea slope spring stream summit swamp tower trail tunnel valley well woods Limit searches to county GNIS database via USGS Canadian Geographic Names database
GNIS Search Forms for Individual States Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas ... Wyoming Available from this portion of the Peabody Museum web are 1,233,933 records corresponding to the labeled features that can be found on the 1:24,000 scale topographic maps of the US Geological Survey. A synopsis of the GNIS is as follows (excerpted from the USGS/GNIS FactSheet, June 1991):

96. Lewis & Clark Resources | Projects | Internet2 | Programs | MOREnet
images of important river landmarks, animated virtual missouri River travel andan interactive map server offering various layers of geographical data on the
http://www.more.net/programs/internet2/projects/
About Conferences Online Resources Programs ... Programs Lewis and Clark Resources Partnerships Maps eThemes WebQuests ... Remote Videoconferencing To view Adobe PDF files, you need Adobe Acrobat Reader, which can be downloaded from the Adobe website.
Projects In the spring of 2002, MOREnet was asked to take a leadership role in the development of the Internet2 K20 Initiative . The mission of the I2 K20 Initiative is to enable the development and use of Internet applications, tools, and content to enhance teaching and learning and in other ways further the mission of elementary, secondary and postsecondary education in the United States.
While many states are gearing up for events from 2003 through 2006, celebrating the Corps of Discovery holds special meaning for Missouri as the state from whence Lewis and Clark departed in 1804 and returned in 1806. MOREnet's goal is to facilitate the creation of high-quality digital resources for Lewis and Clark materials for classroom use. MOREnet is working together with the eMINTS program, Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education Missouri State Archives University of Missouri-Columbia's College of Education University of Missouri-Columbia Department of Geography ... Missouri Historical Society and others to make Lewis and Clark resources unique to Missouri digitally available through the MOREnet network.

97. Lewis And Clark Expedition 200 Year Anniversary - Maps, Links, And Resources
available showing specific campsite maps, photorealistic of Dr. Bob Coulter at MissouriBotanical Garden. National Geographic Society s Primary Lewis Clark
http://spatialnews.geocomm.com/features/lewisandclark/

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98. An Outline Of American Geography - Map Of The United States: States

http://www.usembassy.de/usa/etexts/outgeogr/usmap.htm
STATE MAP OF THE UNITED STATES
AL - Alabama
AK - Alaska
AZ - Arizona
AR - Arkansas
CA - California
CO - Colorado
CT - Connecticut
DE - Delaware
FL - Florida
GA - Georgia
HI - Hawaii ID - Idaho IL - Illinois IN - Indiana IA - Iowa KS - Kansas KY - Kentucky LA - Louisiana ME - Maine MD - Maryland MA - Massachusetts MI - Michigan MN - Minnesota MS - Mississippi MO - Missouri MT - Montana NE - Nebraska NV - Nevada NH - New Hampshire NJ - New Jersey NM - New Mexico NY - New York NC - North Carolina ND - North Dakota OH - Ohio OK - Oklahoma OR - Oregon PA - Pennsylvania RI - Rhode Island SC - South Carolina SD - South Dakota TN - Tennessee TX - Texas UT - Utah VT - Vermont VA - Virginia WA - Washington WV - West Virginia WI - Wisconsin WY - Wyoming DC - District of Columbia
U.S. map courtesy Government Information Exchange
Back to Contents To Index of Maps

99. USIA - An Outline Of American Geography - Map Of The United States: States

http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/GEO/usmap.htm
STATE MAP OF THE UNITED STATES
AL - Alabama
AK - Alaska
AZ - Arizona
AR - Arkansas
CA - California
CO - Colorado
CT - Connecticut
DE - Delaware
FL - Florida
GA - Georgia
HI - Hawaii ID - Idaho IL - Illinois IN - Indiana IA - Iowa KS - Kansas KY - Kentucky LA - Louisiana ME - Maine MD - Maryland MA - Massachusetts MI - Michigan MN - Minnesota MS - Mississippi MO - Missouri MT - Montana NE - Nebraska NV - Nevada NH - New Hampshire NJ - New Jersey NM - New Mexico NY - New York NC - North Carolina ND - North Dakota OH - Ohio OK - Oklahoma OR - Oregon PA - Pennsylvania RI - Rhode Island SC - South Carolina SD - South Dakota TN - Tennessee TX - Texas UT - Utah VT - Vermont VA - Virginia WA - Washington WV - West Virginia WI - Wisconsin WY - Wyoming DC - District of Columbia
U.S. map courtesy Government Information Exchange
Back to Contents To Index of Maps Maps curtesy of Quick Maps

100. Mable/Geocorr 3.0 Home Page
as well as a long list of geographic codes (and will also draw you a map of the
http://www.oseda.missouri.edu/plue/geocorr/
WELCOME!
MABLE/Geocorr Geographic Correspondence Engine
Version 3.01
[OSEDA Mirror] [SEDAC Mirror] [CENSUS Mirror]
New "2K" Version With Access to 2000 Geography!
This application allows you to access the MABLE geographic data base and to generate custom "correlation lists" as reports and/or files.
Help Examples Usage Notes
Output Samples
... Future
This form has 5 main sections. Only the first 2 are required.
Input
Output Bounding Box Geographic Filter Note: In most of the select-list boxes below you can make multiple selections. Some browsers require that you hold down the ctrl key while clicking before it will recognize multiple selections.
Input Options
Select state(s) to process. (Limit of 5 states on weekdays, 7 AM - 6 PM)
(Required Option)

Random Pick ALABAMA ALASKA ARIZONA ARKANSAS CALIFORNIA COLORADO CONNECTICUT DELAWARE DISTRICT OF COL 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 For background information and help with any of the geographic codes
used in the MABLE database (source/target geocodes) consult the file:
MAGGOT

(Master Area Geographic Glossary Of Terms) Select "SOURCE" Geocode(s) Select "TARGET" Geocode(s)
Entire Universe [no code] State (1990) County (1990) County Subdivision: MCD (1990)

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