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Mapping New Jersey
Bookstore | Mapping New Jersey

Mapping New Jersey
Mapping New Jersey

Price: $39.95 

Subtitle: An Evolving Landscape
Edited and with an introduction by: Maxine N. Lurie and Peter O. Wacker
Cartographer:
Michael Siegel
Subject: Regional/Geography
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8135-4585-1
Pages: 256 pp., 225 color maps, graphs, and diagrams
Rivergate Books


Watch Cartographer Michael Siegel talk about Mapping New Jersey



Read sample pages from Mapping New Jersey


Praise:

"Mapping New Jersey is wonderful, exquisite, spectacular . . . far beyond my high expectations!"David A. Robinson, Chairman, department of geography, Rutgers University  andNew Jersey State Climatologist

"Editors Mazine Lurie and Peter Wacker have put together a beautiful book of historic and current maps that cover every aspect of our state and its people. Their colorful maps with clear descriptions depict everything from the soils that make up the land to the location of Utopian communities."Hunterdon County Democrat, 11/5/09

"Maxine Lurie, Peter O. Wacker, and Michael Siegel have created what is for all intents and purposes the "Atlas of New Jersey."Thirty-three contributing authors provide the authoritative commentary for more than 75 contemporary historical maps, 120 thematic maps, satellite images, graphs, and illustrations in full color divided into six chapters: "Environment," "Land Use," "Demography," "Transportation," "The Economy," and "History and Politics." This is truly a treasure trove of information about our most densely populated state, encompassing the 400 years from Colonial times to the present. This unique publication, beautifully crafted yet moderately priced, is an essential purchase for New Jersey residents, former residents, U.S. history buffs, and all reference collections in and outside of the state."Library Journal, 11/15/09


Description:

Mapping New Jersey is the first interpretive atlas of the state in more than one hundred years. New Jersey, small in size with only 4.8 million acres, has a long and complex background. Its past is filled with paradoxes and contradictions—an agricultural economy for most of its history, New Jersey was also one of the earliest states to turn to manufacturing and chemical research. Today, still championing itself as the “Garden State,” New Jersey claims both the highest population density in the country and the largest number of hazardous waste sites. Many see an asphalt oasis, from the New Jersey Turnpike to the Garden State Parkway, with cities that sprawl into adjacent suburbs. Yet, after hundreds of years, large areas of New Jersey remain home to horse farms, cornfields, orchards, nurseries, blueberry bushes, and cranberry bogs.

Tracing the changes in environment, land use patterns, demography, transportation, economy, and politics over the course of many centuries, Mapping New Jersey illuminates the state’s transformation from a simple agricultural society to a post-industrial and culturally diverse place inhabited by more people per acre than anywhere else in the country.

An innovator in transportation, from railroads to traffic circles to aviation, New Jersey from its beginnings was a “corridor” state, with a dense Native American trail system once crisscrossed on foot, country roads traveled by armies of the American Revolution, and, lately, the rolling wheels of many sedans, SUVs, hybrids, public and commercial vehicles, and freight. Early to industrialize, it also served as the headquarters for Thomas Edison and the development of the modern American economy. Small in territory and crowded with people, the state works to recycle garbage and, at the same time, best utilize and preserve its land.

New Jersey has been depicted in useful and quite stunning historical maps, many of the best included in Mapping New Jersey—crude maps drawn by sixteenth-century navigators; complex and beautifully decorated pieces created by early Dutch cartographers; land maps plotted by seventeenth-century English settlement surveyors; examples of the nineteenth century’s scientific revolution in map making that helped locate topography and important mineral resources; detailed insurance maps that correct London map maker William Faden’s 1777–78 classic rendering of the state; and aerial photos, remote sensing, and global positioning system maps generated through twenty-first-century technology breakthroughs in cartography.

Integrating new maps, graphs, and diagrams unavailable through ordinary research or Internet searches, Mapping New Jersey is divided into six topical chapters, each accompanied by an introduction and overview telling the story of the state’s past and detailing its diversity. Mapping New Jersey, dramatically bold and in full color, travels where New Jersey has gone and the rest of the nation is likely to follow.

Maxine N. Lurie is a professor of history at Seton Hall University. She is the author of a number of articles and book chapters primarily on early American and New Jersey history, the editor of A New Jersey Anthology, and the coeditor of the Encyclopedia of New Jersey (both Rutgers University Press).

Peter O. Wacker,
professor emeritus of geography at Rutgers University, is the author of The Musconetcong Valley of New Jersey: A Historical Geography; Land and People: A Cultural Geography of Preindustrial New Jersey Origins and Settlement Patterns; and the coauthor of Land Use in Early New Jersey: A Historical Geography (Rutgers University Press).

Michael Siegel
is the staff cartographer and teacher in the Rutgers University geography department.


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Price: $39.95 






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