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The Navajo Atlas: Environments, Resources, People, and History of the Dine Bikeyah. The Civilization of the American Indian Series, Volume 157. Goodman, James M [microform]
The Navajo Atlas: Environments, Resources, People, and History of the Dine Bikeyah. The Civilization of the American Indian Series, Volume 157. Goodman, James M [microform]
상세정보
- 자료유형
- 마이크로피시
- 언어부호
- 본문언어 - English
- 보고서번호
- ISBN-0-8061-2032-0j
- 청구기호
- 서명/저자
- The Navajo Atlas: Environments, Resources, People, and History of the Dine Bikeyah. The Civilization of the American Indian Series, Volume 157. : Goodman, James M - [microform]
- 발행사항
- 형태사항
- 119
- 총서명
- ERIC Reports
- 주기사항
- 119p.
- 초록/해제
- 요약The 48 maps and descriptive narratives in this atlas of the Navajo Reservation are divided into six sections. Part I, Navajo Country, displays Navajo land in relationship to the United States and the region, and becomes more detailed to place locations within the Dine Bikeyah, or Navajo Land, including administrative and political subdivisions of the reservation. Part II, The Physical Environment, shows the landforms and geology of the area, climates, vegetation, soils, the pattern of streams, and various aspects of ground water. Part III, Navajo History, describes the evidence of prehistoric Navajo inhabitation of the area, early Navajo migrations, and the evolution of the Navajo Reservation. Part IV, Navajo Population, contains maps showing rural dwellings and population density, and graphs depicting structure of the Navajo population by age and sex. Part V, Livelihood, Resources, and Services, shows livestock and grazing, employment on the reservation, mineral resources, energy development, electric transmission lines, pipelines, railroads, tribal utilities, irrigation, medical facilities, banks, educational facilities, parks and sacred places. The section on educational facilities gives a brief history of education on the reservation from boarding schools, BIA schools, and mission schools to institutions of higher education. Part VI, The Disputed Navajo-Hopi Lands, traces the origins of a land dispute between the two tribes that resulted in a partition of a joint use area into areas exclusively for each tribe. Most maps detail information on Hopi land as well, since it is surrounded by the Navajo Reservation. The atlas also contains graphs, photographs, selected references, and an index. (KS)
- 복제주기
- Microfiche. . Springfield, VA : ERIC Document Reproduction Service. . microfiches ; 11×15 cm.
- 기금정보
- Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, New York, N.Y.
- 일반주제명
- 키워드
- 기타저자
MARC
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■008980928s1982 us b 000 0 eng d
■040 ▼apcul
■0410 ▼aEnglish
■088 ▼aISBN-0-8061-2032-0j
■090 ▼a370.78▼bE68
■24504▼aThe Navajo Atlas: Environments, Resources, People, and History of the Dine Bikeyah. The Civilization of the American Indian Series, Volume 157.▼cGoodman, James M▼h[microform]
■260 ▼aU.S.; Oklahoma▼c82l
■300 ▼a119
■440 0▼aERIC Reports
■500 ▼a119p.
■520 ▼aThe 48 maps and descriptive narratives in this atlas of the Navajo Reservation are divided into six sections. Part I, Navajo Country, displays Navajo land in relationship to the United States and the region, and becomes more detailed to place locations within the Dine Bikeyah, or Navajo Land, including administrative and political subdivisions of the reservation. Part II, The Physical Environment, shows the landforms and geology of the area, climates, vegetation, soils, the pattern of streams, and various aspects of ground water. Part III, Navajo History, describes the evidence of prehistoric Navajo inhabitation of the area, early Navajo migrations, and the evolution of the Navajo Reservation. Part IV, Navajo Population, contains maps showing rural dwellings and population density, and graphs depicting structure of the Navajo population by age and sex. Part V, Livelihood, Resources, and Services, shows livestock and grazing, employment on the reservation, mineral resources, energy development, electric transmission lines, pipelines, railroads, tribal utilities, irrigation, medical facilities, banks, educational facilities, parks and sacred places. The section on educational facilities gives a brief history of education on the reservation from boarding schools, BIA schools, and mission schools to institutions of higher education. Part VI, The Disputed Navajo-Hopi Lands, traces the origins of a land dispute between the two tribes that resulted in a partition of a joint use area into areas exclusively for each tribe. Most maps detail information on Hopi land as well, since it is surrounded by the Navajo Reservation. The atlas also contains graphs, photographs, selected references, and an index. (KS)
■533 ▼aMicrofiche.▼bSpringfield, VA▼cERIC Document Reproduction Service.▼emicrofiches ; 11×15 cm.
■536 ▼aAndrew W. Mellon Foundation, New York, N.Y.
■650 4▼xEducation
■653 ▼aAmerican Indian Education▼aAmerican Indian History▼aAmerican Indian Reservations▼aAtlases▼aClimate▼aEducational Facilities▼aElementary Secondary Education▼aHigher Education▼aHopi (Tribe)▼aMaps▼aNatural Resources▼aNavajo (Nation)▼aPhysical Environment▼aPopulation Distribution▼aWater Resources▼aNavajo ReservationDocument Not Available from EDRS.
■7001 ▼aGoodman, James M.
■999 ▼a010; 133


