Cartographic Details: Scale approximately 1:32,500,00 (E 25°01'00"--E 146°19'00"/N 77°03'00"--S 9°48'00"). Relief shown pictorially. Prime meridian: Philadelphia. At upper right: 51.
Creator:
Carey, Matthew, 1760-1839
Created:
1814
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, John R. Borchert Map Library.
Oil on masonite depicting animals from Asia. Belongs to a series of murals of animals and people of the world that Francis Lee Jaques painted for the White Bear Unitarian Universalist Church (Mahtomedi, MN) in 1964. When it was first painted, the panel was sponsored by Mr. Jerry A. and Mrs. Sonja H. Wenger in honor of Wendy Wenger.
Cartographic Details: Scale [1:4,660,000]. Dedicated to Major James Rennell, by A. Arrowsmith, January 1st 1801."Engraved by George Allen." Ornate title cartouche, with military regalia. Greenwich meridian. Relief shown pictorially with shading.
Creator:
Arrowsmith, Aaron, 1750-1823.; Allen, George
Created:
1801-01-01
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, John R. Borchert Map Library.
"Base source: Compiled in 1978 from USGS 1:24,000-scale topographic maps dated 1959-1961." "Planimetry revised from aerial photographs taken 1977." "Projection and 10,000-meter grid ticks, zone 17: Universal Transverse Mercator. 1927 North American datum 25,000-foot grid ticks based on Ohio coordinate system." Includes location map.
Contributor:
United States. Soil Conservation Service; Ohio. Division of Lands and Soil
Created:
1980?
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, John R. Borchert Map Library.
A formal document written by John Fullerton and Thomas [Cross] from onboard the Prince George in the port of Bengal, addressed to the Honorable Henry Frankland, esq, President and governor of Fort William, and the owners of the ship Prince George, dated simply 1728. It also contains an undated postscript signed by Fullerton and [Cross]. Appended...
Creator:
Fullerton, John; Crosse, Thomas; Frankland, Sir Henry
Created:
1727-12 - 1728
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, James Ford Bell Library.