Thursday, January 6, 2011

GEOG national geographic maps and articles

Publication: National Geographic ADVENTURE magazine
Title: 14 Secrets of the Southwest
Series Title: The Hidden Southwest
Alternative Title(s): Fourteen Secrets of the Southwest
Learn the Ancient Way
35 New Adventures: Canyon Hikes, River Trips, Cool Towns, Desert Biking, Fly-in Backcountry, and More!
Thirty-five New Adventures: Canyon Hikes, River Trips, Cool Towns, Desert Biking, Fly-in Backcountry, and More!
A City Slicker Hits the Rez
Date: Mar. 2008
Volume: v. 10, no. 2
Pages: 66-77

Contributor(s): Siber, Kate Author
LeDuff, Charlie Author
Kish, Dawn Photographer
Additional Contributors: Bradley, Ryan Author
Collier, Christopher Percy Author
Ketcham, Christopher Author
Richardson, Whit Photographer


Publication: NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC magazine map supplement
Date: Sept. 2004
Volume: v. 206, no. 3
Pages: Supplement
Other Side: NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN CULTURES: A LEGACY OF LANGUAGE AND INSPIRED IDEAS Map Supplement

Subject(s): History --United States
Indians of North America
Land claims
United States
Notes: Contents: Map of the United States showing native homelands today and American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) populations by state and for cities of 100,000 people or more; notes on state names of Indian origin, fishing rights, "red power," education, sacred land, reservations, health care, Cherokee Nation, who is an Indian, Everglades restoration, casinos, New York City Indians, Bureau of Indian Affairs, citizenship and taxes.
Included: Portraits of Native American notables including: Little Turtle, Tecumseh, Sequoyah, Eli Parker, Sitting Bull, Jim Thorpe, a Navajo code talker, Elizabeth Peratrovich, N. Scott Momaday, Joe de la Cruz, Wilma Mankiller, Vine Deloria, Jr., Oren Lyons, Winona Laduke, John Echohawk, and Sherman Alexie; photo of Marie Randall, a Lakota elder.
Scale: Albers Conic Equal-Area
Projection: 1:8,427,000
Size: 20 1/4 x 31 inches
Inset Title(s): Inset map included: A Nation Expands, 1775-1819
Inset included: Alaska
Inset map included: Forced Exodus, 1820-1864
Inset included: Gambling for the Everglades
Inset included: Hawaii
Inset included: Introduction
Inset included: Indian Jackpot
Inset map included: Land Rush, 1865-1894
Inset included: Long History of Losing Ground
Inset map included: New Battlefields, 1895-2004
Inset included: Portraits of Pride
Inset included: We Are Many
Inset included: Who Is an Indian?
Region(s): North America



Publication: National Geographic TRAVELER magazine
Title: Visit Canyon Country With Indian Guides
Variant Title: Department : Trips
Date: May/June 2002
Volume: v. 19, no. 4
Pages: 115

Subject(s): Canyons
Indians of North America
Outfitters
Southwest (region), U. S.
Notes: Included: Photo of Canyon de Chelly viewed from Spider Rock Overlook.
Also included: Outfitters: Moki Treks, Side Canyon website; Overland Canyon Tours; Grand Canyon; Monument Valley; Arches National Park; Canyonlands National Park; Navajo Indians; hogans.



Publication: NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC magazine feature article
Title: Better Days for the Navajos: The Largest U.S. Indian Tribe Shapes a New Life With Schools and Hospitals, Irrigated Farms, Steady Jobs, Oil, and Uranium
Date: Dec. 1958
Pages: 809-847

Contributor(s): Breed, Jack Author
Herbert, Charles W. Photographer
Subject(s): Folk art
Indians of North America
Navajo Indians
Oil
Shamanism
Sheep raising
Silversmiths
Uranium
Arizona
Monument Valley, Arizona-Utah
Utah

Publication: NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC magazine feature article
Title: The North American Indian
Date: June 1908
Pages: 448-454

Subject(s): Apache Indians
Indians of North America
North America
Notes: Indians included: Apaches, Havasupais, Maricopas, Mojaves, Navajo, Papagos, Pimas, Walapais, Yumas.


Publication: NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC magazine feature article
Title: Indian Tribes of Pueblo Land
Date: Nov. 1940
Pages: 549-596

Contributor(s): Stirling, Matthew W. Author
Kihn, W. Langdon Artist
Subject(s): Anthropology, physical
Apache Indians
Havasupai Indians
Hopi Indians
Indians of North America
Navajo Indians
Pueblo culture
Zuni Indians
Notes: Included: Painting insert, "Red Men of the Southwest."
Indians included: Acomas, Apaches, Basket Makers, Cliff Dwellers, Cocopas, Comanches, Havasupais, Hohokam Culture, Hopis, Kiowas, Lagunas, Mojaves, Navajo, Paiutes, Papagos, Pimas, San Ildefonsos, Tewas, Utes, Yaquis, Yavapais, Yumas, Zunis.


Publication: NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC magazine feature article
Title: Flaming Cliffs of Monument Valley
Date: Oct. 1945
Pages: 452-461

Contributor(s): Breed, Jack Author-Photographer
Subject(s): Navajo Indian Reservation, Arizona-Utah
Navajo Indians
Arizona
Monument Valley, Arizona-Utah
Utah

REG #1 scripture reading

It struck me while I was reading that one of the effects of Christ's Atonement being eternal is that that the sins I comitted in the pre-mortal life were forgiven before I entered this mortal state. When I came to earth I did not remember the pre-mortal life, and the sins and transgressions I commited there were forgiven. This enabled me to have a fresh start; I was inocent again. The Atonement had never encompoused so much to me. I used to believe that it mierly covered up the sins I committe in this life, but now I can see that the Atonement is truly eternal. I have always believed in a pre-mortal, a mortal, and an after life. In the pre-mortal life I understood that there were opertunities to sin, because of the third of the hosts of heaven who chose the to leave God's precence and join the devil. From my experiences on earth I was fully aware that there are many opertunities to sin. I aslo assumed that there are chances to sin in the after life becuase I have heard it will take thousands of years after this life to reach perfection. I had never made the conection though that the Atonement had influencial power in all of these realms of sin. In my mind the Atonement was this white wash of forgiveness that just covered everything up. It was aw stricking to realized that when I entered this life I was litterally re-born throught the Atonement; it was not some sloppy cover up job, but a complete transformation of my soul. As my understanding of the majesty of the Atonement increases I can feel my faith strengthen.