Maps and Atlases
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11867/14898
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Item Open Access Annotated map of Indian territories in the Pacific Northwest(previously unpublished, 1950) Relander, ClickHand drawn map with annotations in Relander's handwriting describing territories of a variety of tribal lands.Item Open Access Sunnyside Division Yakima Project scale: 1/40,000(United States, Department of the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation, 1940) Rosendorn, P. A.PDF of a map of Sunnyside, Prosser, Grandview, and Outlook Irrigation Districts.Item Open Access Columbia Basin Project - Washington, Irrigation System(Department of the Interior, GPO, 1943) US Bureau of ReclamationMap of the areas irrigated by the Columbia Basin Project. System equipment and waterways are identified.Item Open Access Birdseye view map of Yakima Valley and Central Washington(Freeman Brothers, 1907) Lange, EdwardHand-drawn, sepia color historical map of Northwest, from Portland in the SW corner to Coulee City in the NE, showing natural resources, major rivers, population centers, and roads.Item Open Access Authentic Map of the Columbia Basin Irrigation System as it will appear upon completion.(Lindgren Brothers, 1947) Lindgren, JollyHand-drawn, full color map of the Columbia River Basin, from Grand Coulee Dam in the north to Pasco, with insets showing details of the regional irrigation system.Item Open Access Roza Division, Yakima Irrigation Project: Lands opened for entry subject to Public Notice No. 10.(United States Dept. of Interior, 1937) Smith, A.M.; Reclamation, Bureau ofUnited States Department of the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation, Washington (State),United States, Department of the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation., 1950. Map printed on paper, 11 in x 13.75 in Roza Division Yakima Irrigation Project.Item Open Access The Pacific Coast and the World.(Home Library and Supply Association., 1892) Cram, George F.Created by George F. Cram, whose eponymously named company remained in business from 1867 through 2012 as a leading map firm and the first American firm to publish a world atlas. It employed a relief process. "Geographical, astronomical, historical. Showing the greatest number of Maps of any Atlas published in the World. Containing a complete Gazetteer showing all the Cities, Towns, Villages and Post Offices in the United States. This great work is especially prepared for the Pacific Coast States and is compiled from the latest and most authentic sources." Only three maps have been digitized, but it is available to view in its entirety by appointment.