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Maryland has been called "America in miniature," because the state
embodies a wide range of our nations landscape features. From sandy
beaches on the Atlantic Ocean, across flat fields of the Coastal
Plain on the Eastern Shore, to the rolling hills and tumbling
rivers of the states central counties, and concluding with the
mountainous terrain of Western Maryland, the Free States diverse
scenery is a result of eons of geological activity. Written for the
interested layman or student with no specialized training, this
book explains the basics of geological processes, and then shows
how they worked to create Marylands beautiful and fascinating
landforms. A wealth of diagrams and maps clarify further a text
peppered with enlightening analogies. Whether the discussion
concerns the different types of weathering, for instance, or the
basic kinds of faults or events of plate tectonics, the text and
figures combine to help the reader understand how long-ago events
produced what we see today. The author not only focuses on the
actual landforms and their underlying geology, but also describes
the patterns of settlement, farming, mining, manufacturing, and
transportation that are all results of the states unique underlying
structures.
Kentucky Illustrated brings together a substantial portion of the
pictorial scenes published during Kentucky's first century, many of
them rare prints reproduced here for the first time since their
original publication. From the frontier days of Daniel and Squire
Boone to the rise of the railroads that opened the state to
visitors who toured its landmarks and bathed in its springs, more
than two hundred views offer a picture of Kentucky's growth and
civilization. Until the 1890s, Kentucky was sketched in the words
of adventurers, travelers, and journalists, but all most Americans
knew of the face of Kentucky was the occasional engraving that
appeared in popular publications such as Harper's Weekly and
Scribner's Monthly. The camera was not widely used and photographs
could not yet be reproduced for mass distribution, so each
illustration was captured by an artist and translated by an
engraver before it reached the imagination of the viewer. Readers
will enjoy chapters on the frontier, the Civil War, education and
religion, urban and rural life, making a living, the natural world,
and roads, rivers, and rails. State historian James C. Klotter
provides an overview of Kentucky history that enhances the
illustrations, and Joe Nickell's description of early print methods
allows readers to appreciate fully the art form as it was practiced
in the nineteenth century. Captions include both historical
background and information on artists, lithographers, and printers.
This handsome collection of rare early views will delight all
Kentuckians as well as historians, teachers, librarians, and
students.
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