--- Begin Forwarded Message --- >Date: Mon, 31 Aug 1998 08:34:45 -0400 (EDT) >From: Ken Grabach <[log in to unmask]> >Subject: Re: older topo map index books (fwd) I have found myself confused about which indexing service is being criticized. There are the green state indexes, which for some states are in booklet format, fairly convenient when you have only a small table space and the sheet, quite convenient when you do have table space. The brown catalog, which is for ordering purposes, as it lists available maps and sheets by name, are not intended to tell you what sheet covers a particular area. The initial commentary, I thought concerned the two forms of the index. The discussion about the name listing not being useful is apt except that concerns another tool than the index. A more distressing trend I have noted is that on the newest sheets that are not overlayed revisions of an older version, omit the names on the margins for adjacent sheets. One then has to commit to memory the other quadrangle names or to keep the index map at hand. _________________________________________ Ken Grabach <[log in to unmask]> Internaitonal Documents and Maps Librarian Miami University Libraries Oxford, Ohio 45056 USA On Sat, 29 Aug 1998, Johnnie Sutherland wrote: > ---------- Forwarded message ---------- > Date: Fri, 28 Aug 1998 21:21:00 -0600 > From: Dennis McClendon <[log in to unmask]> > To: [log in to unmask] > Subject: Re: older topo map index books (fwd) > > >Hear hear on the more useful topo books. . . . > >"Too costly" is what we have been told. > > The story I heard was that books have to be printed/bid by the GPO, but > that "maps" can be printed by USGS itself, so that's why they went back to > maps. Personally, I prefer the maps with the quad name printed right in > place to looking up 24K names in the books. > > :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: > Dennis McClendon, Chicago CartoGraphics [log in to unmask] > --- End Forwarded Message --- --BAA10543.904577567/kryptonite.sge.net--