Category: Uncategorized

  • Population Change in U.S. Metropolitan Areas, 2000-2010

    This map reveals a wealth of stories. Explosive growth in places like Austin, TX, Boise, ID, Charlotte, NC, Las Vegas, NV, McAllen, TX, Raleigh, NC, and Riverside, CA shifted the center of population southward. Deindustrialization led to actual numerical decline in Buffalo, Cleveland, Dayton, Detroit, Pittsburgh, Toledo, and Youngstown. Hurricane Katrina reinforced the ongoing pattern…

  • Where’s the Snow–in the Northwest

    While southern Minnesota has had a relatively warm winter with little snow cover, things are quite different in the Pacific Northwest. Sea surface temperatures and atmospheric circulation patterns have been in the La Niña pattern. While El Niño features warmer than normal ocean temperatures in the eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean, La Niña features cooler than…

  • Annual Geography Meeting in New York City

    Geography Professors Ruth Baker, Thomas Sigler, and Anna Versluis attended the annual meeting of the Association of American Geographers held in New York City on February 24-28, 2012. Dr. Sigler presented a paper titled “Explaining Rapid Growth along Panama City’s Waterfront” and Dr. Versluis presented a paper titled “Formal and Familial Material Aid Following the…

  • Gusties Intern at City of Saint Peter

    Geography major Stephanie Korba ’12 did a January Term career exploration under the supervision of Mr. Todd Prafke, the City Administrator for Saint Peter, MN. She researched pawn shop fees in other communities and presented her results to the City Council. She also researched access charges for connecting new developments to sewer, water, and electric,…

  • Dr. Sigler featured on Planetizen

    Congratulations to Geography Professor Thomas Sigler whose essay “Is there such a thing as ‘rural’ gentrification?” was published yesterday in Planetizen, an on-line resource for urban planning and development.

  • IronSheep

    The annual scholarly meeting of the Association of American Geographers takes place next week in New York City. In edition to paper and poster presentations, there will be a mapping contest, IronSheep, that mimics the Iron Chef TV program. Teams will work under stringent time limits to create maps and other visualizations from “crowd-sourced” data…

  • Spring planting in February? It’s happened!

    A mild Minnesota winter like the one we’re having makes one wonder if spring is nearly here. According to today’s WeatherTalk newsletter by Mark Seeley of the University of Minnesota Extension, Minnesota farmers began spring planting in February once: “Historical records show that February of 1878 was so mild that many Minnesota farmers were in…

  • Sustainable farming conference

    Interested in sustainable, local agriculture? The annual conference of the Sustainable Farming Association of Minnesota will be held on Feb. 18, 2012, in Saint Joseph, Minnesota. Learn more at http://www.sfa-mn.org/conference/.  

  • Are restored wetlands as good as the originals?

    In the U.S., landowners who want to drain a wetland are required to replace it with a newly created wetland (or buy a new wetland, as here). New studies suggest that the ecosystem services provided by restored wetlands are more limited that the original wetlands. The magazine Good Environment writes that “Even though [wetlands] cover…

  • Our Gorgeous Blue Marble

    Check out the latest “blue marble” image of the Earth from space. This one was taken on January 4, 2012, by NASA’s newest Earth-observing satellite, Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership (NPP). This satellite contains five different instruments that measure and monitor vegetation, sea surface temperature, cloud cover, ice movement, and atmospheric moisture, among others.