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A Geography of Pennsylvania

By E. Willard Miller

424 pages | 8.5 x 11 | 1994

ISBN 978-0-271-01017-5 | cloth: $29.95 sh

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The culture and economy of Pennsylvania have been developing for more than 300 years. As a consequence, human activities have evolved from those based on primary occupations in the eighteenth century to the manufacturing economy of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries to the tertiary functions of the late twentieth century. With each major change in economic structure the geographic patterns also changed. The Geography of Pennsylvania charts those changes and provides a spatial analysis of each key geographic function taking place in the state. This book will be an indispensable reference for those who want to understand the factors that shaped Pennsylvania into the dynamic society it is today.


E. Willard Miller is Professor Emeritus of Geography at the Pennsylvania State University and author of many books, including The College of Earth and Mineral Sciences at Penn State (Penn State, 1992).


Contents

Preface

American Roots in Pennsylvania Soil
Peirce Lewis


Part One: The Natural Landscapes

Landforms and Human Habitat Ben
Marsh and Peirce F. Lewis


Climate Brent
Yarnal


Water Resources E.
Willard Miller


Soil Resources E.
Willard Miller


Forest Resources Richard
D. Schein and E. Willard Miller


Part Two: The People

Growth and Characteristics of Pennsylvania's
Population Paul
D. Simkins


Ethnic Geography Wilbur
Zelinsky


Cultural Geography Wilbur
Zelinsky


Political Geography Anthony
V. Williams


Recreation and Tourism Wilbur
Zelinsky


Part Three: The Economy

Agriculture E.
Willard Miller


Mineral Resources E.
Willard Miller


Transportation E.
Willard Miller


Manufacturing E.
Willard Miller


The Rise and Decline of Pennsylvania's
Steel Industry Allan
L. Rodgers


Services Ronald
F. Abler


Part Four: The Cities

The Location and Growth of Pennsylvania's
Metropolitan Areas Rodney
A. Erickson


The Internal Spatial Structure of
Pennsylvania's Metropolitan Areas Rodney
A. Erickson


Postindustrial Philadelphia Roman
A. Cybriwsky


Pittsburgh: An Urban Region in Transition
E.
Willard Mille
r