The Changing Landscape of Durango, Colo., as seen in aerial postcard views, etc.Rubric to accompany the historical map activity |
This page contains an educational introduction to a collection of Southwest Colorado postcards, photos, and maps that are digitally accessible on the Center's website. Through its partnership with the Collaborative Digitization Program (CDP), the Center of Southwest Studies has digitized many thousands of images selected from various collections for viewing on the Web. |
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The CDP (formerly the Colorado Digitization Program) is supported through a National Leadership Grant to the University of Denver Penrose Library from the Institute of Museum and Library Services (a federal grant-making agency in Washington, D.C., which fosters innovation, leadership and a lifetime of learning, by supporting museums and libraries) with additional assistance from the Colorado State Library, and the Colorado Regional Library Systems. |
Historical Map Rubric (Source: http://www.cdpheritage.org/educator/documents/landscaperubric.doc )
Map
Conventions:
___ Map title is located in key
___ Map title accurately describes purpose of map
___ Key is included
___Key explains use of color and any symbols used on the map
___Key details the years represented on the map
___An accurate compass rose is included
Boundaries:
___Physical features (College Mesa, Smelter Mountain, Perins Peak) are shown
___Key roads represented
___1900s Durango boundaries shown in one color
___2000s Durango boundaries shown in a different color
Map
Style:
___Map is readable and communicates the idea of a changing landscape
___Map is completed neatly
On another piece of paper, answer the following questions in complete
sentences. Use your completed
map to help you.
v v How has the city of Durango grown in the past century?
v
v
What has caused the growth found in this area?
Sources
used:
http://www.cdpheritage.org/educator/landscape.html
and http://www.cdpheritage.org/resource/toolbox/documents/lessons.pdf
The collections are located at the Center of Southwest Studies on the campus of Fort Lewis College. Interested researchers should phone the archivist at 970/247-7126 or send electronic mail to the archivist at: Ellison_T@fortlewis.edu . Click here to use our E-mail Reference Request Form. The Center does not have a budget for outgoing long-distance phone calls to answer reference requests, so please provide an email address if you wish to receive a response from the Center.
Durango historical/geographical activity lesson
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Page revised: October 31, 2013