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McGill University Maps and Photos of Europe. Plans de villes et villages du Québec (Historical Maps and Plans of towns and cities in Quebec). Bibliothèque et Archives nationales de Québec.
- Canadian Digital Elevation Data
The Canadian Digital Elevation Data is produced by Natural...
- Bdga (Raster)
The Le Québec à l'échelle 1/1 000 000 contains detailed...
- Land Use and Land Cover
Digital Maps Atlas Of Canada: Land City of Montreal Master...
- Topographic Maps of Europe
McGill Library has a collection of international topographic...
- Geospatial Data
This page contains links to freely available geospatial...
- CanMatrix
CanMatrix consists of scanned topographic maps of Canada at...
- Bdcg
The Base de données des cultures généralisées (BDCG) :...
- Bdtq
The BDTQ contains detailed large scale mapping (1:20 000) of...
- Canadian Digital Elevation Data
This file contains is a folded brochure with a guide and campus map of McGill University, including a brief history of the university, a list of faculties and departments, and a summary of its activities.
Sheet maps of Chicago from the 1860s, 1870s, and 1880s that are held at the University of Chicago Library's Map Collection. During these three decades, Chicago grew from a small city of 109,000 into a large one with a population of more than 1,000,000.
Description: America Transformed: By 1870, Chicago's population approached 300,000, making it the nation's fifth largest city. This guide map, published just after the Great Chicago Fire, superimposes the burned area over the gridded street pattern.
Click on the links below to access scans of some of the sheet maps of Chicago from the 1860s, 1870s, and 1880s that are held at the University of Chicago Library's Map Collection. During these three decades, Chicago grew from a small city of 109,000 into a large one with a population of more than 1,000,000.
This file contains McGill ephemera with campus maps, including a postcard announcing move of Centre for Continuing Education from Strathcona Hall t...
McGill’s campus today is filled with venerable buildings, but in the first fifty years of its existence, it was virtually empty! The first shape we recognize today appeared some twenty-two years after the University’s official beginning: the Arts Building’s central and east wings were built in 1843.