Geography Reference
In-Depth Information
Bringing Together Corpus Linguistics
and Geographical Information Systems,”
Literary and Linguistic Computing 26
(2011): 297-314; C. Grover, R . Tobin,
K. Byrne, M. Woollard, J. Reid, S. Dunn,
and J. Ball, “The Use of the Edinburgh
Geoparser for Georeferencing Digitised
Historical Collections,” Philosophical
Transactions of the Royal Society A 368
(2010): 3875-89; M. Yuan, “Mapping
Text,” in The Spatial Humanities: GIS and
the Future of Humanities Scholarship, ed.
D. J. Bodenhamer, J. Corrigan, and T. M.
Harris (Bloomington: Indiana University
Press, 2010), 109-23.
10. Early English Books Online, htp://
eebo.chadwyck.com/home; Proceedings
of the Old Bailey, London's Central Crimi-
nal Court, 1674-1913, htp://w w w.old
baileyonline.org; Google Books, htp://
books.google.com.
11. The David Rumsey Map Collec-
tion, htp://w w w.davidrumsey.com pro-
vides a good example.
12. A. S. Fotheringham, “Trends in
Quantitative Methods I: Stressing the
Local,” Progress in Human Geography 21
(1997): 88-96.
13. See Meeks and Mostern as well as
Hallam and Roberts in this volume and
other examples, including D. Cooper and
I. N. Gregory, “Mapping the English Lake
District: A Literary GIS,” Transactions
of the Institute of British Geographers 36
(2011): 89-108; and E. Barker, S. Bou-
zarovski, C. Pelling, and L. Isaksen,
“Mapping an Ancient Historian in a
Digital Age: The Herodotus Encoded
Space-Text-Image Archive (HESTIA),”
Leeds International Classical Studies 9
(2010): 1-36.
14. C. L. Borgman, “The Digital Future
Is Now: A Call to Action for the Humani-
ties,” Digital Humanities Quarterly 3,
no. 4, htp://digitalhumanities.org/dhq
/vol/3/4/000077/000077.html.
15. See Tom Armitage's section on
“Open & 'Free' Geo Sotware and Data” at
htp://digimap.blogs.edina.ac.uk/2013/06
/19/geoforum-2013-liveblog.
16. ESRI, htp://www.esri.com.
17. Google Earth, htp://earth.google
.com.
18. Quantum GIS, htp://www.qgis
.org.
19. D. Miller and J. Modell, “Teaching
United States History with the Great
American History Machine,” Historical
Methods 21 (1988): 121-34; Time Map:
Time-based interactive mapping, htp://
www.timemap.net.
20. O. Boonstra, L. Breure, and
P. Doorn, Past, Present and Future of His-
torical Information Science (A msterdam:
NI W I-K NAW, 2 0 04).
21. See the Digital Humanities Sum-
mer Institute (DHSI), htp://www.dhsi
.org, and the Historical GIS Research
Network, htp://w w w.hgis.org.uk for
examples.
22. Social Explorer, htp://w w w
.socialexplorer.com; Hypercities, htp://
hypercities.com.
23. A. Brimicombe and C. Li, Loca-
tion-Based Services and Geo-Information
Engineering (London: Wiley, 2009).
24. For history, see, for example, I. N.
Gregory and P. S. Ell, Historical GIS: Te c h -
nologies, Methodologies and Scholarship
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2007); and A. K. Knowles, ed., Placing
History: How Maps, Spatial Data and GIS
Are Changing Historical Scholarship (Red-
lands, Calif.: ESRI, 2008). For archae-
ology, see, for example, J. Connolly and
M. Lake, Geographical Information Systems
in Archaeology (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2006); and H. Chapman,
Landscape Archaeology and GIS (Stroud:
History Press, 2006).
25. D. Sui and D. DeLyser, “Crossing
the Qualitative-Quantitative Chasm I:
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