Tumgik
#arcuses
yr-obedt-cicero · 2 years
Text
“The Colonel's nephew, John C. Hamilton, had become estranged from his wife and family, and about this time the former gave her employment as his housekeeper. Her son Edgar, devoted to the memory of his Uncle William, in later years gave some of the most intimate glimpses we possess, into the life at the mines. The Colonel had also a Negro servant boy, “Black Davie,” of whom Edgar writes kindly. The Hamilton cabin became rare meeting-place as time went on. Here, it is true, he boarded some of his rough and muddy miners, but here he also entertained most distinguished visitors. Here his fine, aristocratic mother, and his sister, Mrs. Holly, were his guests in 1837. And here would sometimes come crowding in a roomful of the natives bands of whom remained for five or six years after Black Hawk's day. They were beggars and thieves. Hamilton understood them, and had no fear of them. But he had to keep a watchful eye on the visitors to guard against being “robbed out of house and home.”
Says Muldoon, of the always interesting Colonel: “One day he could eat his ‘grub’ with his heavy-whiskered, ragged and mud-spatered miners; the next he could take his place to preside over a banquet of silk-clad and powder-haired aristocrats. He was an exceptionally clever conversationalist, when he did talk, but as a rule, was one of the silent type, doing far more, thinking than talking.”
From all sources we learn that Hamilton was unusually handsome, and from many that he was the “living image” of his illustratious father. He was of medium height and of medium stoutness. He stood 5 feet 7 inches in height and weighed 160 pounds. He had a light complexion and light brown hair. His eyes were blue and piercing. Strength, intelligence and kindliness all were marked in his fine face. He stood erect, was prompt and positive, and in every relation in life was the gentleman. He never married, nor, so far as is known, had a love affair. One of the finest tributes to the man, one that rings was paid by his friend of many years, Mr. Chas. H. Gratiot: “Col. Hamilton was an intimate friend of my family and a frequent visitor for many years. We esteemed him for his warm social instincts, his affability, his unassuming courteousness, his refinement and culture. He was virtuous, temperate and generous to a fault.”
“Col. Hamilton first opened the mines at Hamilton's Diggins in 1928, and spent most of the next twenty years in mining, meeting with good success until the water put a stop to his operations. Mr. Hamilton lived the life of a miner, a rough life at best, yet in his miner's cabin, the surroundings evinced the fine taste of the occupant. His library was the most valuable in the country, and contained, mostly, the books of classical authors.”
The friend with whom Hamilton first entered Galena, Daniel Parkinson, opened an inn at Mineral Point, thirty miles from Fort Hamilton, and here the Colonel could often be found with congenial friends, such men as General Dodge and the Gratiot brothers, discussing politics and sipping their cider, each taking his turn with some story of adventure in the wilderness. So, too, these men, and others well known in the lead district would meet before Hamilton's broad fireplace, or in his grocery store. Colonel Kellogg, or Captain Gentry was likely to be among them.
After the Indian war a post-office was established at the Diggings, and known as Fort Hamilton. The Colonel was again post-master. Now, more than ever, the store became the social center of the place. In 1833, he built a now needed school-house. Then followed a tavern, a saw-mill and a distillery. Fort Hamilton was growing. One matter is too interesting to omit. It concerns General Henry Dodge and the Colonel. From the time of Black Hawk's War to Colonel Hamilton's death in 1850, these two men were politically the foremost citizens of Wisconsin. Dodge was an ardent Democrat while Hamilton championed the Whig principles of his great father. Hamilton had always a keen tongue, when arcused and shortly before the Black Hawk War had made some statement which Dodge resented. After the fashion of the day. the latter challenged his Whig opponent to a duel. There was no hesitation on the part of the Colonel. We have the story from his nephew. The newphew, Col. Schuyler Hamilton, afterward of much prominence in the Civil War, says, “Uncle William replied that at that moment his country demanded his services; but if he survived until the war was over, he would be happy to oblige Mr. Dodge. Later, the war being over, Uncle William informed General Dodge that he awaited his convenience. But General Dodge replied frankly that he could have no quarrel with so brave a soldier and so true a gentleman as he had found Col. Hamilton to be, and begged to withdraw the challenge, and that they be friends. And they did become friends.” The incident speaks volumes for the mainliness of both men. Col. John Dement, of Dixon, married a sister of General Dodge, and Mrs. Dement spent her days thereafter at Dixon. She is known to have had the same fine openness of character as marked her distinguished brother.
Twice in his life on the frontier, as we are told, Colonel Hamilton visited his mother in the East-once from the Sangamon country and once from the lead mines, after the Black Hawk War. 1000 miles and he made it, like at knight of old, on horseback. But he did not stay long. Life in New York had become tame for him. It was a trip of His movements always had a suddeness and unexpectedness about them. Riding to the door one morning he told his mother, “I can't stand it here: I've got to get back where there is room,” and kissing her goodbye, he mounted his horse again and rode away.
In return, in the summer of 1837, the mother, accompanied by a daughter, Mrs. Sidney Holly, paid him a visit. Mrs. Hamilton was in her eighties, and the trip was a long one. From Pittsburgh on west it was by boat down the Ohio to Cairo and up the Mississippi to Galena. They took boat the middle of March and reached Galena June 1st. The courageous old lady was able, however, to meet every demand on her endurance. But the Colonel's cabin, “Fort Hamilton”, was too lacking in the comforts and refinements of living to be a suitable place to entertain his lady guests, so he shortly arranged for their entertainment in Galena, at the more elegant and comfortable home of his friends, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. B. Gratiot. Their historic old house is standing yet today.
Mrs. Gratiot writes of Mrs. Hamilton: “Pleasant and unaffected, she bore her eighty-four years with graceful dignity.” Not only the Gratiot home, but the entire community, showed her every courtesy and kindly attention. Her hosts took her on a trip to Fort Snelling where the ofifcers paid her distinguished honors, such as due the widow of Alexander Hamilton, She was always a devout church-woman. The Episcopalians of Galena had been kind to the Colonel in an illness, and were very kind to her, and it is told that she presented the church some communion silver. The writer has asked the present rector, the Rev. Mr. Ellsworth in regard to the gift, and he says it is not certain. but that they do have some old silver plate, of which no one now seems to know the origin. The visit lasted from June 1st to September 15th. It was set down by the diarists of the time as “the first great social event of the lead country.” The Colonel accompanied the ladies as far as St. Louis, on their return, and there, too, much was made of the patriotician old lady, of so many fine associations.
In the “Log Cabin and Hard Cider” campaign of 1840, the men of the Diggins, regardless of previous political affiliations, were enthusiastic Whigs. William Henry Harrison, victor over Tecumseh at the battle of Tippecanoe, and father of their fine young Captain at the stockade, was the Whig candidate. Moreover, it was confidently accepted that in the event of his election he would appoint their own beloved Colonel first Governor of the new territory of Wisconsin. The Whigs won the election, and Hamilton had so few plans laid for the governorship. Among them was that his mother and Mrs. Holly should be the ladies of his official household. He was boyishly happy in the prospect of being able so to honor and to gratify his aged mother.
It was no fault of “Old Tippecanoe” that Colonel Hamilton did not achieve this, the greatest political ambition of his lift. President Harrison died after only thirty days in office, and the post of President went to Vice President Tyler, a General appointed Democrat, who Dodge to the new governorship. Wisconsin was then Democratic, and the cards were stacked against the brave Colonel. Politically he enjoyed but one pronounced success, and that with the odds quite against him. His mineral region elected him to the first Territorial Convention of Wisconsin. There he was selected as chairman of the Convention and was recognized as easily the leading man in its deliberations. It was in 1843 that Hamilton changed the name of the Diggings, or Fort Hamilton, to Wiota, by which beautiful name the hamlet is still known. When, in 1847, Iowa County was subdivided, that part in which lay the Diggins was given the name “Lafayette's tribute to his friend, and his father's friend, General Lafayette. He made one more essay into politics. He was candidate, in 1848, for membership in the State Constitutional Convention. The vote was declared to be slightly against him. But there was little doubt the count had been erroneous. They could play politics in that day as well as this. Hamilton took his case before the convention itself. He is said to have made a masterly presentation of his claim, one that would have done credit to a Patrick Henry. But the majority were Democrats and voted solidly against him. He may well have forsworn all politics from that day on.
The California Gold Fields
Almost at the moment, however, arose a matter that would quite naturally crowd political questions from the mind of the adventure-loving Hamilton, anyhow. Word came East of the gold discoveries in California. He decided to join the gold-seekers. With all the zest that characterized the man, he spent the winter in preparing for overland trip the following spring. With the aid of the village black-smith he built two strong moving-wagons, and these he equipped for the journey. His proposed leaving saddened the home of his miners. But he assured his friends that he did not plan to be gone long, not more than a year or two. Then he hoped to return with money enough so that he could install pumps in the lead mines and give them all employment again.
Early the spring of ‘49 he started out with his two prairie schooners, soon to join one of the many long caravans heading across the plains and mountains. Hamilton himself, always a lover of good horses, dorve to the front wagon a span of beautiful blacks. One of the early settlers, a Mr. Engebretson long told of the brave appearance of the Colonel's team, with all its equipment new. The driver of the second wagon was a fine colored fellow named Barney Norris. It is likely that he drove mules. It would have been hard for oxen to keep pace with the Colonel's spirited blacks. Later, Norris returned to Galena, where he spent his days, far into old age, as sexton of the Presbyterian church. He was highly respected, and thought of, to the last, as Col. Hamilton's body servant. The Colonel and Barney got through in early summer.
They lost little time in prospecting, soon staking out their claim at a point about 100 miles north of Sacramento. The claim yielded fairly from the start. Profiting by his experience in the lead mines, Hamilton established a store, also, and sold supplies to the miners. He was $10,000 ahead at the end of twelve months. The stake he had set for the venture, before he should return to the Diggings, was $20,000. At this time a Sacramento firm, dealers in lumber and mining supplies, sold him an interest in their business. July 17, 1850, he was still at this “brush store” at the gold mines. July 30th, he was on his way to Sacramento. About October 1st a friend sought for him there, and was told by a member of the firm that a few weeks after joining them, Col. Hamilton had taken sick and died in the cholera then raging in the city. It was a period of terror, in which few records of any sort were kept.
The Colonel had been fortunate in having with him, in his last hours, fiends who stood by and gave him whatever attention and comfort was possible. His friend, Charles Gratiot and the faithful Barney were two of them. It was impossible to secure a coffin, but they found enough lumber to make at least a box. They accompanied his remains to the trench, where the cholera victims were being laid, and buried him as “No. 50” in the trench. They secured the services of a Baptist minister at the grave. One of the Colonel's brothers, in New York, having been informed of his death, wrote, requesting Mr. Gratiot to ship the remains East, but naturally enough, the navigation company would not carry the body of a cholera victim. It was 27 years later that an effort was made by a Wisconsin friend, the Hon. Cyrus Woodman, to locate the grave of Hamilton, with a view to the erection of a monument at the spot. The markers set up at the time of the burial had been of wood and were now rotted and gone. The faithful Barney, in Galena, over a quarter-century after the burial, now proved to be the one person who could so describe the location of the grave that it could be found. And it was. The remains were taken from the trench to an individual lot, and a good stone was placed at the head, by his old friend, Mr. Woodman. The inscription on it read:
COL. W. S. HAMILTON Born in New York Aug. 4 1797 Came to California in ‘49 Died October 8, 1850
In size and features, in talent and character, he much resembled his illustrious father.
A friend erects this stone.
Ten years later, Col. Hamilton's body found another, no doubt its final resting-place. The city of Sacramento furnished a larger lot, in a new and roomier part of the cemetery, naming it “Hamilton Square.” The Colonel's relatives in the East, at family expense, erected a stone there, dedicated to his memory, and bearing also, on one face, a bronze medallion of his father, Alexander Hamilton. Here may his rest be undisturbed!
Back by the village street in Wiota seems nevertheless, the most fitting spot for a memorial to the brave and lovable Colonel Hamilton. Here his heart was. And here, in his memory, where he was so long known and loved, the ladies of the D. A. R. have set a granite tablet, suitably inscribed. Near it stands a fine but necessarily temporary memorial painting, in bill-board form, showing, above, the Colonel's team and covered wagon, and below, a picture of the stockade. This, then, is what I have, at last, learned about William Stephen Hamilton, frequent visitor at early Dixon, friend of Father John Dixon, and son of great Alexander Hamilton.
THE END”
The “Sometime back” series, by L. B. Neighbour. Dixon Evening Telegraph (Illinois) [March 17, 1932]
15 notes · View notes
bellafragolina · 2 years
Note
Sad though but when the Player/Rei/Akari completes the Pokédex for Arcuse he puts everyone that was displaced in time back to their original timeline.
So Ingo and his S/O (providing that they are from the future too) are sent back to their time where they have a heart full reunion with Emmet.
Only there’s a problem.
The triplets aren’t there.
This is because they aren’t displaced in time, they were born in Hisui/past Sinnoh so they belong in that timeline.
So this either leads to Ingo and his S/O crying at the fact they lost their children with Emmet not knowing how to feel since his brother is back but his apparent Nephews and Niece are in the past and long since dead and they go to a museum to find pictures of their children growing up without them, possibly having their own family’s before ultimately learning how they die.
Or they go on a journey to find a Pokémon capable of time traveling and get their terror triplets back.
oh boy
that is heartbreaking, losing your kids like that! and being able to do nothing about it! i know ingo and his spouse would both tear the world apart to get their kids back, but is it even possible?
the angst that could come from this idea are incredible, and i applaud you. i love me some good angst
and god, imagine it. having to hold ingo as he wails for your kids, while trying to control your own emotional breakdown. and emmet is doing no better, struggling with the fact that he has niblings and they're still hundreds of years in the past, possibly dead now
~Renee
13 notes · View notes
Text
I find it funny that the day after I finish writing the chapter that introduces Akari as the protag in legends Arcuse, we get the event in pokemon master that shows that Rai is the canon protag lol.
(sorry you can't read this chapter yet my friend hasn't edied it yet)
0 notes
soluse · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
‘Untitled’. september 13, 2017 by Yannick Verhasselt
instagram
90 notes · View notes
thelotuslava · 2 years
Note
Anon huanter@Mica
... you know, for a Pokemon that's been, uh, dead for arcuse knows how long... you sure are very, uh, " "enthusiastic" " about others besides this orange weirdo seeing you now aren't you? (said sarcastically...)
What's the matter?... DISTURBING your peace or something? (Remarked snidely...)
Tumblr media
"I've been dead for years...why should I just be okay with suddenly being tied to a scatterbrained idiot?"
[Previous / Beginning / Next]
17 notes · View notes
safitheartist · 5 years
Text
Here is the real issue and why a lot of people feel upset
Pokemone Sword and Shield doesn't feel like a upgrade to the pokemon franchise. At least not a big enough one to justify buying a whole new system.
With each new consol it always felt like there was a genuine upgrade to the Pokemon franchise that took advantage of the capabilities of the system they are on.
Like think about it.
With Ruby and Saphire for example we got:
Two separate evil teams depending on the version you get, impressive new graphics that felt approprite for the Advance while keeping the recognizeable pokemon style, new ways to explore the over world, contests, weather effects, being able to go under water with dive, some of the most creative puzzels in the pokemon franchise to date.
Getting a Advance for this game was something people actually felt was worth it.
Then there is Diamond and Pear which not only expanded on some of the features introduces in Ruby, Saphire and Emerald but also brought in their own inovations like pokemon with varrying forms, the implimatation of the touchscreen and microphone by giving the player usefull little gadgets down there (Map with your berries on, step counter for breeding purposes etc.) First introduction of the idea that pokemon can follow you outside of their balls which was futher expanded on in HGSS, one of the most memorable extensions of the pokemon mythos with the addition of Dialga, Palkia, Arcuse and Giratina. A clear narrative connection between it and HGSS which did not feel super gimicky. Really interesting bits of lore also great secondary legendaries with their own side quests. What most people view as the most chalanging champion fight to date and again impresive sprite animations for what was the standard on the consol at the time.
These games were infact a reason to want a DS, I would know, me and my brother got one for it specifically back in the day.
Then there was X and Y which in hignsight marks where things were starting to go down hill. The graphics of the game were passable, not the best but also not the worst we had seen on the 3DS. It introduced trainer custumasation and what we got to learn was anew form of evolution, Mega evolution, something everyone felt would be a substancial change to the games and how you play them from then onward. Which ended up not being the case at all. Mega evolution, despite having been warmly resived by the fanbase, got kicked in the same genoration, a lot of the game ended up feeling less memorable and the only thing that really seemed to have left a mark on the games in a whole was the inclusion of the new fairy type.
Was that worth buying a 3DS for? Eh debateable now but at the time a lot of people thought it would be.
So where does this leave Sword and Shield? Gigantamax? Very clearly a gimick, who knows how long that's gonna stick around? Character custumazation got improved? Neat but not a game macking thing. Graphics are better compared to other pokemon games? Well yeah but compared to what we have established as a standard for switch games? Kinda not at all. Animations? Again same thing, which is really jaring seeing the statements the devs made beforhand. Some of it looks like a terribly unfinished game. Cooking? We had cooking minigames in the past. Pokemon camp? Again a extension of past concepts? Pokemon jobs? A neat idea but a reason to buy this game? No. The legendaries? We got the least amount of info on them. Starter evolutions? We didn't even get them offically revealed. All we really got offically were fancy shots of new trainers and honestly a extremly limited amount of official pokemon reveals.
If it hadn't been for the leaks people would have had to make the decision to buy these games almost entirely blind.
Then there is the pokedex situation.
I personally think quiet a bit of their reasoning as to why so many pokemon aren't in it seems dishonest or at the very least not entirely true. Looking at the animations in the game alone and you get the feeling of "really? That's what they hyped up as a justification." But looking futher into it and you get a feeling where their 'stuning animation' really was put to use. This game is gem packed with gimicks that look and feel over produced compared to the rest of the game, rather then making the entire game feel more visually polished it's these things like pokemon camp, that don't have a baring to the over all game experience, that get fun new animation.
And while you can say what you want about you not being able to get all pokemon in other pokemon games too, 44% of the already established pokemon missing, including several fan favorites and former starters? That's abysmal. You can't talk this pretty yall.
I originally wondered why Nintendo talked about this in the first place and now it's clear to me, they couldn't get away with not adressing this and finding some sort of excuse. This isn't a small number of pokemon missing, this isn't 10-15%, it's almost half of them.
And that leaves you wonder? Is this game worth buying a switch? Well. No. Absolutely not. You guys have to realize this and I mean this as objectivly as possible:
Pokemon is no longer a handheld, it is a consol game now. Not only is the game system it is on dubble the price of the usual hand helds pokemon would come out on, there are aditional fees you have to pay to be able to play online. The switch was suppose to have you be able to enjoy consol games on the go, not hand held games on the big screen. And for that Pokemon just didn't deliver in the same manner other game franchises have.
And for Pokemon, having been a system selling game in the past, this is infact very disapointing, especially for people who might prematurely have bought a switch specifically for pokemon or were hoping to do so and now feel like they have been wasting their time.
Now this is not to say you can't enjoy these games, if you find joy in them that's great for you. I'm not here to judge you or call you stupid or blame you for buying the games. This is not what this is about.
However we need to awknowledge that the criticism uttered against this game is not unfounded and that this very much is showing a lot of red flags in regards to how Nintendo and Gamefreak are managing these games.
Closing your eyes and pretending everything is fine and everyone are just haters and Nintendo did nothing wrong is not going to help anybody. Especially when the issues here are clear, this game should have been developed by a way bigger team with more experience in consol games and with a bigger time window rather then having to rushed out for the christmas sales.
37 notes · View notes
gregoiresy · 5 years
Link
(Source: Arcusant, via: Alone)
1 note · View note
Text
Case Study 1: Industry Usage of GIS Select a case study of GIS benefitting an organization from GIS-related magazines, the industry press or academic literature that was published within the last three years. Several trade relevant trade magazines are: Directions Magazine, WhereNext (Esri), ArcUser (Esri), ArcNews (Esri), ArcWatch (Esri), GPS World, URISA Journal, MIT Technology Review, and Wall Street Journal. Other sources of information are in the rich electronic journal resource of the Armacost Library. This assignment requires the student to (1) choose a business within an industry of focus, (2) learn how GIS’s are used within the chosen industry, (3) learn which other geospatial technologies are also typically coupled with the GIS, (4) for the business chosen, learn about how that firm has implemented a GIS application, and (5) propose, for that firm, how a new geospatial application can be used to support customers, a business goal, or strategic advantage. Bring in concepts from the GeoB textbook as appropriate. Write a report to describe the benefits and/or difficulties/disadvantages that could occur from the implementation of this new geospatial application. Typical length is 3 pages and must include the reference and citations in APA format. Please include an electronic copy (pdf/jpg screenshots) of the selected article with your submissio
Case Study 1: Industry Usage of GIS Select a case study of GIS benefitting an organization from GIS-related magazines, the industry press or academic literature that was published within the last three years. Several trade relevant trade magazines are: Directions Magazine, WhereNext (Esri), ArcUser (Esri), ArcNews (Esri), ArcWatch (Esri), GPS World, URISA Journal, MIT Technology Review, and Wall Street Journal. Other sources of information are in the rich electronic journal resource of the Armacost Library. This assignment requires the student to (1) choose a business within an industry of focus, (2) learn how GIS’s are used within the chosen industry, (3) learn which other geospatial technologies are also typically coupled with the GIS, (4) for the business chosen, learn about how that firm has implemented a GIS application, and (5) propose, for that firm, how a new geospatial application can be used to support customers, a business goal, or strategic advantage. Bring in concepts from the GeoB textbook as appropriate. Write a report to describe the benefits and/or difficulties/disadvantages that could occur from the implementation of this new geospatial application. Typical length is 3 pages and must include the reference and citations in APA format. Please include an electronic copy (pdf/jpg screenshots) of the selected article with your submissio
Case Study 1: Industry Usage of GIS
Select a case study of GIS benefitting an organization from GIS-related magazines, the
industry press or academic literature that was published within the last three
years. Several trade relevant trade magazines are: Directions Magazine, WhereNext (Esri),
ArcUser (Esri), ArcNews (Esri), ArcWatch (Esri), GPS World, URISA Journal, MIT
Technology Review, and Wall…
View On WordPress
0 notes
kissedhim · 6 years
Note
any blog recommandations?
@straig @arcuse @no-stalgico @te-mpt @captivity @fhlur
1 note · View note
bellafragolina · 2 years
Note
Ingo triplets would likely work in gears station as subway masters in the Battle Subway.
In Gear Station you have the single battle station where one of his sons work at it and then the double team battle line where both of his sons are at.
His daughter?
On the train line that leads straight to Pokémon League where the the elite four and champion are at on a bullet train she designed herself.
Everyone that has battle her has advice that they always say to anyone that decides to go on her train to battle her.
(This is people thinking that all of the triplets are male just to be clear, they don’t know that she’s a girl.)
“Run”
“Just walk to the Pokémon League it would be easier then battling him.”
“He’s just like his uncle Emmet.”
“No, he’s got even worse then him.”
“The Galvantula, oh Arcuse, the Galvantula.”
*crying in fear at the mention of her name*
Needless to say she has got quite a reputation.
lmaoooooo
still tricking people even in the modern day. nobody knows who they're battling, because who's to say the name the kid gave wasn't a lie? hell, who's to say they're not the daughter just dressed up and hidden??
queen behavior. we love it, and we love to see it, and i am her biggest fan. where's the merch, gear station. where is it? i want grown men to weep from the name in a nice font across my shirt
~Renee
5 notes · View notes
aurianneor · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
What world do we live in?
ESRI - Making a Meaningful Map: http://www.esri.com/news/arcuser/0911/making-a-map-meaningful.html
Map projection: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Map_projection
Flag of the United Nations: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_the_United_Nations
Boston public schools map switch aims to amend 500 years of distortion (the video is quite fun): https://www.theguardian.com/education/2017/mar/19/boston-public-schools-world-map-mercator-peters-projection
To order one of the “planisphères renversantes” from an over-passionate anti-imperialist: http://les-volets-jaunes.org/planispheres-renversantes/envoi-postal
For the article in French, click here: https://aurianneor.tumblr.com/post/167486249545/dans-quel-monde-vivons-nous-esri-making-a
Retournons-nous: https://aurianneor.tumblr.com/post/185834980780/retournons-nous-retournez-vous-et-prenez-une
Turn: https://aurianneor.tumblr.com/post/185904858185/turn-look-back-and-take-a-picture-of-the-earth
3 notes · View notes
soluse · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
https://www.instagram.com/p/BdDQqJeAgTL
85 notes · View notes
sou-art-of-data · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
https://www.esri.com/news/arcuser/0110/cartograms.html
This map distorts the world so that the entire map has the same population density. It allows us to see what areas have the most people and, by overlaying other information, we can easily find out about the lifestyles of people from all over the world. 
- Chase Hyma
0 notes
pokemongodarceus · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Arcuse power
2 notes · View notes
verwondering · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
@arcuse in het SMAK.
19 notes · View notes
geone-ws · 5 years
Text
#ArcGIS API for #Python Core Concepts: #Python, APIs, and REST
https://www.esri.com/about/newsroom/arcuser/arcgis-api-for-python-core-concepts-python-apis-and-rest/
0 notes