Atlas & Gazetteer
Series Press Quotes"
And for the angler or outdoorsman, nothing gives you the information you need more quickly, completely or accurately than a DeLorme Mapping Co. State Atlas & Gazetteer."—Fly Rod & Reel December 7, 1998
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And if you can afford only one book this year, make it a DeLorme Atlas & Gazetteer, $16.95…They’re indispensable, containing not only the most detailed road maps available but also summaries on parks, forests, geologic features, bicycling and hiking trails, campgrounds, canoe routes, wildlife sites, factory tours, historic sites, art museums, boat trips, hunting areas, scenic drives and fishing spots. Don’t leave home without it."—St. Paul Pioneer Press November 29, 1998
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For more details than you can ever use in one lifetime, the DeLorme series of Atlas & Gazetteer maps are absolutely the best thing going. They combine the detail of a U.S. Geological Survey topographic map with the convenient packaging of a conventional road atlas. Each DeLorme book covers one state, and most states are now available, with more in the works."—San Francisco Chronicle July 24, 1998
"Nearly every outdoorsman has to have a sackful of maps. You need road maps to get where you're going, local maps to find what you’re looking for when you get there, topographical maps to get the lay of the land, plus other maps or brochures showi ng locations of boat ramps and hiking and biking trails.
"The Georgia Atlas & Gazetteer by DeLorme takes care of all the above and more, covering everything from interstates to pig paths."
—The Atlanta Constitution May 31, 1998
"The Texas Atlas & Gazetteer, from DeLorme Mapping in Yarmouth, Maine, also includes comprehensive street maps for 100 cities and towns. It is by far the most complete map resource available for t he Lone Star State. The back county detail in the Texas Atlas & Gazetteer is truly astonishing, including even the most remote back roads; the maps also pinpoint rivers and streams, dams and lakes, boat ramps, campgrounds and campsites, railroa ds, airports and landing strips, unique natural features and wildlife viewing sites. And, they clearly identify forest, public lands for hunting, other state and national lands, rangeland and agricultural use areas, scrubland, and military reservations. T he urban coverage is equally impressive."
—Houston Tribune April 1998
"Perch fishing has begun on the Eastern Shore, where the crucial piece of equipment isn't a lure or rod or particular bait, but a book. The Maryland/Delaware Atlas and Gazetteer (DeLorme Mapping, Y armouth, Maine), to be specific, which is worth every penny of the $16.95 price when you start wandering back roads looking for the headwaters of creeks called Tuckahoe, Wye, Choptank, Corsica, Blackwater, etc."
—Washington Post March 15, 1998