SOLSTICE: AN ELECTRONIC JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHY AND MATHEMATICS
http://www.imagenet.org
June, 2009
VOLUME XX, NUMBER 1
ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN
Founding Editor-in-Chief:
Sandra Lach Arlinghaus, University of Michigan;
Institute of Mathematical Geography (independent)
Editorial Advisory Board:
Geography.
Michael F. Goodchild, University of California, Santa Barbara
Daniel A. Griffith, Syracuse University
Jonathan D. Mayer, University of Washington (also School of Medicine)
John D. Nystuen, University of Michigan
Mathematics.
William C. Arlinghaus, Lawrence Technological University
Neal Brand, University of North Texas
Kenneth H. Rosen, A. T. & T. Bell Laboratories
Engineering Applications.
William D. Drake, (deceased), University of Michigan
Education.
Frederick L. Goodman, University of Michigan
Business.
Robert F. Austin, Austin Communications Education Services.
Book Review Editors:
Richard Wallace, University of Michigan.
Kameshwari Pothukuchi, Wayne State University
Web Design:
Sandra L. Arlinghaus
(with early input from William E. Arlinghaus).
Educational Technology:
Marc Schlossberg, University of Oregon
Ming-Hui Hsieh, Taiwan
Persistent URL: http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/handle/2027.42/58219
WebSite: http://www.imagenet.org
Electronic address: sarhaus@umich.edu
MISSION STATEMENT
The purpose of Solstice is to promote
interaction
between geography and mathematics. Articles in which elements of one
discipline
are used to
shed light on the other are particularly sought. Also welcome
are original contributions that are purely geographical or purely
mathematical. These may be prefaced (by editor or author) with
commentary suggesting directions that might lead toward the desired
interactions.
Individuals wishing to submit articles or other material should contact
an editor, or send e-mail directly to sarhaus@umich.edu.
SOLSTICE ARCHIVES
Back issues of Solstice are available on
the
WebSite of the Institute of Mathematical Geography,
http://www.imagenet.org
and at various sites
that can be found by searching under "Solstice" on the World Wide
Web.
Thanks to Bruce Long (Arizona State University, Department of
Mathematics)
for taking an early initiative in archiving Solstice using GOPHER.
PUBLICATION INFORMATION
To cite the electronic copy, note the exact time
of transmission from Ann Arbor, and cite all the transmission matter as
facts of publication. Any copy that
does not superimpose precisely upon the original as transmitted from
Ann Arbor should be presumed to be an altered, bogus copy of Solstice.
The
oriental rug, with errors, serves as the model for creating this
weaving
of words and graphics.