COMMERCIAL GEOGRAPHY 



By ALBERT PERRY BRIGHAM, Professor of Geology and Curator of the Mu- 

 seum in Colgate University. 8vo, cloth, 469 pages, illustrated with maps, $1.30. 



THE author seeks in this volume to set forth the principles 

 of commercial geography, offering, so far as space permits, the 

 more important facts about our own and other countries. These 

 principles are inductively approached through a study of the five 

 most significant of the world's commercial products, wheat, 

 cotton, cattle, iron, and coal. Particular emphasis is laid upon 

 the commercial geography of our own country, only one third of 

 the book being apportioned to the treatment of foreign lands. 



In addition to the usual range of subjects, a chapter on water 

 resources deals with this highly essential phase of commerce. 

 Chapters on Concentration of Industry, Centers of General 

 Industry, Transportation, Communication, and the Relations 

 of Government to Commerce mark the permanence and edu- 

 cational value of geographical relations as compared with 

 changing statistics. 



GEOGRAPHIC INFLUENCES IN AMER- 

 ICAN HISTORY 



By ALBERT PERRY BRIGHAM. i2mo, cloth, 366 pages, illustrated, $1.25. 



Outlines for " Geographic Influences in American History" 

 i2mo, paper, 34 pages, 10 cents. 



SHOWING how the evolution of the American people has 

 depended upon the physical features of the country. 



FROM TRAIL TO RAILWAY THROUGH 

 THE APPALACHIANS 



By ALBERT PERRY BRIGHAM. i2mo, cloth, 188 pages, with maps and 

 illustrations, 50 cents. 



THE story of the great roads across the Appalachians, telling 

 where they are, why they run as they do, and what their history 

 has been. 



195 b 



GINN AND COMPANY PUBLISHERS 



