{ "culture": "en-US", "name": "Map_MIL1", "guid": "8BA4E49E-663A-407A-B97C-6875A287854F", "catalogPath": "", "snippet": "", "description": "

This is a database of reports of extreme social-ecological events in colonial Mexico spread across about 660 unique geographic sites, including approximate locations of some 'unspecified sites' where the geographic center of the state or region was used. Geographic locations are, mostly, specified and precisely located. The database uses relational classes to link sites with reports (source records) and with events (specific social-ecological phenomena in specific geographic sites). Currently, there are more than 7,000 unique events with more than 11,000 reports. Social-ecological events are classified into thirteen event-types: abundance, church response, cold, crisis, dry, epizootic, geophysical, hot, illness, scarcity, state response, storm, and wet.<\/SPAN><\/P><\/DIV><\/DIV><\/DIV>", "summary": "", "title": "Map_MIL1", "tags": [], "type": "Map Service", "typeKeywords": [ "Data", "Service", "Map Service", "ArcGIS Server" ], "thumbnail": "thumbnail/thumbnail.png", "url": "", "extent": [ [ -113.704122040997, 15.3202616735855 ], [ -86.7932558498894, 31.7399499999254 ] ], "minScale": 0, "maxScale": 1.7976931348623157E308, "spatialReference": "WGS_1984_Web_Mercator_Auxiliary_Sphere", "accessInformation": "In 2020, data were digitized, cleaned, geolocated, and structured within a GIS by Brad Skopyk. Data derived from multiple archival and published sources, especially _Desastres agrícolas en México_ (2003), compiled by Virginia García Acosta et al.", "licenseInfo": "

The authors of the Ecology of Crisis data want to ensure free and open accessibility to our research and to the project data for the broader scientific community, the efficient transfer of information between collaborators, and the secure archiving of primary data. Scholars, teachers and other interested parties may download some or all of the datasets under Creative commons license without limitation. <\/SPAN><\/P>

Please cite as:<\/SPAN><\/P>

Skopyk, Bradley, and David Mixter. \"The Ecology of Crisis - Geolocating health and ecology in Mexican history,\" Binghamton University Libraries, https://digitalprojects.binghamton.edu/s/ecocrisis/page/home<\/SPAN><\/P><\/DIV><\/DIV><\/DIV>" }