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         North Carolina Cities & Communities Geography:     more detail
  1. Sorting Out the New South City: Race, Class, and Urban Development in Charlotte, 1875-1975 by Thomas W. Hanchett, 1998-08-10
  2. Political Terrain: Washington, D.C., from Tidewater Town to Global Metropolis by Carl Abbott, 1999-06-28

1. Orange County, North Carolina - Info, Facts, Communities On Key To The City
north carolina. History of north carolina get details on north carolina's cities, restaurants, nightlife, history lens of north carolina's diverse geography, geology, plants and
http://www.usacitiesonline.com/ncorangecounty.htm
Orange
County
Sponsor Orange County North Carolina Index Communities The Cities and communities of Orange County, North Carolina *
Buckhorn Caldwell Carr Carrboro Cedar Grove Chapel Hill Cheeks Efland Eno Hillsborough Schley
*This list of cities may not be complete If you have information about any of these unlinked communities, please send it to us and we will add a page for that community. Return to top Location: Centrally located between Raleigh and Greensboro at the merge Interstates 40 & 85, Centrally located between Raleigh and Greensboro at the merge Interstates 40 & 85. A portion of the county includes the well-known "Triangle" area. Nearby Counties to Orange County are: Alamance, Caswell, Person, Durham, Wake and Chatham Orange County Official Site The county seat of Orange County is Hillsborough Orange County/Economic Development
Hillsborough/Orange County Chamber of Commerce

121 West Margaret Lane, Hillsborough NC 27278
e-mail: info@hillsboroughchamber.com
Phone: (919) 732-8156
Fax: (919) 732-4566 Chapel Hill/Orange County Visitor's Center
Population Size: 412 square miles Median Age: Average housing price: Per Capita Income: Median Income History White settlers mainly from Pennsylvania moved into the area of Hyco, Eno and Haw Rivers, the population in the area swelled from 1,100 in 1752 to 4,000 in 1753. The County was officially founded in 1852.

2. Geography World (US Cities)
Access some of the best educational information on specific US cities. US cities. All City Links for 2002! 25 000 communities profiled. LookSmart information on 71 US cities Census. Syracuse. north carolina. Durham. Fayetteville. Raleigh. north Dakota
http://members.aol.com/bowermanb/cities.html
US Cities
Select by state from table below
For alphabetical listing of all available cities, click here.
AL AK AZ ... Best Places to Live, 2000 - from Money.com
Cities Unlimited
- click on state for list of cities
Cities in the United States of America

Cities From Space Collection
- NASA
ePodunk
- 25,000 communities profiled
LookSmart
- information on 71 US Cities
Profiles of the 50 Largest Cities of the United States

Sprawl City
- urban sprawl in US
US Cities: 2000
- from Demographia
US Cities by Density: 2000
- from Demographia USA CityLink Home Page - Links to US Cities USA Urbanized Land: 2000 Census - Demographia Alabama Huntsville Mobile Montgomery Alaska Anchorage Juneau Arizona Flagstaff Phoenix Tuscon Yuma Arkansas Little Rock California Bakersfield Concord Los Angeles Orange County ... Silicon Valley Colorado Colorado Springs Denver Pueblo Connecticut Hartford New Haven Delaware Dover Wilmington District of Columbia Washington DC Washington DC Sightseeing Map Florida Ft. Lauderdale

3. Carolina Locator Map (showing Major Cities)
HOOKERTON, north carolina A SMALL COMMUNITY Professor of geography at East carolina University, Greenville, north carolina many small north carolina communities, Hookerton has
http://www.carolinanow.com/citymap.htm
Carolina Locator Map select a city name from the MAP to go to the region in which the city is located - or - select from our LIST of Carolina Areas
For further information, select a city name from the above MAP to go to the region in which the city is located . . . or - select the initial letter of a community from our Community Index - A B C D ... X-Y-Z or - select from the following LIST of Carolina Areas C arolina comes in four flavors for your enjoyment: the Mountains , the Foothills , the Heartland (which includes the famous Sand Hills area), and the Coastal plain. While each of these regions has attractions related to the geography of the region, many attractions transcend the geography. Choose your favorite flavor - or sample some of all. We welcome you to Carolina!
Select your flavor from the LIST below, or, if you'd rather, Return to the MAP
The Mountains (select one)
Northern Mountains of Western North Carolina Central Mountains of Western North Carolina Southern Mountains of Western North Carolina Return to MAP
The Foothills (select one)
Northern Foothills of North Carolina Southern Foothills of North Carolina Upcountry of South Carolina Olde English District of South Carolina ... Return to MAP
The Heartland (select one)
Northern Heartland of North Carolina Southern Heartland of North Carolina Pee Dee Country of South Carolina Santee-Cooper Country of South Carolina ... Return to MAP
The Coastal Plain (select one)
Northern Coast of North Carolina Central Coast of North Carolina Southern Coast of North Carolina Grand Strand of South Carolina ... X-Y-Z ALPHABETIC INDEX TO CAROLINA COMMUNITIES

4. "The New Geography" By Joel Kotkin
more in absolute numbers than AfricanAmericans in north carolina. in the tech-richPiedmont, communities like Charlotte in many other Southern cities such as
http://www.newgeography.com/WSJ-Reis2.htm
WSJ.Com
Real Estate Journal
Immigration Spreads
Throughout Nation By J OEL K OTKIN
J ames Johnson was born in the rural south, in the tiny hamlet of Falkland, N.C., and grew up in a society sharply divided between black and white, much as it had been since well before the Civil War. "The only time we saw someone who was not black or white," the University of North Carolina business professor recalls, "was on TV or occasionally during the summer in the fields." Today Johnson, also a scholar at the Kenan Institute in Chapel Hill University, sees the emergence of a very different North Carolina - a state that is becoming one of the fastest growing immigrant hubs in the country. Drawn by the region's buoyant economy, new immigrants, largely from Central America and Mexico, have poured into the region, drastically changing its long-established racial character and adding to its basic economic vitality. Since the mid-1990s, immigration to North Carolina has risen by 73%, the largest such increase in the nation. Three of the top four regions in the country with the strongest increase in Latino immigration are in the state.
Fastest Growing Hispanic Cities
Hispanic Population and Growth (1990-2000)
Source: Census Bureau
Analysis by: William Frey The new immigration patterns have forced some demographers, such as the University of Michigan's William Frey, to reassess their 1990s analysis of America's changing racial profile. Formerly Frey saw America as divided between immigrant "magnets", such as Los Angeles and New York, and areas like Las Vegas and North Carolina, that were primarily luring domestic migrants.

5. "The New Geography" By Joel Kotkin
Nerdstans are the new technology communities like Irvine, California, Research Triangle,north carolina and the the renaissance of older cities such as
http://www.newgeography.com/Henton_review.htm
Why Place Still Matters in the Digital World By Doug Henton
H
ere is a book that should be required reading by every regional steward in America. Joel Kotkin, a senior fellow at Pepperdine University who writes a monthly column on "Grassroots Business" for the New York Time s, make the strong case for why place still matters in the digital world. His paradoxical message is: " The more technology frees us from the tyranny of place and past affiliation, the greater the need for individual places to make themselves more attractive." Kotkin colorfully illustrates his point with a rich range of interesting examples from communities across America. What matters today is talent, quality of life and an entrepreneurial environment, not low costs and access to raw materials. Kotkin’s law: Wherever knowledge workers cluster, in small towns or big cities that is where wealth will accumulate. Knowledge workers want good places to live. So places better get busy trying to create livable communities attractive to knowledge workers. Kotkin points out two trends that reinforce this urban renaissance. Immigration has transformed the landscape of most America cities. According to Kotkin, this has been a good thing- adding to the talent pool, creating urban vitality and promoting cross-cultural trade. A second trend has been the rise of creative services and the emerging cultural industrial complex in cities. He makes the case that "The cultural intensive nature of knowledge value production draws on a different, often younger, demographic base that is more attracted to a distinctly urban environment."

6. North Carolina
Study maps of the geography, cities, population and north carolina Department of CommerceSearch for business climate, film industry, people, and communities.
http://cess.wcu.edu/jamaica/nc.html
North Carolina
History of North Carolina
E ducation System in North Carolina Economy History of North Carolina North Carolina Colony
Learn about North Carolina's colonial history by browsing a collection of primary sources and histories. History Museums in North Carolina
Learn about collections, events and special programs at history museums in North Carolina. North Carolina in the Civil War
Find an archive of documents that relate to North Carolina and the war. Find voting results, unit musters, biographies, and
significant sites. North Carolina State Troops
Resource devoted to finding information about Confederate and Union soldiers from North Carolina offers links to histories and
photographs. North Carolina - General Guides
Browse photos and get details on North Carolina's cities, restaurants, nightlife, history and landmarks. Charlotte, North Carolina - History and Heritage
Details Charlotte, North Carolina's founding, history, and genealogy. North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences
North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences - The Southeast's largest Natural History Museum looks at the natural world through the distinct lens of North Carolina's diverse geography, geology, plants and animals. N.C. Div. Archives and History

7. Southside Region: Geography Of Virginia
the counties and cities along the north carolina border were 92, there were nearly50 communities that lost was also unequal (counting the cities and counties
http://www.virginiaplaces.org/regions/14southside.html
@import url(../styles/base.css);
Southside Region
Southside is traditionally defined as the region south of the James River, east of the Blue Ridge, west of Tidewater, and north of No' Carolina. In the early 1700's the colonial governors were accused of favoring development of the region north of the James River, and "Southside" was the frontier at Southampton and Brunswick counties. Governor Spottswood built Fort Christianna, but he purchased land in the Rapidan/Rappahannock watershed and started his Germanna colony there. If you accept the James River and North Carolina boundaries, then the northern and southern edges of Southside are relatively easy to define. However, the residents of Chesterfield and Powhatan counties (and even Petersburg, Colonial Heights, and Dinwiddie) might prefer to be classified as part of the Richmond-centered "capital region" now.
Sunlight on the Southside (1934) starts with:
The title chosen for this work, makes appropriate some explanation of what is meant by "The Southside." The Southside is territory on the south side of James River but just exactly what area is referred to when the term is used is not always clear.
After multiple efforts to clarify the region's boundaries, the author concluded with:

8. Economic Statistics: Geography Of Virginia
Virginia BeachNewport News (north carolinaVirginia); Richmond including thoseindependent cities in Virginia last item suggests that communities seeking to
http://www.virginiaplaces.org/econ/industries.html
@import url(../styles/base.css);
Bureau of Economic Analysis Statistics
Acording to the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) in the Department of Commerce , three Virginia communities Alexandria, Arlington, and Fairfax (including Fairfax and Falls Church cities) - were in the Top 20 of the communities with the highest per capita incomes in 1997.
Oh, lots of counties that separated from Virginia in 1863 - Ritchie, Upshur, Monroe, West Virginia are ranked at the bottom, having the lowest per-capita income for 3110 Counties in the United States.
And did you know that, of the 2,629,000 households in Virginia, 92% have a telephone , while 46% have a computer and 28% were using the Internet in 1998? In addition, statistics are provided for the 7 MSA's and one Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Area (CMSA)/Primary Metropolitan Statistical Area (PMSA) region that include some portion of Virginia: The BEA Regional Facts ("Bearfacts") for 1996-1997 are organized by:

9. About The USA - Travel & Geography > Regions Of The United States
in many New England communities today and only factories and crowded cities is surprised. Kentucky Louisiana Mississippi north carolina South carolina
http://www.usembassy.de/usa/travel-regions.htm

Travel to the United States

The Regions of the United States New England The Mid-Atlantic The South The Midwest ... The West Americans often speak of their country as one of several large regions. These regions are cultural units rather than governmental units formed by history and geography and shaped by the economics, literature and folkways that all the parts of a region share. What makes one region different from another? A region's multicultural heritage as well as distinct demographic characteristics like age and occupation also make regions different and special. Within several regions, language is used differently and there are strong dialects. There are also differences in outlook and attitude based on geography. E-Texts Megalopolis The Bypassed East New England
Connecticut
Maine Massachusetts New Hampshir ... Vermont
New England has played a dominant role in American history. Until well into the 19th century, New England was the country's cultural and economic center. The earliest European settlers of New England were English Protestants who came in search of religious liberty. They gave the region its distinctive political format town meetings (an outgrowth of meetings held by church elders) in which citizens gathered to discuss issues of the day. Town meetings still function in many New England communities today and have been revived as a form of dialogue in the national political arena. New England is also important for the cultural contribution it has made to the nation. The critic Van Wyck Brooks called the creation of a distinctive American literature, in the first half of the 19th century, "the flowering of New England." Education is another of the region's strongest legacies. The cluster of top-ranking universities and colleges in

10. Notes From Fayetteville; North Carolina Under Friendly Fire
Pineland's imaginary geography in north carolina there are Like many in military cities,Fayetteville's people mainly relatives arrived and new communities grew
http://www.aaanet.org/press/lutz_c.htm

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Members in the News ... Administer a Listing Max Rows: Go to AAA Home March 8, 2002, Friday Originally Published in The New York Times March 8, 2002 EDITORIAL DESK
Notes From Fayetteville; North Carolina Under Friendly Fire
By Catherine Lutz ( Op-Ed ) 848 words FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. At a quiet rural crossroads 25 miles northwest of the Army's Fort Bragg, a local lawman shot two soldiers on a Special Forces training exercise two weeks ago Saturday, killing one. The deputy feared for his life when the soldiers dressed in flannel shirts and jeans and failing to identify themselves grabbed for an automatic rifle in their bag. The soldiers wrongly assumed that the sheriff was in Pineland with them, Pineland being the imaginary country where these exercises have taken place over the last 50 years. By the Army's and most locals' accounting, the problem was a simple miscommunication. But the accident raises questions about the size and scale, invisibility, and day-to-day home-front impact of America's military the largest armed force the world has ever seen.

11. Urban Nexus
of geography and Earth Sciences, University of north carolina heatsmith@email anew focus on Building Inclusive cities and communities, commissioning 12
http://www.cprn.com/family/Urban/files/Urban-2_e.htm
Urban Nexus
An e-bulletin of the Family Network of CPRN
Welcome to Urban Nexus , a monthly e-bulletin of policy research, news and events on cities and communities launched by Canadian Policy Research Networks (CPRN) in October 2002. Urban Nexus is for policy makers, researchers and interested members of the public seeking up-to-date information, from Canadian and non-Canadian sources, about new research on cities. To view archived Urban Nexus summaries on the CPRN Web site, simply click here: http://www.cprn.org/family/Urban/Default_e.htm November 13, 2002 – Cities and Poverty With roughly 80 percent of Canadians living in cities, Canada is now one of the most urbanized countries in the world. Our cities have tremendous potential to be cosmopolitan centres of knowledge-based production and idea-driven innovation. Indeed, Urban Nexus for October 2002 described a growing body of Canadian and international research demonstrating the inherent dynamism of the urban milieux. However, cities are also the spaces and places concentrating the greatest threats to social inclusion. The geographies of both prosperity and poverty in Canada are increasingly urban. This issue of Urban Nexus highlights leading-edge research exploring different facets of the complex problems of income inequality, social polarization, and spatial segregation in metropolitan regions.

12. Lane Community College Library - Geography And Map Links
and History Alaska Official Alaska's cities, Towns and Czech Republic) Charlotte,north carolina Charlottesville and Atlas of Canadian communities GeoNet World
http://www.lanecc.edu/library/don/geog.htm
Lane Community College Library
Geographic and Cartographic Resources: 760 Links about Places and Maps

This set of links includes places from all over the globe, as well as many links on cartography (maps). Links are arranged alphabetically, but to find all the resources on a particular area, use the Find button on your browser. Links are checked and verified regularly.

13. 1st Steps In The Hunt
or go directly to a list of cities. Partnerships with communities and newspapers bringpaid listings north carolinanorth carolina Career Employment Resource
http://www.interbiznet.com/hunt/geography.html
S P O N S O R S
  • RECRUITERS
  • EXECUTIVE
    SEARCH FIRMS
    Geographical Resources
  • Alabama Alabama Industrial Development Training
  • Alabama Professional Employment Network - Huntsville-based, non-profit, public service organization dedicated to matching job-seekers' capabilities with employers' needs
  • Arizona Arizona Careers Online
  • Arizona GetNet International - Employment - Employment Opportunities in Phoenix, Arizona and other areas
  • Asia KLA Instruments Corporation Employment - Job opportunities in all fields in the US, Asia Pacific and Europe
  • Asia TKO Personnel, Inc. - specializes in recruitment and careers in Japan and the Asia-Pacific region
  • Asia and Europe Working in Europe and America
  • Australia Employment Opportunities in Australia
  • Belgium, Brussels NOW - Network Operations Worldwide - Located in Brussels, the capital of Europe, N.O.W. is an organization dedicated to supplying professional candidates in the international arena
  • California California Access
  • California California Career and Employment Center
  • California, San Francisco BAMTA Job Bank
  • California, San Francisco
  • 14. Human Geography - American Cities
    Consider north carolina's Research Triangle, opened in 1959. In 48 of those cities,whites are no longer a buy plenty of guns and retreat to gated communities.
    http://geography.ou.edu/courses/1103bw/19-cities.htm

    Contents
    Introduction Human Evolution, Diffusion, and Character The Long Baseline: Hunters and Gatherers ... Pollution, Biodiversity, and Climate Change American Cities Rural America Cities Abroad Countrysides Abroad (View slides for this lecture. 19. American Cities THE CENTRAL CITY THE SUBURBS THE NEW URBANISM ASSESSING THE AMERICAN CITY We're coming, finally, to a sequence of four portraits of the world's humanized landscapes. That's what human geography is finally about. You could say that we're looking at pattern now, rather than process. Or you could say that we're looking at the visible consequences of all the activities we've been tracing. I want to begin with American cities, because they're the places we know best. What comes to mind with this topic? One thing is downtown, that cluster of skyscrapers that immigrants first saw from the decks of liners coming into New York's harbor. Now we mostly see downtown through a car or plane window, but it still grabs our attention. Around it, there is the huge penumbra of suburbia: freeways, arterial streets, curvilinear residential streets, commercial strips, a carpet of houses with backyard pools, and a scattering of bigger buildingsshopping centerss, college campuses, hospitals, stadiums, warehouses, and factories. Those are the tangibles. There's something else, too. Maybe it's excitement. Maybe it's fear. Maybe it's a sense of a world with nothing worth doing or seeing. Maybe it's some of each.

    15. Action Ideas For Cities And States - City And State Examples - Durham
    programs to innercity communities and create Recreation Center- World geography History north carolina Central University, Duke University, University of
    http://www.techpolicybank.org/durhamfullpage.html
    Home Contact Us Supporters Partners ... Print View
    Durham: City-wide Technology Enrichment Program (CTEP)
    Project Description
    City-wide Technology Enrichment Program (CTEP) is a city-initiated effort aimed at enriching the lives of Durham, North Carolina's residents by imparting computer skills. Launched in November 1999, the program operates from computer labs located within nine multi-purpose recreation centers maintained by the city of Durham's Department of Parks and Recreation. Classes are aimed at all age groups during weekdays, evenings, and weekends. The program involves over 30 partners from the public, nonprofit, and business sectors who have contributed their unique skills and knowledge toward the service of over 1,100 residents in the program's first year of operation. CTEP is funded by the city of Durham with less than $100,000, which was used to leverage over $1.2 million in additional services and products. Web Site www.ctepdurham.net Why Selected The Children's Partnership chose the City-wide Technology Enrichment Program (CTEP) as a model of city leadership in addressing the Digital Divide because of the following features:
    • The program shows what can be done in any city through vigorous city leadership;

    16. USIA - An Outline Of American Geography - Chapter 8
    took root in its agrarian communities and homesteads. but furniture manufacturingin north carolina and Virginia These two cities combined with the transport
    http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/GEO/geog08.htm
    An Outline of
    American Geography MAP
    CHAPTER 8
    THE DEEP SOUTH
      T he region of southern culturethe Deep South ( Map 7 : 33K)can be viewed as a geographic composite of beliefs, attitudes, patterns, habits, and institutions. Many of the early patterns and current changes are explicitly geographic; many others have geographic consequences. Strong differences exist within the South. The Gulf Coast, the southern highlands, the Georgia-Carolinas Piedmont, and many portions of the northern interior South each possess their own versions of southern culture. But they are also clear about the "southern-ness" they share. THE HERITAGE The earliest European colonization in America was commercial and exploitative. And the coastal plain south of Delaware Bay, especially that south of Chesapeake Bay, contained many areas that appeared ideal for agricultural exploitation. The long, hot summers, regular rainfall, and mild winters permitted settlers a selection of crops complementary to those grown in northern Europe. The large number of rivers that crossed the plain, navigable by small boats at least, allowed settlement to expand freely between the James River in Virginia and the Altamaha River in Georgia. Population densities remained low throughout most of the region, with urban concentrations larger than the village size limited to port cities (Norfolk, Virginia; Wilmington, North Carolina; Charleston, South Carolina; Savannah, Georgia) or the heads of navigation on the main rivers (Richmond, Virginia, and, later, Columbia, South Carolina, and Augusta, Georgia). The strong rural and agrarian elements of southern culture established a pattern that remained significant until after the mid-20th century.

    17. Guides To The Historic Architecture Of North Carolina
    counties and 51 towns and cities, and original the state and its communities, thebooks and complexity of western north carolina's geography, history, culture
    http://www.hpo.dcr.state.nc.us/guidebooks/guidebooks.htm
    Announcing completion ... of "a magnificent heritage cornucopia."
    Click on a book cover to link to the UNC Press page on the book and ordering information Link to state and county outline map showing areas covered by the three guides
    The North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office and the University of North Carolina Press are pleased to announce publication in May, 2003, of A Guide to the Historic Architecture of Piedmont North Carolina by Catherine W. Bishir and Michael T. Southern. The book is the third and final volume of a remarkable historical portrait that celebrates generations of human experience as mirrored in the historic architecture of one of the nation's oldest and most complex states. Together, the books succinctly and lucidly present over 5,000 places, with 1,200 photographs, location maps of sites in 100 counties and 51 towns and cities, and original regional maps showing historic patterns of transportation, settlement, and development. The full range of the state's architectural heritage is represented, from the simplest early houses to skyscrapers of the late 20th century. Concise, readible, and well-illustrated introductions to each region give context to individual buildings and places. Thorough indexes provide quick references to major historical themes, key examples of building types and styles, and the known works of architects and builders.
    Murray's Mill, Catawba County

    18. SAGE Publications - The Pentagon And The Cities
    Roger W. Lotchin, University of north carolina, Chapel Hill geography The Pentagonand the cities is the spending and its decline on specific communities. . .
    http://www.sagepub.com/book.aspx?pid=2143

    19. North Carolina's Hurricane History, By Jay Barnes. Chapter 11.
    north carolina's three costliest storms Hugo, Fran, and Floyd all visited chaos on noncoastal cities like Charlotte, Raleigh, and Greenville. Though inland communities of cities and
    http://www.ibiblio.org/uncpress/chapters/barnes_nchurr2001.html
    336 pp., 81/2 x 10, 276 illus., 45 maps, 3 tables $34.95 cloth
    ISBN 0-8078-2640-5 $19.95 paper
    ISBN 0-8078-4969-3
    Published: Spring 2001
    Add to cart

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    North Carolina's Hurricane History

    by Jay Barnes
    Chapter 11.
    The Next Great Storm
    We have built and are building below the level reached by past floods, none of which are as large as those that will occur. . . . The worst is yet to be. From Floods and Droughts: The Worst Are Yet to Be , by N.C. hydrogeologist Ralph Heath, 1978 Increased intense hurricane activity striking U.S. coastal areas is a more assured threat to the U.S. than that of earthquakes, greenhouse gas warming, and other environmental problems which are receiving comparatively much greater attention. From Gray, Landsea, Mielke, Berry, and Knaff, Discussion of Atlantic Basin Seasonal Hurricane Activity in 1995 As hurricane Floyd swept past Florida and turned toward the Carolinas near the peak of the 1999 tropical storm season, there was actually some cause for relief on the part of local officials and storm watchers along the Tar Heel coast. Though the storm clearly was headed their way, most observers were thankful that the once-mighty hurricane was weakening as it edged northward. Just days before it had been a strong category four, and fears of a Hazel- or Hugo-like catastrophe seemed to wane with each update from the National Hurricane Center. Floyd was coming ashore with heavy rains and destructive tides, but at least it was a weaker system as many viewed it; it would make landfall as

    20. Buddhism And North Carolina Geography
    The Tidewater region claims seven Buddhist communities, and nineteen Half of NorthCarolina's population is rural. places of worship outside citiesin rural
    http://www.unc.edu/ncbuddhism/page49.html
    B UDDHISM AND NORTH CAROLINA GEOGRAPHY Home
    Page
    Map: Buddhist Temples in NC History of ...
    Traditions
    s Temple
    Profiles
    Buddhism in America Links Temples by Location ...
    Resources

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