The Department of Geography and Anthropology Map Collection includes maps representing several subject areas.
The Cartographic Information Center collection contains copies of historical maps
and charts dating to the 1600s. Most of the pre-1860 map and chart images depicting
Louisiana in the collection are photocopies or reduced negatives of materials in the
National Archives. These materials focus on the Louisiana Gulf Coast and the Mississippi
River with sporadic coverage elsewhere.
The original historical nautical charts showing the Louisiana Gulf Coast date to 1860
while the holdings of charts depicting the Mississippi River bird foot delta range
from 1837 to date.
Over the past seventy years, the Cartographic Information Center and its predecessors
has amassed an excellent collection of pre-1940 U.S. Geological Survey topographic
maps depicting Louisiana as well as other states. In general, the pre-1940 U.S. Geological
Survey topographic maps cover the area south of the Mississippi-Louisiana border and
east of a line from Baton Rouge to Lafayette to the Gulf Coast.
A reference source for descriptions and locations of maps depicting Louisiana prior to 1900 is the book: Historical Maps of Louisiana: An Annotated Bibliography.
Online sources for images of historical maps and charts are listed on our Online Maps Digital Resource
Please note: The public is welcome to view historical maps and charts in the Reading Room. However, historical maps and charts do not circulate.
The West Indies Collection, as defined by the Cartographic Information Center, consists of the Greater and Lesser Antilles. Physical characteristics and land use information is available from topographic series maps of: Haiti 1:25,000; Jamaica 1:10,000 and 1:50,000; and the Cayman Islands 1:25,000. The collection also contains topographic maps of Puerto Rico, Trinidad, Tobago, Barbados, and islands grouped under the collective titles Leeward Islands, Windward Islands, and the French West Indies. Cultural and travel information is provided on Cuba, Dominican Republic, and the Virgin Islands. Geologic information is represented for the Caribbean region, Cuba, and the French West Indies. Political boundaries are illustrated for various individual islands as well as the West Indies and Caribbean region.