MAP RESEARCH BULLETIN NO. 6

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CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6
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RIFPUB
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R
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30
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November 9, 2016
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June 2, 1999
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1
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June 1, 1949
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Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005Ac08b1U01061-6 t_~hCoiJ?~., ~~ FOR THE ASSISTANT DIRECTOR FOR JOLLECTI3:N AND DISSEMINATION,CIA U. S. OFFICIALS ONLY MAP RESEARCH BULLETIN No. 6 Cr" SS CHANGED TO? 'r S C !!pprT RFVIFIAI.r ATF- NO CHANGE IN CLAS DFCLASSIFIFD CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005Adbc C IQ1,%LY Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 ' ' ' h r s ao a ~~ _. ,':rnt.ai-;s III OImal:on atler r: _ the na - tir)nal dolenst- of the 1 jnitecl State-, within -,Ie rneanin'u, (1 r 1.r F.:;pionae:e Act. :i0 U.S.C. 31 and 32, ~:- amended. it,:, transmission or the revelation of its con+r-n s in any manner to an unauthr rized person is prohit:,n.ed by law. Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 RESTRICTED MAP RESEARCH BULLETIN MR-s CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY JUNE 1949 RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080091-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 RESTRICTED TABLE OF CONTENTS I. New Administrative Divisions of Czechoslovakia ............. Page IL The Systematic Reorgasisatfcni of Brazilian Place Names ................. 7 M. Bioclitnatic Atlas of Schleswig-holstein .......19 IV. Map of the British-United States Zone and the Yugoslav Zone in the Free Territory c d Trieste ............... 28 MAPS Czechoslovak: Administrative Divisions, CIA 11229 ,e Free Territory of Trieste, CIA 10612 No e: This Bulletin' has not been coordinated with the intelli- gence org ,nizations of the Departments of State, Army, Navy, and the Air Force. RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : C1A-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/26: C'IA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 RESTRICTED NEW A D112 TRA DI'riSIONS OP CZECHOSLOVAKIA In an alleged attempt to give the people more direct participation in the government, the Czechoslovak Republic has been reorganizing the administrative divisions of the country. Beginning on 1 January 1949 the Republic was divided into nineteen ,kra~, a (departments, sing. kra) administered by ~kra national committees, and the three, historic provinces [zeme) that were administered from Praha (Prague), Brno, and Bratislava were dissolved. Provincial autonomy was liquidated gradually and was completed on 31 March 1949, Prior to 1938 the %dministrative divisions of Czecho Slovakia were as follows: der ma hoslovak Term English Equieaie:nt lot 11.11 Zeme Land or Province 2nd Spravai Okres Administrative ]District Samospr(vnd WSW Autonomous City SSoudni Okres) (judicial District) 3rd Obec Commune The additional term venkov was used to distinguish the saw rlvn4 mmsto from the s end okres that surrounded it, sInce the two carried the same speck c place name. The city of Plan (Pilsen), for example, was called Plzen-meato and the surrounding ckres P1zin-venkov (PlzAn county). In Slovakia the 1. See List of References at the end of article. ,RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005AO00100080001-6 11 Approved For Release I 999/09/268 F ,I ,D 7]@-0l 005A000100080001-6 jgnonymous term okolie was used tanstead of venkov. In the Czech Lands (Bohemia and Moravia-Silesia), oudni dkres was a division of the s rArxnt akres. About scent of the s %T-S n( okros were ivi a `oiro or more soudnn okres~v. anu aowes, a judicial division with feet nis- W4 functions, was not found in Slovakia. Before the dismemberment of Czechosloyakia, the country was divided into four zeme--Bohemia (Cechy), Moravia (Morava), Slovakia (8lovensko)-,-and the Carpatho-Ukraine or Ruthenia (Podkarpats Rus). After the war there were two major changes: (1) Ruthenia was ceded to the USSR, and (2) Silesia, (Slezsko) was given the status of zemd ~' (branch province) within the zemd and was 1oravia'- Siiesia (Morava a Siezako). In early 1948, the three z of Bohemia, Moravia-Silesia, and Slovakia contained a total of 244vn osy. The change from zeme to IgIft Is revolutionary because nineteen lira. a have replac` the three zeme and because the b darIIs o the is je, In some cases coat across the r Ies of the former zexn and okres . The most striking example Of this is the comn1 e1 obli ra. on of part of the centuries -old boundary between Bohemia and Moravia. (See map CIA 112211 at the front of this Bulletin.) In addition to the creation of the nineteen krae radical changes have been made in the boundaries and sees of e y. In the Czech Lands thirty-four new okres were estab- lislned, ten old ones abolished, and four had iar administrative seats- and (as a result) their names changed. In Slovakia eleven new ok s were created. These changes make the map of the political and judieiai. division of Czechoslovakia, published in 1948 (Itern 5 in List of References), almost wholly obsolete. 2- RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 RESTRICTED On the basis of available information, the new adminis- trative organization of Czechoslovakia is as follows: first order, , second orders qkres and statut rnf nndsto (statutory city, the same as the prewar samosa 's o ;and third order, a c (plural obee). The soadni o es s en completely elimi- nated. The administrative organization described above, how- ever, does not explain the peculiar, semi-autonomous position of Slovakia and its capital, Bratislava. It Is reported that the thirteen western kraJe are administered directly from Praha (Pragae), whereas remaining six are administered from Bratislava. Bratislava, in turn, is responsible to the central government in Praha. This would suggest that the Czech sds and Slovakia themselves are administrative divisions of an order higher than the kraj. The following table lists the kra a of Czechoslovakia and shows the number of minor ci ions each includes, its area, population, and density population. RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release I 999/09/ i 9-0l 005A000100080001-6 NEW CZECHOSLOVAK ADMDUSTRATI'VE ORGANIZZATION1 Number of Number of Pop. in Area in Density per AMLe okresy2 obce 000's sq. kmss. s . km. Czech Lands Praia. (Prague) 26-1 1596 2,001 9476 211 eesk4 Budejovice 15 1238 507 9230 55 Plzen (Pilsen) 12-1 1254 549 `1877 70 Karlovy Vary 10 712 301 4583 66 t1st1 nad Labem 13 785 622 4128 151 Liberec 11-1 649 481 4253 113 Hradec I lov4 14 947 557 5200 107 Pardubice 11 756 425 4287 98 jihlava 12 995 420 6604 64 Brno 18-1 958 931 7379 126 Olomouc 12-1 794 585 6214 94 Gottwaldov 11 526 594 5112 116 Ostrava 10-2 477 790 4528 175 Slovakia Bratislava 15-1 458 838 7518 112 Nitra 16 577 690 7966 87 Banska Rystrica 15 585 487 9265 52 Zilina 16 510 509 8269 62 Koiice 12-2 473 462 7440 62 Pre&ov 15 757 448 8496 53 1. Sources: Items .8, 9, 10, and 11 in List of References. 2. The first figure indicates the number of qt, The figure follow- Ing the dash (-) indicates the number of .stuhitarnf m9sta. The number of okresy in Slovakia are reliable esti ~ ~ -4- RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 RESTRICTED LiST OF REFERENCES MAPS 1. Zzechoslovakia Administrative and Political Division; 1:750,000; Vojenskl Zemepisny 16stav (Military Geographic Institute); 1931; photocopy in Czech and English; no grid or coordinates; CIA Call No. 45134. 2. r Neuen Grenzen der Tschechoslowakei (The New Boundaries of Czechoslovakia); 1:1.126,00-0; Deutsches Archly fur Landes-and Volksforschung (German Archives for Geographic and Anthropologic Research); 1938; in German; grid and coordi- nates with longitude measured from Ferro; CIA Call No. 32235. 3. Czechoslovakia; 1.1,000,000; ,rittsGeographical Section, General ` ; 1; stub coordinates, CIA Call No. 25017. 4. Administrativna Ste. Slovvenslm (Administrative Map of Slate ? ; ' ; o Pravda (Truth Publishing Rouse, Bratislava); 1947; in Slovak; stub coordinates; CIA Call No. 44713. 5. 7Politicki a Soudan Rozd6leni Ceskoslovenska Re 1 (Political an icia ivjs~ions the zec o epu lic); 1:800,000; Vo enskj Zenndpisn stay (Military Geographic institute); 1948; in Czech; stub coordinates; CIA Call No. 40377. DOCUMENTS 6. Z r& --St .tn o UJfadu Statistick+ ho (Reports - zechoslovak Nat.ona ce o"s +s , oim" e'~ Numbers 1-16, Praha., 1946. RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 RESTRICTED 7. Z ra (Reports), StAtny Planovacf a 5tatisticky Uradu (T'iova ational Planning and Statistical Office), Volume II, Number 1, Bratislava, 1947. 8. P (Praha), No. 280, 1 December 1948. (d Lice; official Communist newspaper.) 9. Rude Pravo, No. 16, 20 January 1949. 10. Rude Pravo, No. 17, 21 January 1949.. Y.I. RMy (Bratislava), No. 23, 28 January 1949. (T , official Slovak Communist newspaper.) RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/ fi-P79-01005A000100080001-6 THE SYSTEMATIC REORGANIZATION OF BRAZILIAN PLACE NAMES When plans were being made for the 1940 census of Brazil, the existing confusion concerning internal boundaries and the duplication of place names assumed new importance. Inaccurate knowledge of the boundaries made it impossible to plot census data accurately on maps and,. In many cases, the location of a specific place had become a natter of guess - work. As a result of the confusion,, Brazil initiated a nation- wide program for standardizing place names and defining boundaries. This program has now been in operation for more than ten years and two publications of major importance have been issued, The "Diviaa.o Territorial dos Estados Unidos do Brasil" of 1940 includes all changes that were effective for the period 1939-43, and "Divas .o Territorial do Brasil" of 1945 includes additional changes in force during the period 1944-48. With the aid of these two volumes, it is now possible to identify new place names that have appeared on maps of Brazil during the last twelve to fifteen years. Only a few copes of the 1940 and 1945 list of changes, however, are available in the United States, and no description of the program for stabiliz- ing Brazilian place names has heretofore been published in the United States. Before the new program went into effect, e$ do (state):i boundaries were fairly well established, but mun ci to (county) boundaries were inaccurate and confused. In many cases, the limits of municlpios were not known even to their own officials. Because Brazilian settlements had developed at widely separated points along the coast, the efforts of the central government to Wherever possible Brazilian administrative units are identified in parentheses by the nearest English equivalent. The equivalents are not necessarily accurate translations of the Brazilian terms. RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-0I 005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/2i~4AiC~;L9-01005A000100080001-6 establish boundaries and standards of nomenclature were never effectively enforced. In addition, many areas had inherited confused patterns of overlapping boundaries based on long histories of large autonomous estates, personal properties, faulty deeds, obsolete church records, and local tradition. Occasional efforts bed been made to clear up specific problems$ but no nationwide program was established until the late 1930 s.1 With the needs of the forthcoming census in mind, the President of the Instituto Braziletro de Geografia e Estatistica. (Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics) recommended to the President of the Republic that national measures be taken toward standardization of place names and boundaries. These recommendations were based primarily on resolutions passed by the Conseiho Nacional de Estatistica (National Coan- cli of Statistics), a division of the Institutoe (See Appendix A for pertinent selections.) On the basis of the recommendations and other support- ing evidence, National Decree -Law No. 311 was passed on March 2, 1938, which provided in detail for a systematic pro- gram for standardizing boundaries and place names throughout Brazil. The arttcles of the Decree -Law are given in Appendix B. Further study by the C onselho Nacional de Geografia (National Council of Geography), another division of the Instituto, brought to light additional complications regarding place names and led 1. Changes in place names that were effected before the adoption of the nationwide program are not considered in this report. In addition, many of the changes that appeared in the mid.-1930's were merely changes in spelling following the adoption oi[ simplified spelling by Brazil. Sec: A.D'A. Marchant, Brazilian Spelling and Place Names, Pan American L.IM iJ Du, 1, in, May 1943, pp. 253-261. RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 RESTRICTED to the presentation of a resolution (No. 61) on July 24, 1939. Its first and most important provision concerned the elimina?- tion of duplication of place names not only within states but within the country as a whole. It also set up several criteria for deciding can the acceptability of place names (see Appendix C). The provisions of this resolution were presented too late to be incorporated into the first list of changes published in 1940, but were used In the preparation of the 1945 list. Because of the enormity of the task of standardizing place names and boundaries, changes may be made over an extended period of years. Revised lists of official place names may be published at five-year intervals if needed, and all place names appearing in the. list are to be used for a five- year period. At the end of this period a revised list may be published in the light of more recent investigations. This procedure will continue until boundaries and place names throughout the country have been stabilized. To date, the program has been highly successful and credit for success should be given primarily to the Institf to Brra.siletro de Geografta e Estatfsttca, which studied the situ- ation thoroughly, formulated requirements, and presented them for enactment Into law. The enactment of Decree-Law No. 311 has been described as ""a landmark in the cartographic history of Brazil." ""Divislo Territorial dos Estados Unidos do Brasil" published in 1940 represents the culmination of three years of effective effort onn the part of the government to establish a workable system of territorial limits and nomenclature. The volume includes: (1) A list giving the number of minor administrative and judicial subdivisions in each of the administrative divisions in Brazil. -9- RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 RESTRICTED (2) Regional tables listing for each of the states the judicial (comarca, termo, and &g r, ) divisions and admin~ttve municipto and dam) divisions. Column 1 lists all of the coornarcas; column 2 the t,~ rmos within each comer , c , column 3 the m within each termo; column 4 the d tr tos within each munici io; and column 5 the sons within each distrito that is subdivided to this extent. (3) An alphabetical listing of all distrito? whose names have been changed, giving both the old and new forms cross -referenced to each other, and the names of the states in which they are located. (4) An alphabetical guide to administrative seats of dish, munici sins, tee , and co seas, and the names of the states in which they are located. The full texts of forty-six resolutions and decree-laws an which the program is formulated are given in the appendix. State and federal enabling laws are presented in two tables. According to law, each munici to was also required to publish a map of its area based rds set by the C onselho National de Geografta. These maps incorporated the new place names and showed the boundaries that were to be considered as official for the period of five years from 1939 through 1943. The second list, "Divf aao Territorial do Brasil," was published in 1945 and contains the champs that were to be in effect for the period 1944-48. The volume includes the names from the 1940 list that had been accepted, as well as now changes. Approximately 125 munici ios were added to the 1,574 presented in the first list, and tie changes in the first list, and the -10- RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/ja?;5{j79-01005A000100080001-6 dis r, changes in the second list bring into the thousands the total number of new 1at o names approved since the initiation of the program. This number includes complete changes as well as variations that were made to distinguish between dtstritos with identical names. r "Bivisao Territorial do Brasil" does not duplicate all the information given in "Divisgo Territorial dos Estados Unidos do Brasil." Consequently both must be used in an investigation of Brazilian place names. Between the two, it is possible to determine the current official name for every musnici o and distrito in Brazil. In both cases the names of the a aiainistrative seats are the same as those of the corres- ponding administrative divisions. A second set of maps was required from those munict ios in which any changes had been made since the publication of 1940 listing. The new maps incorporated the place names and the boundaries that were to be considered official for a period of five years, after which further revisions may be made. About half of the anunicipio maps had to be revised. All official maps published in Brazil since the passage of Decree -Law No. 311 carry the accepted place names and boundaries as of the five -year period in which they were issued. The most detailed information appears on the of'fical muntci io maps. These vary in scale from 1:25,000 to 1:1,000,,666, but the majority are at 1:100,000. Those of the first and second series that have been received in Washington are on file at the Army Map Service. A more generalized presentation of the 1,700 or more munici los of Brazil is given on the Cart arse de Bivis o do Brasil, 1:5,200,000, October 1945, CIA Call 2 435. T e most recent general map of Brazil showing the new names and boundaries is the IVlaiaa do Brasil, 1:5,750,000, 1945, CIA Call No. 30791. All of these maps were published by the Instituto Brasiletro de Ceografta e Esfat(sttca. RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 199f,11I&JtDP79-01005A000100080001-6 APPENDIX A Provisions pertinent to this report selected from the Resolu- tions presented by the President of the Instituto Brassileiro de Geografia e Esstat stica to the President of the Republic, on Dec. 15, 1937. (Free translation) This Resolution provides for: a. A uniform date for revising territorial organizaticsn throughout the country, at regular intervals before each regional and general census (every 5 and 10 years, respectively) b. The establishment of precise, logical area limits, based on geographical features easily identified, thus avoiding the formerly-used vague lines, such as property boundaries c. A uniform system of nomenclature, to avoid confusion between divisions of the same category having the same names, and between divisions and their respective seats d. A systematic superposition of administrative and judicial divisions so that the boundaries will coincide and judicial seats will be consistent with the admilnis - trative seats within these boundaries e. A definition of cidade (city) and vila (tmvu) according to special criteria set by law f. A unification of the territorial extensions of the adminis- trative and judicial divisions to avoid extra-territorial jurisdiction or the possession of aeon-contiguous areas g. The exact definition of the area of any new entities (distritos and nici tos) created, indicating the divi- it-nss rom which a were created, and describing their boundaries exactly -12 - Approved For Release 199Cft*&DP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 19 g%Utq~h-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 APPENDiX B Articles from Decree-Law No. 311, March 2, 1938 (Free translation) Article 1. The provisions of this law will be observed in the territorial divisions of the country. 2. Munici ios will be comprised of one or more ftstritos forming a continuous area. When necessary, the stems will be subdivided into zonag Paragraph 1. These zonas may have special names. 3. The seat of a munici to has the category of cidade, and it gives t name to the muntetvto. 4. A d is designated by the name of its seat, and .kito when it is not large enough to be a cilcde, the seat has the category of ylia. Paragraph 1. A dpi o will have only one . 5. One or more muntc tos, forming a continuous area., form a tern o uc, a j , whose seat will be the most important cia de in the area, and the ctdade gives its name to the area. 6. One or more termos form a cow, on the same basis as outlined in Article 5. 7. The areas of cotes and tee will be defined by the smaller areas Chat coiastitute them. When a new muntct to is formed, it will be defined by the distr tos which constitute its parts, and its area will be described giving both the old and new limits of the RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release I 999/09/26 ' X b~ 0l 005A000100080001-6 distritos of which it is formed. Likewise, no new isctri o will be formed without defining exactly the prey d Ito jurisdiction of its area, and describing the limits of each of the distritos which border on it. 8. Distrito and munici to boundaries will be defined by geo etic lines between easily identified points or geographical features. 9. No division will include any area lying within a neighboring division. 10. There will not be more than one cLdade or vila with the same name in one state. 11. No new distrtto will be created without previously delimiting the urban and suburban limits of its seat, which will have at least thirty dwellings. Paragraph 1. These limits will always be accom- panted by a city plan. 12. No munici io will be created unless the urban area of is sea s at least 200 dwellings. 13. A year from the installation of this law, each munici io will deposit with the Regional Director ography, in two authentic copies, a map of its area. Paragraph 1. These maps, even when based on crude surveying, must meet the requirements fixed by the Conselho Nactonal de Geografia. Paragraph 2. Any munici io failing to comply with this requirement will lose its autonomy and its terri- tory will be annexed to one of the neighboring municii+, which will aseun the requirement; an addttio `yeas limit is then applicable to that munig ci to. - 14 - RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 RESTRICTED 14. The authority of the state governments to create divisions shall not prevent the munici o govern- ments from subdividing their territories further according to their own administrative needs. 15. The designations comarca, ter g, municioio, and Mtr#q will be adopt the entire country, with their respective seats; and will include distritos that bad been exclusively either administrative or, judicial units. Paragraph 1. The distritos of either order which were already instaii unit io acts are retained. Paragraph 2. The various judicial or administrative d stritos which had their seats in the same g j !, are exa,eptions, and are subject to the criteria fixed in the last part of Article 2. 16. Only by general laws, as stated in this Article, can, the territorial divisions be modified as to the limits, nomenclature, and categories of their parts. Paragraph 1. In the first half of a current year, beginning July 1, the state and federal governments will fix,, according to instructions of the Conselho Nacioi al de Gea raffia, a new territorial breakdown with a systematic description of the boundaries of all the die and Municiflios contained therein. Paragraph 2. Until then, the termos which are at present si* divisions of municipios, will continue; their respective seats will have the category of Z&. Paragraph 3. Once the new territorial breakdown has entered into effect, it may be altered only every 5 years by general laws, which will be promulgated in the last year of each period and come into effect the 1st oif January of the next year. The second of these 5-year revisions will take place only if a general census has been taken in the second year of the 5-year period. w15- RESTRISTE Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : IA-RDP79-01005 A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/ RW P79-01005A000100080001-6 17. The installation of the new divisions and establish- ment of their new seats will be realized within six months, after the enactment of the law which created them, on a date set by the state governments. Paragraph 1. The governments of the states ... will declare by decrees the expiration of the divisions whose formation, through failure to meet the legal. requirements, has not been ordered. 18. The state governments, by decrees handed down uo to March 31, 1938, will publish a list of administra- tive and judici l areas already in existence at the time of the passage of the law, making alterations of the classification and nomenclature and in the category of seats, following the criteria fixed in this law and in accordance with the general model to be formulated by the Conselho Nacional de Geografia. Paragraph 1. Alterattons of names according to Article 10 will be carried out in the new breakdown only as laid down in Article 16, Paragraph 1. 19. This law will apply, where appropriate, to the Distrito Federal and to the Territory of Acre. 20. This law will be enforced from the date of its pub1! a- tion, revoking all conditions to the contrary. 16 -? RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 RESTRICTED APPENDIX C Resolutions of the Conselho Nacional de Geografta July 24, 1939, Preamble and Article I The General Assembly of the National Council of Geography, in the exercise of its prerogatives; whereas, Decree-Law No. 311, of March 2, 1938, calls for changing place names which have been duplicated only in the case of cities and towns of the same Federal unit; whereas, however, it is most fitting that this criterion should be applied as widely as possible so that the eltmiraation of duplicated names should extend to all the localities of the country; whereas the adoption of long names, as well as of foreign names or those of living persons, is unsuitable for designating localities, except in exceptional cases; whereas the Fourth Brazilian Congress of Geography, meeting in the City of Salvador, Baia, ... established the general principal of the preferential use of the indigenous language for Brazilian place-names; whereas, when it is not a case of cities or towns, it falls to the regional or local authorities to give names to the other localities or features, independent of any general consideration; RESOLVES: Article 1 - The National Council of Geography, in the laws or Instructions concerning the coming territorial division of the country, to be made in 1943, in accordance with the provisions -17- RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/9&4MP79-01005A000100080001-6 of National Law no. 311, of March 2, 1938, will recommend the inclusion of dispositions having as their objective the following measures regarding names of cities and towns: 1. The elimination of duplications of a ames, throughout the country; 2. The shortening of long names; 3. The possible elimination of foreign names or names of living persons, respecting the demands of tradition and of the will of the people, as well as legitimate tributes; 4. The preference for the adoption of names in the Indigenous ge of the region or connected with historical events, of the region, in cases where names are being changed; 5. The preservation of the names already sanctioned by the populations of the respective localities when they are not in contradiction with the previous dispositions. 18 RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 RI REST Approved For Release 1999/09/26 CIA-P79-01005A000100080001-6 BIOCLT MATIC ATLAS OF SCHLESWIG-ROLSTEINI The Bioklimatisccher Atlas fur Schleswig-Holstein published inn l is a noble contribution not only to German regional atlases but also to the field of applied climatology. The atlas was prepared under the direction of Dr. Heinrich gemann (agriculturalist) and Dr. Heinrich Votgts (meteorolo- gist) and published by the Forschungstelle filr Landwrirtschaft.- liche Planung and Landschaftsgestalttmg in Lubeck (CIA Call No. F 30&.12F). Research leading to the publication of the atlas was stimulated by a request of the British Military Government for. assistance in selecting the most favorable sites for three new sugar beet factories and in increasing the production of sugar beets; corn, tobacco, fruits, and vegetables. This re- quest waA interpreted in its broadest meaning by the authors, and the resulting atlas is based on exceptionally detailed and scholarly study of the agricultural climatology of Schleswig- Holin. The wealth of detail presented is reliable, and decisions concerning biociimatic aspects of crop production were made in the field by competent scientists familiar with local conditions. The atlas emphasizes factors of importance to local farmers but omits many types of maps usually found in climatic atlases, such as air pressure and general circula- tion. it is well suited to serve as a guide to local planning for optimum land use and could also serve as a source of informa- tion on beaches, terrain, and the extent of ice in winter -- all, of which are important for trafficabilitt studies. 1. Dr. Helmut L,andsberg of the Research and Development Board assisted greatly in the interpretation and evaluation of this atlas. m19- RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 RESTRICTED Unfortunately, the atlas was published in a limited edition of only 300 copies which prevents the widespread distribution it deserves. Furthermore, the maps are Printed on paper of poor quality and the plates are not bound. All of the maps are printed in black and white, with lines of one other color superimposed. The simplicity of the cartographitc presentation, however, does not detract from the scholarly content of the maps. Four base maps have been used for practically all of the maps in the atlas -- two soils maps at 1:300,000 and 1:1,000,000 and two general maps at the same scales. The soils base maps show five types of soils distinguished accord- ing to structure and twelve classes of soils distinguished according to geologic history and vegetation cover (e.g. brown forest soils, young moraines, sandy moors). The areal extent of the various kinds of soils is shown by over-all patterns,. and soil boundaries have been used in checking the distribution of climatic data presented on the overprints for each map. The importance attached to the use of the soils maps as back- ground information is demonstrated by the fact that in many cases the same climatic information is overprinted. on a gen.- eral map and repeated on a soils map. The concept of bioclimatology as used in the atlas Includes all available data on climatic factors known to be of significance to plant life. On the basis of these data, the 60 atlas plates are divided Into six main sections: L Climatic saps, U. Phenologic maps, M. Meteorologic evaluations, IV. Climatic survey maps, V. Agricultural-Meteorologic evaluations, and VT. Bioclimatic evaluations. The climatic section Is the longest and most detailed. Numerous maps illustrate: (1) yearly and monthly distribu- tion of precipitation; (2) cloud types and the duration of periods - 20 - RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/?SRIMD9-01005A000100080001-6 of sunshine and cloudiness; (3) relative humidity; (4) mean, maximum, and minimum temperatures; (5) mean number of summer days with temperature maxima over 250 C and the number of days with frost; (6) average dates for the beginning and ending of periods with temperatures of 50 C and 100 C ; (7) wind velocity and direction; and (8) annual and seasonal frequency of calm weather, thunder storms, and snow. The tables on the backs of the maps give annual variations in the climatic factors mapped, and in addition state the relation between air-mass movement and late frosts in May and June, and the relation between the extent of ice in the Baltic Sea and the beginning of the growing season. The phenologic section includes maps giving the average dates of blooming of eight plants for 1936, 1937, and 1947. Additional maps give the dates of blooming and of harvesting of winter rye. On the backs of the maps are tables providing data on typical seasonal conditions, and a special study of Lubeck presenting typical weather, condi- tions and blooming dates for selected plants. The section on meteorologic evaluations was designed primarily for determining the frost hazard in spring and fall and for estimating the date of the beginning of the growing season. The climatic survey section is concerned primarily with the important problem of determining the amount of moisture available for plant growth at critical periods duri3g the growing season, as well as for the year as a whole. Actual mean monthly temperature is also related to the extent of Ice during the first four months of the year. The responses of natural vegetation to climate are shown by maps of hedgerow and ditch vegetation condtions. The section also includes a -21 - RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release I 999/09/i I ) PJ9-0l 005A000100080001-6 map of Central Europe at 1:3,000,000 showing climatic regions and subregions, with supplementary tables on precipitation, temperature, character of the landscape, forest types, agri- cultural distribution, etc. In the section on agricultural-meteorologic evaluations. data presented in the foregoing sections are applied specifically to increasing the production of sugar beets, vegetables, fruits, corn, and tobacco. Areas of possible production of each of these crops are described climatically and problems of cultivation are carefully explained. In a survey table, the locations of fruit growing centers are given. The final section of the atlas presents a very detailed and typically German study of climate in relation to the location of health resorts and vacation areas. The only map in the section is a summary of climatic conditions in Schleswig-Holstein which presents tables of climatic data at appropriate points on the face of the map and divides Schleswig-Holstein into six health zones. -22- RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release I 999/ ?fr* JDP79-01005A000100080001-6 MAP OF THE BRITISH-UNITED STATE'S ZONE AND THE YUGOSLAV ZONE IN THE FREE TERRITD Y OF. TR TE Accompanying this issue of the ~&p Research Bulletin is map CIA 10612 showing the Free Territory of Trieste as divided between the British United States Zone and the Yugo- slav Zone. The map indicates the outer boundary of the Free Territory and the so-called MorganLine separating the two zones. The MorganI,ine was originally defined shortly after the end of the war to serve as a line of demarcation in Venezia Giulia between Yugoslav forces and British-American forces. It extended in a southerly direction from a point near the north- eastern corner prewar Italy to a point east of Trieste, then turned westward to the Adriatic Sea south of Trieste. As defined by the Italian Peace Treaty, the Free Territory of Trieste lies partly_ to the north and partly to the south of the latter part of this line. When the Peace Treaty came into effect in September 1947 the Britlsh;American forces withdrew from the area t - had been occupying between the Morgan Lino and the new ltalia:n - Yugoslav boundary. They moved south into the British-Amerie .n Zone of Free Territory. Yugoslav forces advanced westward from the Morgan. Line to positions along the new Italian-Yug ilav boundary and the Free Territory -Yugoslav boundary. Yugoslav forces also remained in the Free Territory south of the Morgan Line. The portion of the Morgan Line that now remains Is thus only the southern and western end of the original line. This seg- ment of the line lying within the Free Territory was marked on the ground by representatives of the British-United States and Yugoslav military goveramaent. In September 1948. The area of the Free Territory of Trieste is appro!initely 282 square miles. Of this, about 197 square miles lie within the Yugoslav Zone and about 85. square miles within the British-United States Zone. -23 - RESTR ICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-0I 005A000100080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01 005A0001 00080001-6 Approved For Release 1999/09/26 : CIA-RDP79-01005A000100080001-6 RESTRICTED Approved For Release 1999/09/26: CIA-RDP79II0)$W~ fM (YR?6