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# Use The Atlascope Portal

This documentation contains information on how to use Atlascope, a tool developed for using the comprehensive collection of urban atlases held by the Boston Public Library.

URL:
Atlascope 👉 https://atlascope.leventhalmap.org

# Searching

There are two main ways to search in Atlascope:

  1. by finding the location on the map
  2. by typing in an address

# map

Each historical atlas included in Atlascope has a totally different geographic coverage from all the others. This is because the atlases were created separately for different regions, and were published at a time when Boston's urban landscape was developing rapidly.

atlases

Pictured above: Geographic extent snapshot of different volume coverages

For these reasons, no two atlases in our collection have identical coverages.

As you move around the map, the dropdown menus with available atlas layers will change and update to reflect what is available for that area.

menu

As you move out of the range of one atlas, the app will automatically suggest the oldest atlas layer available for the new map location.

# address

It is possible to search for modern-day addresses by selecting "Search places" from either the initial home screen, or the menu.

search menu

Selecting a suggested result will bring you to that location on the map, and also turn on imagery for that location.

# Find me

Atlascope was designed to make exploring Boston history easy and fun. It works well on an phone or tablet, and a "locate me" tool exists to situate yourself in history while you are moving about in the city.

This section of the guide will explain how to enable location services in the app in order to find your current location, and if you wish, have the app track you as you move around.

No location data is collected; this tool exists only so you can easily find where you are and compare what exists in real life to what existed a century ago. You can also choose to ignore this feature, and leave your location services turned off.

From the Atlascope home screen, select Find me to find your current location and return historical atlas layers available for that location.

If you want the app to follow your path as you meander through Boston, select Follow in response to the prompt "Do you want the map to move with you?"

The Find me + Follow combination is fun to try on foot or on the MBTA!

If you would like to find your location initially as a point of reference, and then turn off all subsequent tracking, select No to when asked if you want the map to move with you.

# Overlaying

Atlascope has three options for overlaying layers: glass, swipe, or opacity modes.

# glass

The default overlay mode in the app is the Glass mode, named so for its resemblance to a spyglass.

This mode provides a neat way to "peer through" the baselayer to whichever atlas is selected inside the Glass view.

We tend to think of Glass mode as a rather convenient way to use Atlascope, because of the ability to increase or decrease the size of the glass, allowing for a more fine-tuned comparison between the base and overlay map.

glass

# swipe

Another mode available is Swipe mode.

You can change the direction of the swipe by toggling between Swipe Y and Swipe X in the app menu controls.

swipe

# opacity

The final available overlay mode is Opacity mode.

Opacity mode can be activated at any time by selecting Opacity in the menu layer controls.

In addition to using the range slider to gradually increase or decrease opacity, try selecting "0" or "100" on either end of the slider to quickly toggle the overlay off and on.

opacity

# Compare change

Try setting both the base and overlay layers to historic atlases. What comparisons can you make that show how the city has changed?

Let's compare a few blocks in South Boston between 1885 and 1891...

In Glass mode

compare glass

In Swipe mode

compare swipe

In Opacity mode

compare opacity

# Sharing

To share a link to the whole app, or a specific view/location, following these steps:

  1. Click the Share button in the upper-right hand corner
    share

  2. Select the appropriate share option:

  • Share the app
  • Share this specific view
  • Embed in a website

# Digital collections

While using mosaiced atlas layers inside the Atlascope app is an intuitive way to access the materials, we understand there will certainly be cases where you wish to access high-resolution scans of individual atlas pages, and thus will need to be able to locate these unique items in our digital collections.

Or maybe, you even wish to visit the Map Center, and research with particular atlas pages in person!

For these reasons, Atlascope works symbiotically with our traditional library interfaces, specifically our digital collections and collection-level research guides for the historical urban atlas collection.

In this guide you will learn how to use Atlascope to quickly find atlas plates in the digital collections, download high-resolution images of the maps, or build a description for any given plate.

# Use Atlascope to find a plate in the digital collections

  1. Use the map or address search to find a location in Atlascope.
  2. Zoom in to the area of interest.
  3. Check the layer menu to ensure you have the correct year and publisher selected.
  4. From the app layer controls, select "About this map"
  5. Observe the bibliographic information for this volume, and options for finding this resource in the library collections.

collections options

# View plate boundaries and atlas extent

This option will take you to a page displaying only the layer for the one atlas volume you have selected, and a blue/green outline showing which coverage each page represents.

extent

When you click on a page boundary, a popup will appear with bibliographic information about that atlas plate, including the digital collections identifier #, and a link to the item in the digital collections.

popup

# View list of plates in the Digital Collections

This option will bring you to a query in the digital collections returning all results associated with that atlas's call number. This will essentially be a gallery of thumbnails. You will still need to page through the results to find the plate with the location of interest.

Hint: Viewing the list of plates in the digital collections is a great way to locate the index page for any given atlas. You may want to use the index page to find that atlas's symbology key. Each publisher uses different colors and markings, so the legend on the index page can be helpful.

# Find this plate in the Digital Collections

This option will bring you to a page with only that atlas layer again, but this time, it will be zoomed in on the area you had been engaging with in Atlascope.

This is generally the best way to find a specific plate in the digital collections, as this tool will remember where you were looking in Atlascope, and bring you right to that item in the digital collections.

  1. After clicking "Find this plate in Digital Collections," click on the exact area you are looking for, and a popup should appear with bibliographic information.

  2. At the bottom of the popup, click "View this plate in digital collections"

  3. To download a high-resolution scan, navigate to Downloads and select Master (full resolution, uncompressed)

  4. To cite this plate, select "Cite". A description will be automatically generated.

# All atlases @ BPL

# Atlases not included in Atlascope

While Atlascope includes an amazing number of atlases from the BPL collections covering Boston and surrounding towns, it does not include a significant portion of atlases available for research at the BPL.

Atlases not in Atlascope

  • Atlases outside of Boston Proper for most towns in Massachusetts - If you would like to support expanding the geography, please contact us.

  • Atlases published after 1923 where rights are still retained by the copyright owner. This includes most of the twentieth-century Sanborns.

# Coming in to research

Though you cannot access these important archives in Atlascope or the digital collections quite yet, you can research with them in person. Here's how:

1). Submit a reference request using our research form.

2). Use our libguides to find a complete record of what's available.

# Using the libguides

Libguides → http://guides.bpl.org/urban-atlases

The BPL Urban Atlases Libguides provide a comprehensive description of every urban atlas available within the state of Massachusetts at the BPL.

Here we will describe how to use the libguides to determine the best way to access any given atlas, depending on the following factors:
Whether or not it has been digitized and added to the Digital Collections and
Whether or not it has already been added to Atlascope
Whether it is still under copyright and must be accessed in person.

Navigate to the Historical Urban Atlases of Boston Libguide.

To find a list of descriptions for all urban atlases available at the Boston Public Library, organized by neighborhood and chronology, select List of Urban Atlases.

In addition to this comprehensive description list of every atlas available at the Boston Public Library, the Boston area libguide has a tab Find by Map which visually displays records for all Boston atlases and places them on a map interface, grouped by neighborhood. Many of these atlases have been digitized and added to Atlascope already, while others are still pending processing, or cannot be digitized yet because they are under copyright.

Choosing an atlas from the neighborhood map menu dropdown will let you know the best way to access that item.

If you add a menu item for something that has been added to Atlascope, a link will appear that will bring you to that item in Atlascope. If you select a menu item that has not yet been added to Atlascope, a boundary extent layer will appear on the map, giving you useful bibliographic popup information about each atlas plate as a placeholder until we are able to extend direct access to the mosaiced imagery.

If you are looking for towns outside of Boston, from the guides.bpl.org/urban-atlases page, navigate to Related Resources tab on the left, select Historical Urban Atlases of Massachusetts Towns @ the BPL.

This will bring you to a complete listing of historical town atlases available for research at the BPL. They are organized by County.

For questions related to researching with the BPL holdings, please do not hesitate to get in touch via our research form or via email at reference@leventhalmap.org.

# All layers in Atlascope

Atlascope also provides a way to see all layers included in the app. Try zooming far out on the map to see all of the layers available. Select one from the dropdown menu to be brough to that atlas layer.

We think one of the coolest aspects of creating high-resolution layers of each atlas is our ability to share them with you.

This section of the guide will give instructions on how to bring in the mosaic of any atlas in Atlascope to your own GIS project.

The tiles for each volume are accessible by selecting About this map and then copying the link under XYZ Tile Endpoint

tiles

This link can be brought into any geospatial software -- desktop software like ArcMap, ArcGIS Pro, and QGIS, cloud mapping platforms like ArcGIS Online, Carto and Google Maps, and you can even use them to build your own Javascript web apps, like we did with Atlascope!

For any questions centered on using these tiles as layers in your own project, or any questions related to geospatial data and mapping, please do not hesitate to reach out to us via our geospatial research form.

Last Updated: 3/9/2021, 12:32:02 PM