Transcript Slide 1

3. Geographic and Historical Notes
THE INDIANA PREVENTION
RESOURCE CENTER
GIS in Prevention
County Profiles Series, No. 3
DeKalb County, Indiana
Barbara Seitz de Martinez, PhD, MLS, CPP
The Indiana Prevention Resource Center at Indiana University is funded, in part, by a contract with the Indiana Family and Social Services
Administration, Division of Mental Health and Addiction, financially supported through HHS/Substance Abuse Mental Health Services
Administration, Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Block Grant. The IPRC is operated
by the Department of Applied Health Science and The School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation.
GIS in Prevention, County Profiles, Series 3 (2006)
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3. Geographic and Historical Notes
GIS in Prevention
County Profile Series, No. 3
DeKalb County, Indiana
Barbara Seitz de Martinez, PhD, MLS, CPP
Project Staff:
Ritika Bhawal, MPH
Solomon Briggs
Kyoungsun Heo, MPA
Srinivasa Konchada
Indiana Prevention Resource Center
Opinions expressed herein are those of the authors, and not necessarily those of the Trustees of Indiana University or the Division of
Mental Health and Addiction. Indiana University accepts full Responsibility for the content of this publication. ©2005 The Trustees of
Indiana University. Permission is extended to reproduce this County Profile for non-profit educational purposes. All other rights reserved.
GIS in Prevention, County Profiles, Series 3 (2006)
3. Geographic and Historical Notes
3. Geographic and Historical Notes
Sources: Map
from PCensus for
MapInfo;
Geographic Notes
from
Indiana Facts:
Flying the Colors
by John Clements,
1995.
DeKalb County is located in east central Indiana. It is bordered by
Steuben County to the north, La Grange to the northwest, Noble to
the west, Allen to the south and the State of Ohio to the east. U.S.
Highway 6, Interstate Highway 69, and State Highway 8 cross the
county. Elevation is 850 to 1,000 feet. The landscape features oak,
cottonwood, elm, ash and hickory trees. The topography is mainly
nearly level, except for slightly sloping areas in the northwest and the
border areas on the north and west. All of this pertains to the Ohio
Till Plain land resource area.
De Kalb County is in Eastern Time Zone and observes DST. Average
daily temperatures are 15٥/31٥ in January and 60٥/85٥ in July.
Annual precipitation is 35 and snowfall 25-35 inches.
Typically the first freeze of the season occurs October 10-15 in all but
the southeastern tip where it is between October 5-10. The last
freeze varies from around May 5-10. The growing season lasts about
148-158 days.
Agriculture is diversified. The main crops are corn for grain, oats,
soybeans, and winter wheat. About two-thirds of the land is
farmland and about half of that is in commercial crops. Fruits
include apples and strawberries. Livestock includes cattle/calves,
milk cows, and hogs/pigs. Popcorn is a special crop. Main natural
resources include construction sand and gravel, and over 27,000
acres of commercial forestland. Water resources include Cedar,
Dunton, Indian, Story, and Terry Lakes, and Grey Stone Pond, and
St. Joseph’s River.
Communities include the cities of Auburn (the county seat), Butler
and Garrett. Towns include Altona, Ashley (which extends into
Steuben county), Corunna, Hamilton (which extends into Steuben
county), St. Joe and Waterloo.
DeKalb County is not a tobacco producing county.
GIS in Prevention, County Profiles, Series 3 (2006)
3. Geographic and Historical Notes
DeKalb County
The maps and tables in this publication were prepared using PCensus
7.06 for MapInfo and MapInfo Professional 7.0.
GIS in Prevention, County Profiles, Series 3 (2006)
3. Geographic and Historical Notes
3. De Kalb County Block Group Maps
Don’t Know Your Block Group Number?
You can find it easily at the
American Factfinder Web Site
(www.census.gov)
GIS in Prevention, County Profiles, Series 3 (2006)
3. Geographic and Historical Notes
DeKalb County
GIS in Prevention, County Profiles, Series 3 (2006)
Block Groups