1. Page 1
    2. Page 2
    3. Page 3
    4. Page 4
    5. Page 5
    6. Page 6
    7. Page 7
    8. Page 8
    9. Page 9
    10. Page 10
    11. Page 11
    12. Page 12
    13. Page 13
    14. Page 14
    15. Page 15
    16. Page 16
    17. Page 17
    18. Page 18
    19. Page 19
    20. Page 20
    21. Page 21
    22. Page 22
    23. Page 23
    24. Page 24
    25. Page 25
    26. Page 26
    27. Page 27
    28. Page 28
    29. Page 29
    30. Page 30
    31. Page 31
    32. Page 32
    33. Page 33
    34. Page 34
    35. Page 35
    36. Page 36
    37. Page 37
    38. Page 38
    39. Page 39
    40. Page 40
    41. Page 41
    42. Page 42
    43. Page 43
    44. Page 44
    45. Page 45
    46. Page 46
    47. Page 47
    48. Page 48
    49. Page 49
    50. Page 50
    51. Page 51
    52. Page 52
    53. Page 53
    54. Page 54
    55. Page 55
    56. Page 56
    57. Page 57
    58. Page 58
    59. Page 59
    60. Page 60
    61. Page 61
    62. Page 62
    63. Page 63
    64. Page 64
    65. Page 65
    66. Page 66
    67. Page 67
    68. Page 68
    69. Page 69
    70. Page 70
    71. Page 71
    72. Page 72
    73. Page 73
    74. Page 74
    75. Page 75
    76. Page 76
    77. Page 77
    78. Page 78

 
S,I'I'
SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
MEMORANDUM
AM
To....
From.., .
SENATE CO(ITTEE ON .JRGRAD.AT.STDIES
Subject.
FACULTY OF ARTS
?
Date.. NOVEMBER 14
,
,
, 1974
GEOGRAPHY CURRICULUM PROPOSALS
MOTION ?
"That Senate approve - and recommend approval to the
Board - the proposed Department of Geography Curriculum
changes as set forth in S.74-1, including:
(i)
Changes in the grouping of courses, in lower level
course requirements, in upper level and upper division
course requirements, in minor requirements, and in
major requirements."
(ii)
The following new courses:
E-1
GEOG 361-3 Introduction to Urban Geography
GEOG 362-3 Geography of Urban Development
GEOG 419-5 Selected Topics in Physical Geography
GEOG 429-5 Selected Topics in Economic Geography
GEOG 449-5 Selected Topics in Cultural Geography
GEOG 475-5 Historical Geography II
GEOG 498-5 Field Studies
GEOG 499-15 Directed Readings/Field Study
(NOTE: GEOG 460-5 Selected Regions was recently approved.)
(iii)
The renumbering of the following courses:
GEOG 345-3 Historical Geography I to
GEOG 375-3 ?
(dropping GEOG 345)
GEOG 349-3 Human Microgeography to
GEOG 369-3 ?
(dropping GEOG 349)
(iv)
The discontinuation of the following courses after
August 31, 1975:
GEOG 463-5, 465-5, 466-5, 468-5.
(v)
A change in title and description to
GEOG 344-3 Geography of Modern Industrial 'Societies"
0

 
?
to
?
I
57c'- /
,3
i
SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
?
?
.
?
MEMORANDUM
To SENATE
From Senate Committee on Undergraduate
Studies
Subje
Faculty of Arts - Department ....O
......
f
?
Date
November 14, 1974
C ;_ . h
......
Currcü1um ... PropbsaIs.....
At its meeting of 12th November, the Senate Committee
on Undergraduate Studies considered the attached curriculum proposals
from the Department of Geography.
?
Discussion of these proposals had
been postponed from a previous meeting, pending receipt by the Dean
of Arts of the Geography Departmental Review and his bringing to the
attention of the Committee any relevant matter from that Review. At
this point the Dean commented on those reviews which he had received
and noted that a number of the points covered had been met by the
Department's proposal.
?
He emphasized, however, that he had not
yet received reports from all the reviewers and that his report was
necessarily of a somewhat preliminary nature.
The Committee then undertook detailed examination of
the course proposal and the changes in requirements and declared
?
itself satisfied with the proposal with one exception. In the case
of Geography 498-5: Field Studies, some members of the Committee
expressed reservations about this course and clarification was
requested. ?
This was given orally at the meeting;and a copy of
a memorandum from the Chairman of the Departmental Curriculum
Committee is attached for the information of Senate.
These proposals are now transmitted to Senate for its
consideration, with the Committee's recommendation that they be
approved.
I. Mugridge
ams
att.
0

 
?
SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
SUS
X-4-0
MEMORANDUM ?
.
0
....BobB.rQ.wn,...A.C.tlflg...C.h airman, ............. .
?
From ....... ..........S. ..... Smi,.t.h. ............. .....
?
.... . ...... ............. ..
....Senate....Committee....o.n....U.n.de.r..g.r.ad.uai
Studies
Subject..Geo.g r.a.p.hy... .Up.p.e.r....D..i..v..i.s..i.On...Re.V ie.w...
Dean,. ,F.aculty ...of
?
A.r.t.s ........................
Date ..........
October ....
1.0,1974 ... .........
.......................
I am enclosing the Geography Upper Division Review (Papers C-87-1 -
87-12) which has been approved by the Faculty of Arts Curriculum Committee
and by the Faculty of Arts. Would
you please put these papers on the
Agenda of the next SCUS. meeting.
The Department of Archaeology has formally raised the question of over-
lap between Arch. 272-3 and Geog. 342-3. Discussions are taking place
between the two departments and the Dean's office regarding the overlap
in accordance with the directives from SCUS concerning the Faculty's
responsibility in this area. The departments have agreed to pursue
these discussions further but there is no particular solution to the
problem pending at this time.
Thank you.
?
.
Z ^^ - . 6
q5)—
(^
WAS:mjm
,L.•
OF

 
SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
MEMORANDUM
From ?
Larry Thoma
.
s
?
.....
Assistant University Librarian
• ?
for
Collections and
-
Public Services
To ?
Dr. Sam Smith
Dean of Arts
.
Subject ?
Geography Course. PrOpOS4l.S
.
.....
?
Date.. ?
..October
?
1974
As required by the new SCUS procedures we have reviewed Geography
proposals for courses 344, 361, 362, 369, 375, 419, 429, 449, 475, 498 and
499. We were surprised to find that about 131 items identified on the reading
lists were not in the library collection. We estimate that the cost of acquiring
these books and articles would be approximately .
$475.00. Additional costs
would be incurred if more backfiles were required for certain journals. Since
most of the courses are to be offered late in 1975 or in 1976, we feel this add-
itional cost could be absorbed by our normal book budgeting procedures pro-
vided, of course, that the Library continues 'to be funded at approximately or
better than the past rate.
One course, 366, is to be offered in Spring, 1975. Normally this would
be too soon to acquire Library materials. However, in this case we have
most of the materials and would not object to a waiver of the normal time
lag requirements.
cc. D. A. Baird
University Librarian
LET/dap
0

 
, ?
_.i.
C ?
..bII
SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
MEMORANDUM
To... ?
Dr.
L.
Boland, Chairman
?
.From M.E.
?
.
?
Chairman
Yaculty
of Arts
Curriculum Committee
?
. ?
Department of Geography
Subjed ?
Geography
Upper Level Review
?
Date....
.
AU
...t ?
'.....9...
.................
fl
S
Enclosed are eleven
course proposals and supporting documentation
which result from the department's recent review of its undergraduate
curriculum. These proposals complement the revised lower level course
structure approved by Senate in December
1972
and bring to a
completion the review of the entire Geography curriculum.
The proposals, guided by the department's recently formulated state-
ment of aims and goals (See Appendix I) essentially attempt to
encourage greater flexibility in the course offering structure, while
ensuring that majors and honors in Geography experience on the
systematic level a wide range of courses. The proposals include new
courses on special topics in physical, economic and cultural geograph,'
and five- and fifteen-hour field studies/directed studies courses.
There are new sections under Division A with the requirement that
majors and honors include at least one course from the physical,
economic and cultural geography substreams. The
reorganization
of the
latter require only the renumbering of two existing courses: 315_3 to
375-3
and.
31
4
9_3
to 369-3. Moreover, the proposals include new courses,
which augment existing ones to expand on specific geographical areas
of study. Urban
Geoga
' phy
I and II are designed to provide the back-
ground for the existing Geography of Urban Regions course. Historica'
Geography II concentrates on issue-oriented themes based on materials
presented in the
existing
Historical Geography I course.
Finally,
several proposals revise only the title and calendar description of
existing courses to reflect new thinking and new teaching approaches
as well as an
updating and reorganization of old and new materials.
In its review and examination of the curriculum, especially in regard
to existing faculty resources and course scheduling, the department
has projected on a five-year basis a timetable of course offerings
which includes the anticipated new courses. (See Appendix II) This
projection is primarily predicated on the faculty teaching/research
ratios of the faculty members currently in the department. Some of
the new courses are scheduled on the basis of less frequent offerings
of existing courses.
?
. ?
.
to time quest
?
h.a\re beer.
courses oferedby
,
tbis.
c_••_
?
'• ?
•.
?
.,i,. ?
'.
Some of which are slightly modified to overcome, possible areas
O1
undesirable overlap with other departments.
One course proposal, Geography
1
0_5 (Selected flégions) hs
received approval for offering In 71
4 _3 by the Senate;
Overlap with existiu courses. From time
raised about the apparent overlap between

 
a
?
2.
department and other departments in the University. Our response has
S ?
been that the character of our discipline is such that it requires a
certain amount of overlap. In a memorandum to the Senate Under-
graduate Studies committee (November
27, 1972)
I have attempted to
describe the character of our discipline:
AM
Geography 19 concerned with the character of places and
seeks
to understand how this character developS.
Explanation
of the character of the human landscape
involves
the awareness of all the factors that create
landscapes. Geographers, therefore, study the physical
landscape, involving such matters as climate, geological
structure, the landfOrms created
.
on the crust of the
earth, and soils and vegetation; these contribute the
bulk of the content to what is known as physical geo-
graphy. But the personalit
y
of places reflects more
than just the work of nature; equallY important is how
people over many inilleflia of occupanCe of the earth's
surface have perceived the potential of the landscape
and how they have used it. Geographers are therefore as
much interested in what people do as in the raw materials
upon which they have worked. But the subject matter of
this discipline is the landscap
e
or the personalit
y
of
place; this concern is central to all aspects of
geography and to all courses that the Department of
Geography teaches or proposes to teach.
The point is that geographers must draw
UpOLl
the knowledge of the
other disciplines in order to attempt to explain the character of U''
human landscape. Courses in physical geography will overlap with
physics, biolo
gy
and the earth sciences; those in cultural geography
and those in economic
with ?
thropol0gY, archaeology and sociology;
geography with economics, political science and perhaps others. The
difference is that these materials are used in a different context,
that of identifyin
g
and
explaining the spatial character of
the land-
scape.
Essentially, the proposals include:
1. ?
Regrouping Division A courses into four sections:
I. ?
Physical Geograp.
313-3
Geomorphol9gY
314-3
climatology I
315-3
Biogeography I
317-3
Soil Geography
318-3
SedimentologY
and Past EnvirorUflents
XI. ?
Economic GeoraphL
A
322-3
?
Geography of Primary Activities
323-3
?
Geography of Manufacturing
321$_3 ?
Geography of 'Transportation
325-3 ?
GeograPhY'0fTert1t Activities

 
3.
III.
Cultural Geography
312-3 ?
Geography of Prehistoric Societies
3143_3 ?
Geography of Transitional Societies
3141
47
3
?
Geography of Modern
Industrial
Societies (See No. 2 below)
IV.
Other
Geographical Areas
351-3
?
Cartography II
361-3 ?
Introduction to Urban Geography (See
No. .3 below)
362-3
?
Geography of Urban Development (See
No. 3 below)
369_3* Human MicrogeographY
375
..
.
3*
Historical Geography I
381-3 ?
Political Geography
?
382-3
?
Population Geography
where Geography. majors and honors are required to take at
least one oftheir five 300-level courses from each of
Sections I, II, and III.
2.
Retitling and redescribing Geography 31414 in Section III.
3.
Adding two new courses in Urban Geography (Geography
361-3 and 362-3) and one new course in Historical
Geography (Geography
1475_5).
14. ?
Adding in Division B three new courses: Selected Topics
in Physical (1419-5), Economic (1429-5), and Cultural
(14149-5)
Geography.
5.
Streamlining Division C: adding a new course titled,
"Selected Regions", which has received approval from
Senate for offering in
7
1
4-:3,
and deleting Geography 1463,.
46, 1466 and 1468.
6.
Adding two new courses in Division D: Geography 1498-5
(a five-hour field study course to be offered principally
in inter-semester periods)
and Geography 1499-15 (a
fifteen-hour directed study/field study course.)
L-lc
(f
?
?
.
?
'---
Wrs/)
*
?
These courses require renumbering to fall In Section IV. Thcrt.
are uo chrLnes in course content.
S
.

 
APPENDIX
I
DEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAPHY
Simon Fraser University
?
-
A. ;tatement of Department Aims & Goals
The material of study of geography is the surface of the
earth and humanity's use of it; geography is concerned with
the special character of places and landscapes and with how
these have developed, and therefore, straddles in its interests
the conventional social sciences, natural sciences and the
humanities. Geography is basically and essentially cross-
disciplin
ar
y
in its approach.
The department offers undergraduate and.graduat
e
instruction
in the traditional aspects of geography, the so-called physical,
social and economic aspects, tending to BtreaS the area of
human geography.
Beyond the systematic approaches, the department of
geography at Simon Fraser University has taken a special interest
in those pressing contemporary problems that have geographical
implications. I3% particulars attention is given a.t the upper
levels
to the areas of resource management, developing countries,
land use conflicts, cities and the consequenc
es
of urbanisation.
.
Whilst undergraduates have quite a free choice in the
development of prcgramreC, it is possible to identity three
streams or areas of specialisation: Cultural Geography, the
relationship between different cultures and sub-cultures on
the
one
hand and the use and interpretation of the surface of
the earth that different peoples have made on the other;
Economic Geography, including not only the traditional problems
of location of various types of economic activity but also
questions of social and ethical
concern;
Physical Geography,,
encompassing the study of the relationships among a number of
Earth Scinces which give general insight into the nature of
man's natural environment.
Undergraduates may concentrate on one' of the traditional
streams in their work, but they may not confine themselves to it.
The need for awareness of the interrelationsh
ips
of all landscape-
forming factors is recognised by the requirement that students
take, at
the fourth year level, a course
in.
the study of a
particular area or region.
The Department offers graduate programmes at the Masters
and Doctoral levels. There is particular interest in the development
of theoretical
and
conceptual
frameworks in
the systematic aspc.'tZ
of Geography; emphasis is placed on the application of these to
. ?
contemporary and historical geographiCalPrOblema in western North
• ?
America, with particular reference to British Columbia and the
0
Statement accepted unanimously by full department on October 2
1
4,
19'

 
2.
• ?
management of Its resources.
The
Department is naturally
i
nterested in
interdisciplinary
app
roaches in area Studies and Supports such
projects
as
Canadian
S
tudies, African and Middle East Studies and
Latin
American
coo
peration
Studies.
with other
The
Dedis
partment
ciplines
looks
in these
forward
matters.to
increasing

 
a
I
[.
(
I
_._1____.
.1.
1---1
tt.d
0-
L.L
?
11
?
?
1
tt
t
T ?
L_
I
—. ?
I ?
I I ?
I
..-a ?
.
-J
jj
?
(1W-
U ?
k-'--
z
Tj
.*A
-o
'.7
u
L ?
\-
- C)
C
I
) ?
-
£4
I
LA
.
oi
O
L44
1
I ? —
Ch 0
L•
t'sc
'J ?
c
0
Kr
I
-•• ? -
Ch
••
0
(.
'••)
.J ?
I
?
U
c
,
2
,-.•,.
>1
V.
U.
V.
0
e•u
_
'I ?
01
-s ?
0
,.I ?
'
C ?
CU
C) ?
U
' ?
A1
V
•1
0
> ? .
c. •-
x ?
c
— u
C)
S
o- .
U
.
?
CL
0
A) A)
?
V. I
A)
OL U
C)
'
) (1
?
U
?
G
0
o,
01 ?
C ?
JL
A)
L.
V. 01
-- ?
C ?
• ?
01
Ci 01
> 0
C'
0 ?
0
'
?
C
C ?
-
U
'
I ?
0 ?
C)
U 0 ?
I 0 C)
?
I) C)
I U C
?
C)
C)
I's) ?
C) C)
Ci
A)
?
l (.1
Ci C)
Ci C) ?
£ ?
Si
C C)
I
Ve LD
'
•,
I — ?
•—
C)
'.1)
r
U
q.j
•—
p.. •
?
C%a
(J
?
C)d
, - ?
-
•-:_._1

 
S
S
0
—— ———
——
-
&
--
IL
___ ---
-
— — —
c1.
p.
at
-c---Y!------
u
•L
t)
.
r
U.4
(-V
I
CO
4A
?
a
Li
Li
.,j
,
j
'L
.
-0
.
du
4.-
c-
(i-i
F)
tj
L
'•
S..)
¼)
'-
=
')
rj
,?
I ?
::<
____
i'3
S?
r
.4
0
'
co
Ch
?
ci..
-
— —
..
t
,
.
Ii
U
— —
-__
c42
57
...
____-.
N
.
.
Li
p.
0
?
N
— —
— —
vw
:2
,,
WI
4,,
.sc
,.!
i..,
.'- > I
?
> ?
01
C
0
— ?
A.
J
WI 44
0 U
t-
• ?
C4.
(.7' s.
?
- ?
.. ?
c
Op
?
04'
?
0-
-
-
,
0
tn ?
0. ?
I..
(,
U ?
_
0.J
7'
00 ?
$,I
C)
?
4.7'
.- ?
1. ?
(, •
0 .-
0
bi ?
I-
0 4..)
I
Q.
1.
4) ?
4..
?
.0 ?
.(
C ?
Q. S.
?
LI
- ?
4I....
.,
WI
V
•..
L5
?
Cd
OW
?
M
4.4. C)
6J.(
041L
0
0
.
UI ?
,._ ?
..4.4
-
(h(
1.4,
?
?
(.n1
I..
?
t.7'L
• ?
L()
•C
4)
0 ?
- ?
T
-
?
.- Cl
) .i
?
0 —
?
rI C
?
(
(I).
_j ?
111(4
4111
A3 ?
(f) ?
,,
.
3
?
?
LI.
1.11, ?
4.3
?
L)
0
1.
4-
,
4 4.4
II
?
'4
3,
?
I....
(.)
L
.0
.i
?
•.,
- -
t ?
in
?
P, ?
J
4j ?
Co
it
C
.- ?
•-
?
I
'
•- ?
I ?
r.
Co
I_.d
.r
Co
it
-,
LJ
Co
Co
..2._
-J
I

 
'.1
.
o.
a ?
I

 
p
-
.41
-
-
_
y
.
CPI
.-
lb
-
-
a -
- - --- -
J
U
V.
to
.4.•_)
-
L
-
• ?
.
_
_
- - - - - — -
• ?
I
—4
-
L-
1
_
UY,
r l ?
IA
^a ? C61
? - — —— — -
- - — - - -
• ?
'•.
__
Ln
-----fl
0
_
-
-- -.
L
-
- - - -
_
L
9
';1
ei,
Cft ?
93.
__-
- — -
- -
fo
Lip
.e
4'
.0
C -
• ?
a,
41
c
4'
'U
41
C
1J,
C ?
1
4,
o
C
4' C'
.1
L U
•.-
•0
?
-'
'_)
r
r.
41
(
$-
C..
•J
4• ?
i
:j ?
m
J
I. ?
-.--
C,
X
4,
'U
-
C C)
Q'
'I
C -
'
0
J
'U
In
f
("1
.-
t•
'fl
U1
'J
fl
0
I.
0)
'
C"
'C)
.•t
'oO
t
-
I
- -
?
-_

 
I
.4
/
t
g
I
Cft
-J
.4
&
CIL
coIl
U,
I-
01
-'--0
-4
ca
01 S
SI
CY
cn

 
I
.
-
-
-
-
- -. -- -
V)
II
Ch w
Y
.1
Ix
L
.
SI
I
'
-
LL _
a
r
•.
%-
4j
••
Or
(i-
-j
."
I-.' .
'.j•
#1
te
(.
1TT
a
a
a
o.V
u
•.;;,
e
8
O
U — i
U ?
C:
U ?
-..
-
I..
-
•.•- ?
'
OP
Q. >
coJ
u C
0
.o
U
(.-
-
-
-
x
?
,— ?
.
L_LL1

 
• ?
SENATE COMMITTEE ON UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES
NEW
COURSE
PROPOSAL FORM ?
TITLE
&,
DESCRIPTION CHA;c
• ?
ONLY
Information
?
Department: ?
GEOGRAPHY
344
Abbreviation Code:
GEOG ?
Course Number:
?
Credit Hours:
3
?
Vector: 1-2-0
Title of Course: GEOGRAPHY OF MODERN INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
Calendar Description of Course:
The theme of this course is the effect upon modern urban morphology c:
certain ideas and i'nstitution& prevalent in Anglo-S axon cultures bet\
the late eighteenth and early twentieth centures. The
origin,
spread
and differentiation of selected man-made landscape features are
systematically reconstructed.
Nature of Course
?
One one-hour lecture and one two-hour seminar.
Prerequisites (or special instructions):
Prerequisite: Geography ili
Reco
mm
ended. Geography 201 and courses in
?
S
tudents
'
with credit for Geog.344-3 unde
nineteenth century English literature & ?
its previous title may not take this
history. ?
-
?
course for further credit.
What
course (courses), if any, is being dropped from the calendar if this course is
approved: None
2.
Scheduling
How
frequently will the course
be offered? Every
,
other semester
Semester in which the course
will
first be offered?
•'(hich of your present facultywould be available to make
the
proposed offering
•Posibie?
?
E.M. Gii.son
3.
Objectives of the Course
?
.
See Attached
?
.'
4.
Budgetary and Space Requirements (for information only)
What
additional resources will be required in the following areas:
Faculty
?
"The frequency of course offerings
'in the Geography under-
graduate curriculum has been modified to accommodate the facul
Staff ?
staff and space requirements of this and other new courses in
Library
?
the Upper Level Review. Library and audio visual materials
required for this course are presently available in the
Audio Visual University and require no additional acquisitions. No further
Space
?
equipment other than what is ay
al
l
a
ble
is
required."
Equipment
S. Approval
-Date:
V
4 ?
"1
^._
?
C(Lc. ?
CiirL,:n
-'---o
?
___-,___
Da
cul
Chairman, SCU
SCUS 73-34b:-
(When
ccvrp1etin8
this
form,
for instructions
see Memorandum SCUS 73-34:1.

 
S.
i
.
COURSE TITLE & DESCRIPTION CHANGE ONLY
3. p3ect1veB of the Course
-
a. The general
objective of the course is to reconstruct the
origin,
spread
and differentatio
n
in the
morphology and style of the landscapes created by
Anglo-Saxon cultures between the late eighteenth and the early nineteenth
centuries
.
These include the design of civic, religious, commercial,
industrial and domestic .buildlng5, streets and parks together with their
arrangements in town plans. The object is not to merely describe these
changes but to understand them as expressions and generators of ideas.
In the end the students ought to be able to identif
y
"modern" building
and connect them with both the principal ideas
and
associated
landscapinwith
g
their
styles
origins and their place
.
to place variations in
Anglo-Saxon cultures.
b. The course will be organized in three parts
PART I
1 ?
INTRODUCTION TO TUE
CULTURAL GEOGRAPW OF BRITISH PEOPLES IN THE
NINETEENTh
CENTURY
PART II
POOL OF NINETEENTH CENTURY
IDEAS AND
TECHNOLOGY
2 ?
Romantic
a.
Ideals and Steam Technolo
gy -
3
.
b.
Pugin
God and a Theory of Urban Design.
4 ?
c. Rucktn: History andTheory of Urban Design.
5
?
d. 14orria
Brotherhood and a Theory of Urban Design.
ORIGIN SPREAD AND DIFFERENTATIO
N
OF ANGLO-SAXON INDUSTRIAL CULTURE
6 ?
a. The Railway.,
7 ?
b. The Factory.
8 ?
C.
Civic
Buildings.
9 ?
d.
Parka, Gardens and Streets.
10
e. Working
Class Housing.
11 f. Country Homes.
12. g. Town Plans.
c.
The proposed course change is an attempt to establish a calendar entry
that better describes the content of Geography 344-3. Geography of
Contemporary Indutrial Societi
es
as it has evolved under the influence of
recent published literature in culture geography and the growing interests
in
urban geography reflected in other course changes made by the Depart11t
ovcr the lt eight years. Thus the course is on one hand a part of the
Dapdrur-inCs Cultural stream and on the other hand a building block for
400 level courses in Canada, U.S.A. and Urban geography.
PART III
d.
The proposed course does not overlap with any course already existing.

 
BIBLIOGRAPHY
?
-
I
A.
Books
Berrall, J-S., The Garden. New York: Viking Press, 1966.
Chadwick, G.F., The ark and the Town. New York: Praeger,
1966 reviewed by Crook in Victorian Studi , Vol. XI,
No. 2 (December 1967), p.
'142.
Chesterton, G-K., The Victoria
?
eiri Liter
atur
e. London:
?
Oxford University Press, New York, 1966.
Clark,
K., Blake and Visionary Art. University of Glasgow Press,
1974.
Crook, J.M.,
The
Greek Revival. W. & J. Mackay Ltd., 1972.
Gilbert, E., The Advancement of K
nowledge Relating to. the Beuut
of Scenery in Town
and
Country. Oxford preservation Trust,
65.
TaughanCorniBh
862-19148. Oxford Preservation
Trust,
1965.
Goodwin, M., NineteenthCeP
?
Opinion
(An
anthology of extracts
?
from the first fifty vols. of the Nineteenth Century).
Penguin Books.
Houghton, W-E., The
Victorian Frame
.
of
Mind.
Yale University
Press, New Haven
.&
London.
Howard, E., Garden Cities of Tomorrow. Edited by P.3. Osborn.
London: Faber and Faber Ltd.
Jackson, A., The Politics of ArchiteCtur!
?
University of
?
Toronto Press, 1970.
Macleod, B., Style and SocietL. RIBA Publishers Ltd.
Olsen, D.J., Town Planning in London. New Haven: Yale University
Press,
Pevaner, N., Pioneers of Modern De.si&p. Penguin, 1960.
__________
•,
Some
Arch
itectural _Writin
g
of the Nineteenth CentL
Oxford Univer
s
ity Press, 1972.
Ritchie, T.,
Canada
Builds. Toronto: University of Toronto Pr'
1967-
^I
?
Rowan, A., Carde
n
_ p
J d I nj. Taylor Garnett Evans & Co.
SummersOn, J., The Cia ;cteal Language
.
of
Architecture.
?
T.li.
ricke1l & Son,. l96e.

 
-
?
2.
El
bia
SuTflmC°''
3.,
"flctoriafl Archi
t
e
c
ture. New York: Colum
University Press, 1970.
Tunnard, C., et a]., ManMade America Chaos
or Control?
Haven:
?
New
W 1
1iffen, N.,
American
Architecture from 1780 to
1 40
D
MIT
?
AlthO].Z, 3.5 Victorian England 1837-12.
?
Cambridge University
Press, 1970.
?
of' ?
Booth,C, Life ari
d
Labour o:
Town
Life. 17 Volumes. London: Macmi
llan
?
Co., 1902-3.
London: Loflgmafls Green &
Briggs
*
A.,
('r...
Ltd..
1959.
London: Odhams Press, ,1963.
Victorian
I
Cities.
The Victorian Mind. New
York: Random
House
Inc.,
195
Buckley, 3.IL,
Chadwick, E., Report 2!L'iE
cat Britain
^W-37
Edited by
14.W.
?
uu.
Edinburgh
New York:
St .
Martins Press,
CL -
ChartiSt portraits.
,
Coll.flS, H. and C. AbramskY.
Karl Marx and the Briti
London: Macmillan and Co., Ltd., 19•
movement.
DyOs, N.J..
The Stid
of
Urban
?
tZ ?
New Yor
k:
rro,
.ater
University Press, 1966.
V
icto rian
Subu
rb.
Leice
Glacken, C.
?
Traces
?
,
on the Rhodian Shore. Berkeley: UniversitY
of California PreSs 19
7.
Glass, B., London:Bec8
?
Chane.
LondOfl MacGibbon and Kee,
?
Hartz, L., The oundifl of
New
Societies. Toronto: Harcourt
?
rac
and World,
19
Innis, E., Can d
?
Political and Social
Hi 9.!X• Toronto,
?
Rinehart
and Co., Inc., 195
1965.
Pacey, D.,
Ethel W
ilson. New York: Twayfle, 1967.
PhillipS,
P., No
Power Great. Vancouver: B.C. Federation
of
Labour, 1
9
7.
Langn. L. The Life 111
r,torv
in AnthrOD010
?
Sc cnCC.
TO
Ontario: Iloit,
?
inchtrt and
WlrthtOrt,
19
5.

 
.1
3.
Mannheim, K., Tdco1j
.
j nd Utopia. Translated by L. Wirth and
E. Shil.
New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, Inc.,
1936.
Mill, J.S., On Liberty.
New
York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 19147.
Parsons, T., et al. Towards a General Theory of Action. Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1951.
Sauer, C., Land and Life. Edited by J. Leighly. Berkeley:
University of California Press,
1967.
Wagner,
P. and M. Mikesell (eds.), Readings in Cultural Ceograpy.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1963.
B. Article!
Bartholomew, H. and Associates. A Plan for the City of Vancouver,
British Columbia. Vancouver: Wrigley Printing Ltd.,
1929.
Lort, R., "Samuel Maclure M.R.A.I.C.
1860_1929",.
Royal Architectural?
Institute of Canada Journal, Vol.
35,
Serial No. 3921April
19581, pp 11 -115.
of Town Planning in British Columbia",
Institute of Canada, Vol.
35, Serial No.
pp. 110-113.
Collins, P.,
Thonas Cooper, the Chartist:
Byron and the 'Poets
?
of the Poor'. Nottingham Byron Lecture Series, 196
Nottingham: Hawthorfles Ltd.,
1969.
Dyos, 11.J., "The Growth of Cities in the Nineteenth Century: A
Review of some Recent Writing", Victorian Studies, Vol. IX,
No.
3 (Mar
?h
1966),
pp. 2252411.
"The Speculative Builders and. Developers of VictOrlLtfl
London",
Victoañ
Studies, Vol. XI, Supplement (Summer,
1968),
pp. 6141-689.
Walker, A., "Town Planning in Vancouver", The
MucJa.y2SL..2i
Canada, Vol XXXI, No.
14
(June,
1935), pp. 5-10.
Ward, D., "The Ernergence of Central Imigrant Ghettos in American
Cities", Anna's of the Association of American Geographers,
Vol. 58, No. 2 June, 19), pp.43-359.
Wynne, R.E., "American Labour Leaders and the Vancouver Anti-
Oriental Riot", WashintOfl State
Hfttoricai iSociet1
.
, Vol.
57, No. 1
4
(October, 196), pp. l?2-i60.
Best, C., "The Scottish Victorian City", Victorian Studi,
Vol. X
No. 3 (March, 1968),
pp.
329-358.
Cornish, . V., "Apparent Magnitude in Natural Scenery and its
Determining Cauics", Geographical Journal, Vol. LXV, No. 5
(November, 1925), pp.
42i-433.:........
Oberlander,
p., "History
Ro
a
1 A r c hitectUrj
39(Apri1, 1958),

 
4.
Cornish, V., "Harmonies of Scenery: An Outline of Aesthetic
Geography", GeograPIiY, Vol. 11
4 , Part
14
(Spring,
1928),
pp.. 215-283.
sh Geo
?
hical
Dickinson, R.E., "Landscape and Society", scotti
?
ra
j azir
.
c
1
Vol. LV, No. 1 (January,
1939 , pp.
Fc'ldmefl, A.S. and C. Tilly, "The Interaction of Soàial and
American SociolO ical Review Vol. XXV,
Physical Space",
No.
6
(December,
1960), pp. 877-88
Firey, W., "Sentiment and Symbolism as
Ecological Variables",
American
S
ociological Review) Vol. X, No.
2 (April, 19145),
?
Gilmore, u., "The Old New Orleans and the New A Case for EcolOCY",
American 5ocjo1
0
giC
?
Rev, Vol. IX, No.
14
(August,
191414),
. 385-39k.
Horowitz, G., "Conservatism, Liberalism and Socialism in
Canada",
?
Canadian Journal of EconOmiC
?
Science, Vol'.
XXXII, No
w
. 2 May,
19 ?
, pp. 1 1-1 3.
Loventhal, D. and H. prince, "The English LandsCaPe",
Vol. LIV, No.
3
(June,
19614), PP• 309-37.
Review,
?
,
"English I,andSCaPC .Tastes " The
GeO&rai1I
?
Vol. LV, No. 2 (April,
1965)1 pp. 186_222
Petersen, W.,
?
'eo1ogical Origins of Britain's New Towns",
American
?
Vol. XXXIV, No 3
Scholte, B., "EpistemiC paradigms, Some Problems in Cross-Cultural
Research on Social
?
t
?
hropO10g
- Histor
y
and TheorY
",
American
?
thropo10g- .i Vol.
68,
No. 5 (October,
1966), pp.
1192-1201.
Vance, J.E., "Housing the Worker: Determinative and Contingent
Ties in Nineteenth Century jmjngham",
Vol. XLIII, No.
2
(April,
1967), pp. 95-127.
"Housin g
the Worker: The Employment Linkage as a
Force in Urban Structure, ECoflOfl
?
Ge0r1?.iY.., Vol. XLII, No.
(October 19
66
),
PP 2914-325.
Ward, D., "The Emergence of Central Immigrant GhettOS in Americ"
S ?
Cities",
Annals of the AssOCiation of
American
Geo ra hers,
Vol.
58,
No. 2
?
8),PP.
3
3-359.
don", Victorian Studies, Vol.
Dyos, H.J., "Slums of Victorian Lon
?
x

 
a-
Pevener, N. "William Morris and Architecture", Journal of the
Royal Institute of British Architects, Vol. LXIV, 3rd Series,
1951.
"Uvedale Price", The Architectural Review, Vol. XCV,
1914
1
1
1
pp. 126-137. ?
S
"Richard Payne Knight", The Art Bulletin, Vol. XXXI,
1949,
pp. 108-125.
•,
"A Note onSharavaggi (written in collaboration with
S. Lang), The
ArchitecturalReVieW,
Vol. CVI,
1949,
pp. 102-10
., "Karl Friedrich Schinkel", Journal of the Royal
Institute of British Architects, Vol. LIX,
1951-52, pp. 174.19.
"Humphry Repton", The
Architectural Review, Vol.
CII,
1948, pp. 138-155.
"Good King James' Gothic", The Architectural Review,
Vol. CVII,1950, pp. 156-1630
"Goethe and'ArchiteCtUre", Palladio (translated
by
Adeline Hartcup),
Vol. No.
X-XII,
1951,
pp.. 1614-173.
"The Genesis of the Picturesque",
'
The Architectural
Review
L
Vol. XCVI, 19
44
,
pp. 78-101.
"The Egyptt.n Revival" The Architectural Review,
Vol. CXIX, 1956, pp. 212-235.
..
"Early Working Class
Housing",
The
Architectural
Bej-
Vol. XCIII, 19143.
"Early and High Baroque", Repertorium fur.
Kunstwiaeenschaft XLIX,
1928
9
pp. 314-55.
"The Done Revival", The Architectural Review (written
in collaboration with S. Langi, Vol. CIV,
1948, pp. 196-211.
_____. .
"The
Jahrbuch fur
_____., "The
fur Kunatwis
pp.
10-33.
Crisis of
1650
in Italian
Painting",
Wiener
Kuntgcschichte, Vol. VIII,
1932, pp. 56-101.
Counter-Reformation and Mannerism", ReDertorium
cenachaft, (translated by David. Britt), Vol. XLVI,

 
4
SDO PRAS2R UNIVERSITY
DQpartTiflt
of GeographY
J.
Evendeft
flOM:
TO: Undergraduate Studies Coittee
?
L.
Depart3nt of Geography
SUBJECT: Proposed courses in Urban
?
DkTZ April 25, 1974
Geography (Geog. 361-3 and
362-3)
UJU I I
?
141 ?
£fl
?
s
?
Lit' I
?
1
al
forms
are
completed as per the reqt
The attathd iw Course Propos
outlined in the inDtrt!Cti°fl8 froa Dr. HugridgC Chaitwafl, scus,
dated October lat,
1973, with the exceptio
n
of
item 3(b) which rgquircs a atatOT2flt of ho'.,. the
proposed courses Lit into our ov3rall
prorfl°. The purpose of thin covarit*g
earlier tormda
note is to fulfil that ruqurCTnt
and
I do so by appending two
from ?
to the
Cocitt3O,
t
h firet dated 3te 21.at, 3.973, end the ccd dated
February 26th, 1974.
LJE/gf

 
4
D..
SIN FRASER UNIVERSITY
Departflt of Geography
TO: Undergraduat
e
Studies Committee
?
FROM: J. L. Evenden
Department of Geography
SUBJECT;
Effect on the course
.
Geography
441, DATE: February 26, 1974.
Geography of Urban Regions, of the
-
introduction of Geography 361-3
and 362-3.
Background .
?
.
The intention of Geography 441
is, as stated in the
Calendar, to
evaluate
"...the
nature
of urbanizatio
n
having specific
reference to theories of urban
spatial
structure and
to
comparisons
of urbanizatio
n
in Canada and abroad."
This implies
prioi knowledge of the principles
of urban geography and a
commitment to the study of urban
phenomena
on
a comparative
basis. Experience
with
the course in the
programme has led to
the conclusion that students
are
i11prepared to take up such comparative study, largely becausC they
have not
been expoied to a systematic urban geo
g
ra
phy
at
sori earlier level. Thus some
of this missing background has had to be covered
as
an introduction in Geography
441. This pro'4deD only a superficial know1ede
and takes away from the
intent.
of Geography 441.
?
.
Effect
Introduction0f
the two courses at
the 300
level would
provide an in-depth
background to the principles
of urban geography.
Thus the
subject would be much
more
firmly
based in
the
programma
and would
remove from
Geograph
y
441
the
need
to
cover this material. This senior level course could then fulfil
its aim in
the
study of comparative urbanism.
C.
.-

 
SI)N FRASER UNIVER$ITY
?
MEMORANDUt
TO: A. MacPherson,
Chairman ?
'PROM:
Undergraduate Studies Committee
4
L. J. Evenden
Geography Department
SUBJECT:: The place of Urban Geography in the
?
DATE:
Jcie 21, 1973.
upper levels course structure:
Circumstances and Proposal
1. Immediate circurst'nces
The up-coning review of the upper levels
course structure provides the
opportuni..
to re-assess the place of Urban Geography in our curriculum.
2
Backrrtd_
It was my uuderstandin, when
first
appointed, that Geography 441-5, "Urban
Regions", was to be n' principal focus for teaching. I was made to understand,
further, that the course was
to
"use" the knowledge of the systematics, and to
"cap" the study of urbanism by referenc3
to comparative studies and scudicn vhic
haw atterrtpred to identify ways of
making
valid comparisons. In,
this oerse it wa
s
one of the courses desiaed to "integrate" or "synthesize" at the final etage of
degree study and thin has been tho direction of vty efforts.
The exigencies of the 'tri'mnter" system have produced various
strains on the
COflt
I
UU itY
of courc• materialb and, although the course has not frcquent!y been
offered by others, when it has the subject
matter
has
tended to revert to a
8yatematic urban geography such aa used to be taught in outlines as exemplified
in Mayer
arid Kohn, Readings in Urban Ceograpy; Ecirry and
liorto
r
a, Geographic
Per
,
pcctives on Urbzn Systems,
has been used at least once as a text for 441,
d this 1
?
may e regaideo
as the direct intellectual
descendant of the Mayer
cnd Xohn format.
Two factors which should potentially influence our restructuring of
the
curriculum may be read into
this. First,
despite
the fact that our upper levels
program=
is, in
certain clearly Identifiable ways, an outgrowth of the "old"
urban geogranhy of the late
1950
1
s,
there
is evidc.rtly a
felt need to keep
aystemtic initrucUoa
along these wall-eatablichad
linen. I agree with those
who fool this
way, but
without violating the intention
of the Urban
Regions
course,
there has been no opportunity to teach along
these lines.
What students
have received in this
way is thus
patchy and only put together by the individual
student exposed to
these "patches"
in
various courses. Second, it
appears there
is
a greater
interest on the part of faculty to be invo1d in teaching specifically
"urban" courses, as evidenced by volunteered ussrs in the recent five year
projection for courco. In an opinion cliuute of "don't spread r,
too
thinly"
a
concentrLtion
of ncrs anywhere In the curriculc.n is an o-.-ant and may be taken
as a rened
intereit
in the
subjuct matter and
market
potcnritL of urban geography.

 
).' MacPharcofl
?
.2- ?
April 25, 1974
3
0
• ?
I have surveyed
the Urban Geography offerings,
in
their contexts of programmes
?
for Geography, in most
of
the Canadian universities with
Geography Departments.
Two babic impressions emerge
a) Simon Fraser has not been alone in mounting
program19 related
to the
Urban Geography
curricula of 15 years ago;
but b) we stand alone in not
having
retained, or re-introduce
d
, courses which are
specifically labelled: by the word "urban" and are "syateciatiC" in
content
and
approach.
These impressions have
long been with me and are the
basis of my
submitting new
couroes
to the
Committee sotre 18 months ago. My
recent
examination of
curricuia
makes r feel even more strongly
that
we
are not only
light
on our urban offerings,
but out
of phase with other geography proraIn2B. This is a sericun matter if we
are
to keep
in mind
that we should offer the "boat possible undorgradut progratn
in geography",
and a
serious matter indeed
when we
consider our geographical
poaitic'n
in one of the fastest growing, and largest, urban areas in Canada.
In
going
throui
the
programmes of
nther
Geography Dcpartr2flt(J, end in keeping
a finger on trends
in Urban
Geography, I conclude that our
d
icicuCC-O
lie in on
ibonce
cf
yntert.0 urban geography, historical. urban
an
gecgrphY, gran
?
U.chniqu.
in urban naiyui, and problem (or research) cours
es
(or seminar&)in urban study.
One is iaadc irovc
acutely crcre of dsficiancict wh3n it is realized
that
aside from P.S.
464-5, which is infrequently offered, there are no other specificall
y
designated "urb-
cours
es
in the
University
Calendar apart from our own "Urban
Itegicrns". The
proposals
below hew to the
line of correcting
these deficiencies in our
departmental offering6.
L I
TE
/ 9
I

 
SENATE
c
1TTEE O1 UDERG.UTE STUOtES
?
NEW COIJRS- PROP-SAL FOIL
tbbreviratiOn
end3 InfOtjofl
?
Depattmt
?
GEOGRPH
6
Code
?
Course Nuer
?
Hours:Vector:!
GEOG
Title of Course:
ITBODCTIO TO URBAN GEOGRAPHY
Calendar
?
Yi ?
and
exa mmn
?
esCP ?
of
CoutSC
?
concepts
This course yjil
?
trOduce basic c
?
in the study of urbati
geography by 5ystemat allY identif
' ?
maOr
of urban structure.
components
TO
?
Nature of Course
?
lectures and one tutorial
(or special
i ns t ruction
s
)
: ?
the
department-
GeOBraP ?
ill-3; 1213
Id il-3 or perm'
of
ites
t is preferae but ot eSSeflti to take this course before tak"i
Prerequis
eOgraP ?
3
What course cour3e8)'
62.
if
?
aY, is-being dropPed from the
caleUd
?
f
this
course s
a
pproved: NONE
2.
§checlul-III&
How
frequently will the course
?
An
tse be offered?
?
pall
1975
Semester in which the course
?
first be offered?
erin
Which of your present
faculty
would be availableto maethePr0PO8
oU
Brown a
pcSi
?
t.3
?
ven' B.C.
?
r.d àcUitY
. Obe9 of the Course
Cou
These
are
?
?
a)- to •intr0
?
basiS
the study of urban geograPhY on
?
5ystemtiC
b) to identify
the inaOr components of ur
?
he
ban strUcte
C)
to assesS the strUcte of
flO
?
outl
1e about t
contemPo
?
city as 'revealed
?
the scholarly
iiterate on the 5ubect. (See atta
?
course
?
-
4.
?
(for inforti0n only)
What additional reso
urces
will be requiredin the
following areas:
,
e uireme
Faculty
?
The frequency
?
course offerings
in
the ?
eOgr aP ?
Unde?
staff
?
Curricum has been modified to accommodate the faculty
stt.
-Y aval
and space
?
qjrement6 of this course. Iibrar1 and
?
V
Library
?
materials
?
quired for this
?
c
is nece?
i
ourse are present
Audio
Visual
the Universit
?
addition
o'
1
Space
Equipment
581
flats
?
i.
Dean
A
c
SCUS
?
73-341):(When cPl8tth8 thiU form, for instrU°'
?
eu
McmOtdt SCU

 
V.
o
populationQ.
thcLy.
(a)
distributio
na
l
characteristicsof
the
population by
age and sex
(b)
distributional
charactCri6tjc
?
of
ethnic groups,
claa&eS
social
(c)
distributional
change characteristics
characteristics of
of population
in areas of thccity
(d)
(c)
migrations of
urban population
in populati0''
distributio
ns
(1)
diurnal variations
1
Course
Outline
Evenden
Introduction to Urban Ceo ra
?
?
L.J.
h
-
0:
?
S
Carter, Harold,
?
Arnold, 1972,
346
pp.
xiv.
This is a recent text and is one of the best
?
for
the
upper
level ?
ergraduat ?
It is already widely adopted in universities.
Jo
?
I ?
nadianCit,
Toronto, McGraw-Hill-Ryerson, 1973,
Jack&Ofl,
237 pp.
J hn
xiv.
J.,
?
book in structure but it is based
?
This recent text parallels Carter'S
upon Canadian materals. It makes a point of linking
Canadian
urban
i
?
link
this
course
structur
e
to European
-
4n
tecedentS, and thus helps o
-3.
W ith the proposed Geography 362
ii
I.
a
II.
Overview of
ContcP
Urban P
r
o
b
l
ems
(a)
extent of urban development; selected examples
(b)
rapidit
y
of urban growth ard change
(c)
urban problems in national context
(d)
cffcct of urban growth: inner city, suburban sprawl, decline
of small centres, regenerat
i
on of selected centres
(c)
dcmarcatiflS
?
delimiting the urban area
(1) probloi of urban data
The
Locatio
ns
Of
Citi
es
(a)
in relation to broad environmental factors:
zones,
and
rivers
(b)
in relation to transportation routes
The Conce
pt
of
Cen t
K!, it ^
coastlines, latitudinal
(a)
the functional approach in urban geography
(b)
central authority as the basis for focal actiVitY
(c)
central place theory; rank size rule
(d)
criticisms of central place theory
and
of
the rank
size rule
Iv.
?
TaxOn0
(a)
functiOnS, and functional clssificati01,0f
tOwnS
(b)
morpholo
gy
and
the analysis of plan (layout)
(c)
imager
y
and the perception of cities

 
S
S
Introduction to Urban GeograPflY coflCQ.
VI
1rjh.0Ltt
(a)
natural site charaCtet
j
9
tl
cs- geology, soils, drainage
(b)
water supply and
usage
(c)
t
he
urban climate
(d)
urban geomorpholo
g
y
(d)
urban metabolism
d Problem
VII The
Urban tan
(a)
land use
theories
and realities
(b)
the central businesHdiRtct
(c)
residential areas: inner city, city
andsuburt)
(d)
the
rural-urban fringe
(e)
urban development and
re-development
(f)
the
amenitY factor
(g)
open space
VIII
The
political Factor in
Urba
n
G!^^r a ^ 11Y_
(a)
the geà_poiitiCal framework of
ci
ti
es
(b)
urban develoPflflt in relatiO to the changing nature of political
involvement
?
-
"s
IX ?
The
Con tempo ar
?
uper-if
problems
X ?
Case
?
L
U rb an
xi
?
rhe
Urhcfl Future
hasea
ii through IX. The
Overview
Emphasis
will be placed principal
ly
upon
section is intended to be brief
and IX and X
will
be treated according to
available time.
with
any
other course listed
This
course
doa8 not overlap in objective
in the University calendar.
I
n
W.

 
Introduction
to Urban Coography (cont'd.)
-37
?
L. J. Evenden
References:
We are
fortunate in
having
two recent texts admirably suited to our
purposes. Supplementary references include the 'following. No journal
articles are
included in this list, several of the volumes comprising
selections of "Readings". Numerous journals, however, including all the
major geographical
ones, carry articles relevant to this course, and reading
assignments in the journals would be made as appropriate.
Bartholomew, H., Land Uses In American Cities_
L
ltarvard
University Press, 1955.
Beaujeu-Garnier, J. and C. Chabot, Urban GoograpY, Longmafls,
1967.
Berry, B.J.L., and P.
Horton, ?
raphic PerspebtiyeS on Urban
SystemQ,
Prentice-Hall, 1970, 564 pp. xxii.
Bourne, L.S. Internal Structure of the Cit
y
, Oxford, 1971. (Readings)
Chapin, P.S., Jr., Urban Land Use P1an2.in,2nd
ed., U. of Illinois Press, 1965.
Christaller, V.,
Cdntral Places in Southern Germany, Prentice-Hall, 1966.
Detwyler, T.R., M.G. Marcus, et al., Urbanization and Environment: the
Physical G3oraphy of the City, Duxbury Press,. Bplmoflt,
1972.
Dickinson, R.E., City and Region, Routledge and Kogan Paul, 1964.
Cibbs, Jack P., Urban Research. Methods, Van )ostrand, 1961 (Readings).
Cottmafln, J., Megalopolis, Twentieth Century Fund, 1961.
Rail, Peter, The
World C1ties McGraw-Hill, 1966.
Hauser, P.M. and L.F. Scbnore, The Study of Urbanization, John Wiley, 1965.
Johnson, 3.11., Urban Geography London, Pergamott, 167.
Jones, E., Towns and Cities, Oxford University Press, 1966.
Legget, Robert F., Cities and Ceo1oy, McGraw-Hill, 1973.
Mayer,
Ii.
and
C. Kohn, Readings in Urban
Goograpy, U. of
Chicago Press, 1959.
Norborg,
K. (ed.),
proceedings of 'the ICU Syrrposium iuUrbnGeOa, Lund, 1960,
Lund Studica in
Geography, Series B, Human Caography (Readings).
Park, Robert E.,
X.W. Burgess and R.D. McKenzie (edc.),
?
Thee
e City U. of
Chicago
Press,
1925.
Putnara, R.G.
F.J.
Taylor and P.C. Kettle, A Geography
of Urban
?
, Mthun, ?
1970 (aadine).
Rose, A., Patt.rnfi of C1ri
L
Nelson, 1967.
Taylor, C., Urb.cn
C4oj
&Methuen, 1949.

 
• ?
SENATE COMMITTEE ON UNDERC!ADUA"rE STUDIES
NEW COURSE
PROPOSAL FORN.
'.
Calendar
Information
?
Department:GEOGRAPHY
' Abbreviation
CoL'c:
GEOG
Course Number:362
?
Credit Hours:3
Vector: 2-1-0
Title of
Course: ?
GEOGRAPHY
OF URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Calendar Description
of Course:
This course will apply the principles of urban geographical analysis
the study of urbanVzation as exemplified in the development of citien
in Europe and North America.
?
S
Nature of
Course
:
?
Two hour lectures and ohe tutorial
Prerequisites
(or special instructions):
Geography 111-3,
121-3
and
1141_3
or permission. of the department.
It is preferable, but not essential, to take this course after having
taken Geography 361.
What course (courses), if any, is being dropped from the calendar if this course is
approved:
?
NONE
2. Scheduling
Row frequently will the course be offered?
?
Annually
Semester in which the course will first be offered?
Fall
1976
Which of
your
preuent faculty would
be available to
make
the
proposed
offering
possible? ?
L.J. Evenden
. ?
tivea
?
Courne
The overall objective is to examine emerging trends in urban develop-
ment through the consistent application of urban geographical
principles to ptternsof city growth, activity, building and decline.
See attached course outline. ?
.
4.
Budgetary and Space
Rguirernents
(for information
only)
What additional
resources
will
be
required in the
following areas:
Faculty ?
The frequency of course offerings in the Geography Undergradut
Staff
?
Curriculum has been modified to accommodate the faculty, staff
and space requirements of this course. Library and audio vii
Library ?
materials, required for this course are presently available in
Audio Visual
the University. No'additional. equipment is necessary.
Space
Equipment ?
.
5. Approval
Date:_____________
Dpartiaant Chairman
?
Dean ?
. ?
Chairman,
SCUS
A ?
C
SCUS 73-34b:--
(When c=pleting ,
thiu form,
for intructionB see Memorandum SCUS
73-34a.
Attach
course outline).
?
S
Oct. 173

 
Outline
se ?
Evenden
Te
Text*
There is no tent which would cover CqUatelY the content of the course.
As
already
0CUt0
in
some
courses, se1ec°
?
5tC
0frea9 would comprise the
?
CotC"
eadiflg ?
and these could vary
?
from semester to se
would
Two recent papers do stand out as appropriate genera
statements which
frame- the course
?
an
introductory
?
way. These are
a) net1eY, Paul, "The Concept o f Urbafl' int_
9nd Uafl' edited by P.3. UckO, R.
?
jngh ?
an ?
A
C.
.
Dimb
1972. Baprint No. 3.2, Warner 11odu1at
Sworthl
pub
b)
VanCe, 3.,
?
is
?
assignment in the Pre
C
aPttt5t Capitalist) and
Economic
Geo&rak"Ll
POBtCaL CY) ?
Vfl1,o. 2, 1971,
p. 1()1-120.
?
Introduction
(a) geograPtc approaches to the study o f
?
and
__
?
urbm ?
appr0a ?
taken by scho1a in dif
including
?
ferent
tries
?
(b) ?
fjttiOfl9
World
U.
(a)
jndigtflO' ?
r cg ?
ioflB
al urbanism
and charaCtent8ti
b) flprei5tntal
versuS
hidU9tti
(c)
crttCi'9
of
the
pre_in
?
ha
?
4.tti
?
designati on
?
paistent tendefle8 in urban
?
actt6ttCS
?
(a)
the tendency to IlEcumeflOpOliB
and teztit0rjatY
f urban
(a)
s
i
t
e and
(c)
er1al re1ati0
?
of
cities
C
(d)
structure of
the
city,
(e)
hi&Lott1_fCtt0
?
appr08e9
to urbafljsm
IV. ?
The pob1Cm of ettO
0
.iitt5m
and the Mercantile
Cit
(a)
ftCt°° 1' st.ructutl ad i&iteractb01
?
comparis0nS between the
bitoriC
trading city an the "moth
?
citY"
(b)
and cofltrLt btwcefl the modC
?
idea
of the
?
j;..d
?
the
ycly big
"
city".
V.
(a)
LOytI
?
cal
tricture of the city
;tatC
?
' ?
. ?
vatiiCfl1
tructur of the urban hiUted
a

 
Geography of Urban Development (cont'd.) -2-
?
L. J.
Evenden
VI. ?
The European Sequence in City-building Geographic Structu
r
al
ExpressionsL
(a)
Nedieval
(b)
Renaissance
(c)
Induatiral
Vii. Capital Cities,
Frontier cities, and Colonial Cities
(a) the
forward site and the central site
?
(b) examination of examples as types
(c) interrelationshi
ps
among types
VIII. Evoltip17
Theor
i
es of City Structure as expressed principally in the works
(a)
(b)
(c)
IX. ?
Can
a)
b)
ci)
Patrick Geddes
Lewis Mutuford
Griffith Taylor
adian Settlement and Urbanization
regional variations in the settlement process
the euterrtce of a "system" of cities
urban primacy in the Cana
dian
. context
rpholoiCai characteristics of Canadian cities.
X.
?
The Go.phy of Urban Government and Plannin
g,
in Canad
a
a)
cities as Provincial entities
b)
spatial characteristics of municipal jurisdiction
c)
geography of metropolitan government
XL. ?
oncluiork: Urbanization and Urbanism - Process and State
Ccmme n t on Emphases
Parts I through III are intended to review basic principles of .urban
geography as suited specifically to this course. The largest proportion of
time would be spent on parts IV through X. Extensive use would be made of
examples
throughout the -course and the geographical approach, as expressed in 1
through Lit, would be emphasized in each case. The sections on Canadian urbanizati
would atteupt not only to describe and interpret the urban process and their
expressions in Canada, but would also attempt
to
place them in a wider historical-
geographical context, referring to European and Amertafl influences in par-
ticular. This is a point 9f contact with the proposed intrpductio
fl
to Urban
?
Geography and specifica
lly
links to Jackson's book, The Canudian Ci, proposed
u a text in that courae,

 
:
Refere
nces
Because of the large number of references which could be
included, the following list has been compiled as sugcstiVC
of the range of reading matter which would be referred to.
The
list is selective and, with one or two exceptions includes
no journal articles, although reading assignments in the journals
would of course be made as appropriate.
Townad ouptryPi
?
1fl,Oxf01 University Press)
Abf.r.'rOrnbie, p.,
Adams, Robt. McC., The Evolutionof Urban ScCCY Er1y
_M
I
PrehiSDItr,ic Mexico.
?
Lewis Henry Morgan Lectures 19
Chicago, Aldine, 191 pp.,
1966.,
Rural Plannin
g
and DevelOoment, Canada,
CommiSsiC
Of
Adams,
Conservation, Ottawa, 1917.
Thos.,
_____ Outli
?
of Town and City
Planning,
Sage
Foundation,
Argan, 0., RenaisSaflCQ.Y Brazille, New York.
1JrbaniZat Jon and
.t5 ?
cmF
-----
Bcian B.C. The
EvOlVifl
Ciy, Pitman (Copp Clark in Toronto), 19[
Beresford Maurice
NeWTOWflS
of the idd)eAe: Town Plantation
-
England, Wa1C5 Gascony ' London. 19
Berry, B.J.L. and F. Horton, Geographic Fe
?
ectiVCS.0fl Urban Sy en.
Prentice-Halls
1970.
Bird, J.., Geography of th.e Port of London, London, Hutchinson,
1957.
Blanchard* Raoul, Grenoble: Etude de Geor'raphie urba, 1912 (& 193
augmented).
Life and Labour of the People in London, Pelican, 971,
Booth,
abridged ed. (Hutchinson,
1969).
Chas.,
edited by Albert Fried andBiChardM.' Elman.
Bourne, L.S., Internal Structure of the City, Oxford,
1971
(Rc1n)
BraidwOod, Robt. J. and Gordon P. Willey,
Viking Fund Pubis. jn
.
Anthr0p0l0gY, No. 32, Chicago, 196-'.
.
?
Cities, London, Odhams, 1963
(al
s ?
o I
n
Briggs, Asa, Victorian
?
}'lic
British Association, Scientific Survey of South-ettCrfl
?
tIt,
Edinburgh.
Brown, flrt)ph
?
of. th
?
United
?
tit ?
, )Iarciur1
Brace & Wor1d
.
New York, Russell
Beckinsale, R-P., and J.M. Houston,
?
Blackwell, Oxford,
1968...

 
Burke,
Gerald, Towns in
?
Making, Department of Town Planning,
College
of Estate Management, London, 1971.
S
Camblin,
Gilbert,
?
Town in U1stei, Mullan, Belfast,
1951
.
DA 990
U46
C27
UBC
Geoiroeog. bib.
Clarke, M-V.,
The M1eV..t1te.
?
An
Es;hy
(
,
,
n
Tyrran y
and
Federation in
't
Late 1dd1e Ages
, London, 1926.
Corish, Vaughan, The 3ret
Methuen, London, 1923. flepr.rted
1971-
Curl, Jas. s., European Cities and 3)ciet, London, Leonard fill
Books,
1970, 190 pp. + viii.
Dickinson, R.E., The West Eupeftfl City, RoutledCe & Kean Paul.
DoxiadiS, C., Ekistic.
Dyos, H.J. (ed.), The Study of Urban Hi stor
y
, London, Edward Arnold,
1968.
East, W.G., The Qeogr&PhY Behind Nistor
y
" NeU;on,
l93&.
Lcndoi:, Methuen, 4th
GulliOfl,
Eisner,
The Urban Pattern.
Geddec, P., CIt.e
?
In EvolutiOn,
1915.
Macnhil
Glaab, Chas.
N.
& A.T. Brown, A
History of' Urban Ameriç,
?
ifr.,
1961.
Goodman,
Paul &
Percival, Comrnunit, 2nd ed., New York, Random
House, 1960.
Seaboard of th
Gottmaflfl, J
. .,
Me alopolis
The. Urbanized Nor
'
theastern
United
St
Greene, Jack
P., 0-4-11--ento to Societr.
1584-1763,
Vol.
1, Doe. Hist.
of American
Life, McGraw-Hill
Gutkjfld, E.A., Urban Deve.1OPrn
?
...(series) (Vol. 1) Central Euro;'.
196k;
(Vol2)
?
in and Scandafl Countre,
165; (voiTTh
Urban Dcv. in southern Europe, SPaill
?
(1967);
(Vol.
4)
Eur ?
It
aly
& Greece
C1969), etc.
International
Hstnry of City Development, Free Press Collier-
Macmillan,
196-71, 7
Vols.,
UT 11 G8.
Internatiull."I
Survey
Gutkind, E., Our World from the In
w ?
Hi Environment
Hack e t t,
?
r an,
?
uu,
Soi
et" and EnvIr0 time
J ?
Te Uior)X ,•• ?
I,on''n, P.rcival Marshall,
l95. ?
(Vol. ?
or 'ihe
of Piannifl ?
SeritL3)
_________•1
An Historical GeoraphY of Eur212.,
edition,
1950.
..
?
I

 
Halliday, W.R.,
The GrbvtOf the City State,
i t Wor 1d,
C
Hammond,
M.9
?
ity
in the Anciei
ambridge, Ma
?
1972, ?
PP-
Harvard Universit
y Pre,
Handliri, 0. and J. Burchard (ed.), The Hist9
?
MIT
Press,
1963
(paperack
1966).
Hiorns, Town Bui1ipi
HoubOfl, ?
Geography, of Europ, LondOn, Gerald Duckworth,
2nd
ed.j
Howard,
E.9
Gard.
I Cities
and Town P1anLLj, Oxford, Clarendon Press.
Hughes & Lambourn, Towns
The
EcOnomofCtS, 'Randoin House,
268 pp.
Jacobs, Jane,
?
• ?
Jackson, J.B., Thern
?
, Methuen
1972.
____________
•,
?
?
Toronto, McGraw-Hill Ryersufl, 1973.?
TheCanaanCit,
?
• ?
Johns, Ewart, British TownsaP
.'
1965.
Johnson, James H.,nGraLL (2nd ed.)
Keir, David, jnhE.L2J! Third Statistical-Account of Scotland, Co11r,
Glasgow, 196b.
Kerr, D. and
J.
Spelt, The Changing Face of
?
Ontct, Ottawa, Dept.
of Mines
and TeC11nicalSu'eYs, Geographical Branch, Memoir
No. 11, 1965.
Lavedan, P., Histoire d'Urbaflis!, Paris,
4
Vols. (1926_192).
Own, Militown, Rai1to, University of Toronto,
1971.
Lucas,
McKelvey*
B.,
Blake,
Minet
The Urbanizatio
n
of America,
1860-1915; 1963.
____________, The Emer ence of Metro olitan America,
1915_19669
Rutgers University Press, 19
, B., The C1t
in
Ameriap Histo
r
y, Allen & Unwin,
1969.
Mc(e1VeY
•,
American Urbanizat
io
n, Scott ForesiTlan,
1973.
U. of London Press, 1968.
MahogUflie, A.L., JrbanizttI0fl in
Nigfl
Marsh, ?
L., Commt
5
, In Canada, Toronto, McClellatmd and St.wtrt,
.
Merlin, P.
?
_TOP!, MethuCfl,
1971-
oho1y_NP1gY,J
Matrix
S
an An 13.1Utred
Praeg', lew York.
Mumford, L., Thu Culture of C.tl, London,
1938.
&. ?
U .,trv -
1961.

 
Mundy, :
John H. and P.
ej
S
CflbCrg, The Medieval Town,
Van.Nostrafld
(Anvil),
1958-
?
y:
An Urban Geography%
• Murphy,
?
ym0nd, ?
McGraw-Hill,
1800-1961, M.A.
OsOr, C.F.,
The Process of Urbanization in Canada
C8
Department, 19° , 227 pp.
Thesis,
SFU EcoflOmi
Pearson,
N.,
University of Guelph,
Countries: Urban
1972.
?
Societv
?
Pirenfle, H., Earl DemOCraC1
?
in the Low
l COflfljCt in the Middle
and
p
0 itica ?
A es and the BenaiSSaflE,
trans
.
by J.V. Saunders l4anchester U.P. & Longmafls 1915
but Harper Torchbook, 1963, New intro
(196.3
by John H. Mundy).
Pirenne, H., Medieval Cities, trans. by F.D. Halsey (Princeton u.P.,
1925),
Anchor Hooks.
?
s.nade.and its
G0y
?
, Toronto, Macmu] an,
Plunke
tt
,
T
?
'Urban
1968.
?
on,
Fred, A.,
External
Relations
Research
Report, 19 3
U. Of
hicagO, Dept. Of
R ?
The MakflR0
?
Princeton,
1965.
Reps, John
w., ?
'Resource Frontier,
R.ubinsons ?
Dept. of Geogra
phy R
?
h Report,
U .
of Chicago,
Robson, B., UrbanLGr2vt1, Methuen,
1973.
Press, .Berkeley &
Bong, Fritz, The Medieval Town U. of Calif-
?
Los
Angeles,
?
20p
Rugg, Dean, SpataF?dO
?
of Urban
Dubuque, Win. C. Brown,
Nedieyl Regions and their Cities, Newton Abbott, David
Russell,
ares,
1972.
J.C.,
Saalmafl, H., Medieval Cities, BraZillC.
Saariflefl, Eliel,
The Cit
?
Its Growth Its Deca
?
Its Future. ReinhO
1943,
MIT Paperback ed. 19 5.
Schlesinger* A., The CitiMr
?
jhstOr. -
Cit
ies: Their Origin
Grow
Scientific American,
Intro, by KingsleY Davis,
?
'rccmafl,
?
an Francisco,
l9(.
297 pp.
Cilliture of
?
Sciinett,
?
R. ,
N
e
w
Yo, 1
App1eton_Ce1turY0ltL
Hducatioflal
1)iVii0
?
crcdith
Corporation,
1969.

 
Sharp, T., Town P1ann1n.
Simmons, J., "Urban Geography in Canada", canadian Geographer,
1967.
Simmons, J. & R., Urban Canada, Toronto, Copp Clark,
1969.
Sjoberg, G., The Pre-industrial City, Free Press.
Spelt, J., Urban Development in South-Central Ontario, Assen, Van
Goorcum,
1955.
McClelland & Stewart,
1972.
Thernstrom, S. & R. Sennet, Nineteenth Century Cities: Essays in the
New Urban History, Yale U.P.,
1969.
Thomas, B., Migration and Urban Development, Methuen,
1972.
Toynbee, A., Cities on the Move, LQndon, Oxford University Press, 1970.
Tucker, Gilbert N., The Canadian Commercial Revolution, 18145-1851,
1936
Yale - repub. by M. & S., 1964.
Tyniai, John Langton, By Section
.
, Township, and Range, Brandon, 1972.
Unwin, Raymond, Town Planning In Practice.
Urbanization in African Social Change, Proc. of the Inaugural Seminar
held in the Centre of African Studies, University of Edinburgh,
5th - 7th January,
1963.
Foreward by Kenneth Little.
Vance, Jan.,
The
Merchant's World: The Geogra
p
hy of Wholesaling,
Prentice-Hall,
1970.
Wade, Richard, The Urban Frontier, The Rise of Cities in the Went,
1790-1830.
Waley, Daniel, The Italian City - Republics,-McGraw-Hil
l ,,
19
6
9, 254 pp.
Ward-Perkins, J., Cities of Ancient Greece and Italy, Brazilles.
Weber, A.F.,
The
Growth of Cities in the Nineteenth Century, London,
1899.
Reprinted, Cornell U.P.,
1966.
Weber, Max, The City, Trans. & ed. by Don Martindale and Gertrude
Neuwirth, Free Press/Collier Macmillan,
1958.
Intro, by Martindt
Wolforth, J. and R. Leigh, Urban Prospects, Toronto, McClelland and
Stewart,
1971.
loungoon, A.J., The Making of Clasnical Edinburgh,
27140-18501
Edinbur
U.P.,
1966.

 
p
SENATE COMMITTEE ON UNDRCRADU1TE STUDIES
NEW CQURSE
PROPOSAL FORN
?
NUMBER CHANGE ONLY
oCalendar Information
?
Department: GEOGRAPHY
Abbreviation Code:
GEOG Course Number:3
6 9 ?
Credit Hours:
?
3_ Vector:20
Title of
Course: ?
HUMAN MICROGEOGRAPHY
Calendar Description of Course:
An examination of human interaction with physical environment,
focusing on the individual as the unit of analysis, with special
emphasis upon designed environments. This course may not be taken by.
students who have previously taken Geography 349-3.
Nature of Course
?
One two-hour lecture and one one-hour seminar
Prerequisites (or special
instructions):
Geography 141
?
?
Students with credit for Geog 349-3 may not take
?
this course-for further credit.
What course (courses), if any, is being dropped from the calendar
if this course is
approved:
Geography 3493 (Number change only)
2.
Schedul
ing
how frequently
will the
course be
offered? Twice yearly
Semester in which
the
course will
first be
offered?
.
ich of your preseet faculty would be available to
make the proposed offering
possible? ?
R.B. Horsfall
3.
Objectives
of
theCourse -
The course will deal with the individual in inter-
action with his enironmeflt his efforts toward its modifjcatiofl, as well
his response to, and perception of various
environmental
features. Principa.
attention will he given to fixed-feature space; social groups and semi-
fixed-features will only be considered as modifiers of the interaction
between the individual and his (relatively stable) physical surrounding-,
4.
Budgetary
and Space Requirem
e
nts (for information only)
What
additional resources
will be
required in the following areas:
Faculty ?
NONE. Number change only.
Staff
Library
Audio Visual
Space
Equipment
5.
Approval
ate: 2
-
2-
?
c#
Department Cuairnan
?
Dean
?
Chairman, SCUS
A ?
•'•:i ?
C L
cr

 
Geography
tD
S1or F:r
Uiiversity
?
R.B. Uorfall
DparttLLt
of
?
SE UTLlNEPR0\hii0i
;ourn' Content;
------
The course will deal with the individua
l
in
interlCti0fl
with his?
envirOflCnt:
his efforts toward
ito
tnodifiCatt0fl aS
well ar. bi
g
rVThS
eptiofl of various
?
feat u
t.
t;
Principal
at.tcntio
to,
to fixedfCatU
and
?
space; social
perc
group(J and
s emi-fixed features
will be give
will only be considered as
?
?
ifiCr$ of the jntcrCti0 between the thdividu..
mod
anet his
(relativelY
stable) physical surroundings.
r tutorial p r wee
k. -A
field
't'jo ono-oUr lectures and
one one-hou
, on a subject approved by
C:ZC-h
procCt will
be
required
of each student
Grads will be dctermined as follows:
tho ?
th]-
ruct0t.
exam
ex=
e
30Z
f
tutoricl prtieipati0fl
?
ZOZ
field projct
?
30%
.
in
C.,
?
GoodnCOO
of Fit and
Ito
source
*
?
C)ri'&3,
?
19649 iarvard University Prue.
umz1 Contacts" in W.R.?
?
s
C., "The City
?
a }iechani
?
for utoiniflg 1
1
jr. (ed.)
?
onentJ.2Ll.' Indiana UniversitY
Press.
L & iythor. W.W., "The Zcology of looleted Groups," BehavtO.L
197, 12, 19-102.
hY," Place Percepti
on Rcc(!Rrcb
Bicut, J.U. "Ctu.ici
in T,Cvolopulental Geograp
Lt' ?1, Oct. 1969, Dpt. of Geography C1rk Univer&iLY.
chitnctortc Communicat
ion , "
in
Durfltt. C...
"J
Li
uiutiC
Structur
e
for Ar
?
(c.d.) ?
Chapel
C.J. ?
(.)
?
1969, Univ. of
Worth
C
A
,
- O
jjra PreoLl.
?
C)bout, J.T.,
"tco1o;iCLtl
Factors in the
DcvlopCflt
of Bo%viorai
?
owli'
i
?
(td.) ?
1967.
n J.
ChAitI. F.S. "Soz..e )iouuing FoctOrl3 Related to Mental )tytunC," Journ'l of
lT.1nQ,
1951, ?
.
Ct.in, I • , "Tiii:nv1 roivnc.ut no a 1cLCriUflt of chavioF ," Journal of o el .)
1954, 39, 115-127.
?
.

 
AVI
-2-
?
Geography
?
T3'
5Qfl yrao.r University
the computer and the
ArthiteCtutal Procee,"
1 101
?
49
276-285.
I
I
DcJon,
Doe
"i°s
Journal
of Urb&n Areas,"
?
the Aericafl1nttt.
planners, 19629 28, 266-76.
Dotong, A.
?
"Coding Behavior and Levels of Cultural Integration
?
Syichronic
MachafliUms in
'tiUrrLTh
Organizations." EtR.A
Confer.
and
Diachronic Adaptive-
Oc t
. 1970. Pittsburgh.
in
the
Friod, H.
& P. Cisicher, "$otne Sources of Reo1detial SatiafaCti0:
Urban Slum," journal of
the
ActSp InitftUte of ?1annCzi. 1961, 27
305.315.
Cans, 8.,The
Urban
?
GlcncOe, 1962,
Free Press.
Goi1d, P.R.,
"Prob1C
?
of
Space Preference Measures and RelnLioflahiPs,"
CerIj
1969, 1., 31-44.
On
?
Mij, Aim Arbor, 1966, U.'of
Michigan
Press.
S
Huff, D.L., "A
Topo&taPhtcal Modol of
ConOUr
Space preferences," Papers E.
igion.1 Science Aruoc., 1960, 6, 159-173.
?rOCC(dtn?J
of ?
_
'I
acc', fl.R., "The
?
ihbOrh00 Theory: An An1yRiC of
it.R
inadequacy,
1943, 14,
15-23.
Jrnnr 4 c'n
InftitutC
of P1nnr-t'
Lco, T., "Urban
UoigWorhOO
d
co a
Socio-Spatial Schea," Uttnan Relation,
19G3 21, 241-2684
Lowenthal D.,
?
ParcoptiOn and Behavior,"
Univeraity
of Chicago,
V.rch 1'apczr QiO, 1967.
U
?
"GographY, Experience, and Imagination: Towards a Geographic;;'
p
iotcO1OY,"
Ann4O,/c ?
oc.
?
1961, 51, 241-260.
Lynch.
It.
&
L.
fl&,dwin, "A
Theory
of Urban ?or,"v 4mericantn..t1tut.2...0!.
I n
,• 24.
Parr, A.1.,, "In Soarch of Theory," Arts and Architectu
re
1965, 82, 14-16.
PstGOfl. C.L., "A )lodel. of Preference: Quantattvc Analysis of the Ferceptiw.
of VS.uc1 Aipcac1nCO of acoidential Nei&hbcrhO0c1G,"
?
na10f1J0iiiJ_
Ueie, 1967, 2, 19-31.
RDdWLO,
Cathridgo,
L. &
1969,
ArnoctatP,
I4.L.T,'reaO.
.t3
FUnnin UrbanCrowthand RjOfln1DOVC101',
Sc.gjrincn, T.F.,
?
rrrc(,.i)tinn of
-
th' flrou,ht z;zard on the Crnt Plan!:., U. of
Chic3o, ici aicrL'lU&, 1966.

 
Sioon LrAear
University ?
.3-
Geography
St,a, D., "Space, Territory and Uuxat1 Movecienta," Landaca, 1965, 15, 13-16.
Trowbrid8c, c.C.,
"On
Ptrndc.:enta1
)ethodo of
Orientation and Imaginary
Hap,"
9cinc v
1 9
1913, 990, 838-891.
W11tco, A., "
p
lanned Privacy: What's its importance for the Neighborhood?"
Journal of Housing,
1956, 1, 13-14.
Vobber, H.,
The Urban Place
and the_Nonpiace
Urban Realm,
1964, Univ. of
Fennay1VCia Press.
-
%ohlwill, J.F., "The Concopt of seneoryOvcrload," EDRA Conference, Oct. 1970.
I
Ir.

 
C7
SENATE COMMITTEE ON U
N
NDERGRADUATE
STUDIES
• NEW COURSE PROPOSAL FORN
?
TITLE & NUMBER CHANGE 0!"
10alendar Information
?
Department: GEOGRAPHY
Abbreviation Code:G
EOG ?
Course Number:
?
375
Credii Hours:3
?
Vector: ?
1-2-.,O
Title of Course:
?
HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY I
Calendar Description of Course:
Geographical factors
?
in the settlement
ofl Canada and the United
States; ?
the role of the
?
frontier;
and ge&graphi.0 ?
factors ?
in the
changing nature of the perception
of resources. ?
This course may
not be taken by students who have
previou'sly ?
taken Geography
?
345-3.
Nature of Course
?
One one-hour lecture and
one two-hour seminar
Prerequisites (or special instructions):
Geography ?
11413
?
Students with credit for: Ceog. 345-3 may not take
this course for
further credit.
What course
(courses),
if any, is being dropped
from
04
calendar
if this course i
approved: ?
Geography
3145-3
2.
Schedulin
How frequently will the cour;e be offered?
?
Twice yearly
Semester in which the course will first be offered?
a
hich of your present faculty would h. available
to
mkthe proposed offering
ossible? ?
P.M.
Koroscil and G.A. Rheumer
3.
Objectives of the Course
Title change required to correspond with
: new course proposal -
Geography 1475 - Historical Geography II.:
4.
jey
and Space
ReguiremntB (for information only)
What additional resources will be required in the following areas:
Faculty ?
NONE. Number change
Oi.l.
Staff
Library
Audio Visual
Spice
Equipment
5. Approvd
ate:?.7.
Dean
DpLrt:ut
(i1.tl
,A
?
(Cc..'r

 
Geo3raphY.,
P.I. iZotoCil
Simon
Fraser
UniVOrOitY
I)epart'flt of GeographY
Semester, 172
An introduction
into the basic approaches utilized
in
iOfl
of the aproacheS to Canada and
listoriCa1
the United states.
CeocraphY.
AppliCat
"Ut ii n a
Course
•RequiedTe
P.i(.
1oroncil, An
introduction to itotiCal
CeograPh'J,
DiCUSSi0fl
Paper 1!o. 4, Department of Geography, Indiana
University Research Publications, 1971.
TopiC9tP
cussed
1.
PhilO3OPhY, Science, PhilosOphY of Science.
2.
pjlosophical Problems
of the Social
Sciences.
3.
PhilOSOPhY and jthodO10gY, flistory, CeoraPY, ritorical CeoraphY.
Geographical IntcrprCt8tin0 of Historical sources.
. .thodolOgY an Applicti0fl; iiatoriCal Gcogr3PhY.
a.
General
Vrit° ?
in Approaches.
b.
Pant Geographies.
c.
GeographiCl Change.
d.
Past in the Present.
e.
Behavioural Approach.
f.
icodela Approach.
6.
Technique Problems and
EistoriCal CeornPhY.
S
7.
Application to
Canada and U.S.A-
.
n

 
ProOrUni'
t
Y ?
-
",
.
,
apartment of Georr1phY
?
p•I.
Koroci1
RESERVE
LIST
BO ...
AI)A1S, Thoa
?
Rural P1ann
?
and Deve
?
,
Conunioiiozi of Corvatiofl,
1917.
AIIBROSE.
Peter
?
Longman,
1969.
BAKER, UAiSHIRE &
LANCTON
?
GeoraJCal I
n t
e
r
pre
tation
Hi storic a l
S ources,
David &?
Char1'7
4
ew
t
on
Abbot,
Devon, 1970.
BERG! -
1AN4,
C.
?
Philo so p h
y 9i_
Scie
n
ce,
U.
of
Wisconsin Press, 1958.
eOry_j ?
uc, prcnticelIa11,1969.
BLALOC
i
c, U.m. Jr. ?
Nl
B1tODBECK, N.
BOWLL R.H.
PLUI{B, J.H.
I'RED,
A.
RASHEVSKY, N.
RENIEi.,
fl0T.'JEY,
G.J.
D.K.
GRAU.A
T I,
J.Q.
THO
M
AS, W.L.
*^a,
P.
BLOCH,
M.
?
The Histon'9_Craft,
-
?
N.Y.,
--
.L'4.
(ed.) ?
Sciences
• .Y.,
1968.
tinor
for
A
m
ericans-
Likeness
of the Eas
t
ern
Seaboar
d 1310,
Am. Ceogr. Society, N.Y.,
1943. ?
What
is Science, Dover Pub., 1952.
.7hatj g
Hio
tor
vj,
pen
g
uin, 1964.
Thre
!Jfld the
Island
_,
U-
of Toronto Press, 1959.
R.G.
?
The PhY,.2
?
2'
London,
1930.
Ana1)ical
Ph ?
of
Hiotory,
Cambridge, 1965.
Cambridge
U.
Press,
The
Do
esday"Geo ru
I l
y
of
Eastern
England,
1952.
The
Practice of Hicto
r
y, Sydney U. Press, 1967.
The_Fundrnntal
Ouctionfl
of
Phiio
,
y,
Collier
Books,
1968.
itpy
2
rub ncr,
1932.
RouClcdZe & Kcgan
Paul
Ltd.,
1962.
En
?
London,
1960.
Ed'rarc1 Arnold.
1965.
Beh cviorcl Post
?
tc
and
1 ction
of
TcoiflUafl
Lri&tO!
Unvcreiy, 1I67,
Bcic of Bourke A Stu
d
y 0 ?
nd Annroaioal and_SetL1etnei\
in
---- ?
----
?
-
Semi-Arid Auatralia, Malboun
z
io
U. Press 1965.
0
ConduetofIflgUitY, Chandler
Pub. Co... 1964.
An Introduction to L{itorica1 Georrar4y Indian Univeraity, 1971.
Do
m
esday
Book
and Beyond, Fontana, 1960.
The Structure
of _Science.;
?
of Scientific
?
Ex
p
la
nation, Harcourt, Brace
& World, 1961.
(ed.)9 .
9j?Y of SoclaiScienecs,
?
1963.
A Model of a M
y
s
ter
y
,
Aarhus
Univeritat, 1970.
Evironment
.
percep ?
and 'ito
Fulfillment nutin
g
Past
_Ti
m
e
s
,
?
Nortbcrnjut1fld, Den
m
ark, Aarhus
Universitat, 1969.
The Death of the
P
ast,
London,
1960.
ti
al ovnv%m
ics
of United S
ta
tes
Urh3n-IndU
?
In lGrowth
1800-1914:
Th
eo
reti
ca
l and Ifltc!2SCtiVe_ay,
IT Pre!..s, 1967.
Lo
o
ki
n
g at ?
i
1 1ath
a
matics
I
tIT Press, 1968.
?
lUotory
It
jrnoe a
ndtthOd,
George Allen & (Jnwin, 1950.
&
Qua
ntitative
liS2.D, The Dorcy Press,
1969.
(ed.)
1an'
Hole
in
ChninthC Fcc
oftc
?
. Chicago U. Pr;,
1956.
The
Idea
of a
Social
c1cn
?
Relation toP_i101mhL, 19S.
.
ERG, H.P.R.
'ON,
Q.
P.
HARVEY, D.W.
IIF.ATUCOTE, R .L.
KAPIJLfl,
A.
KOROSCIL, P.M.
IIAITLAN')
F.W.
NAGEL, Z.
NATAjS0fl, N.M.
NE14CO 3
R . 1.
CAIPBELL, N.
CMR,
E.11.
CLARK,
A.H.
C0LLIC'WO0D,
CANTO, A
.
C.
DARbY,
H.C.
ELTO. C.R.
EW-IWC. A.C.
F}.BVEE L.

 
--
MICLES:
?
-
?
is
a
Research
Fronti
er? 1!
Ann,
l MC 53, 1963, pp. 4290.
"A Note on the
?
rogrCCCi ?
243
and Rc.trO&peti Approaches
in
al Ilistory
jotoriCal GebgraPhY, Erdkufld
e
22. 1968, PP
?
4
---
y&3tC
in
the Vale of Ho1eO'
a
0
view 1401966, pp.
'Tha VuturC of the Feet, Area,
"The
?
of the Western Interior of the
United
States,
4, 1969.
18OO187° A Problem in tiotoric Geography,Proc
A5502-
Am. Ge2nK_-
1,
pp. 16-21.
Canadian
?
1.
The Quafltittt
RevOlUtiOfl
and Theoretical cographY
7 (4), pp. 151-62.
?
ibutiofl o
E.
?
TheOtii C atderati0
?
3rding the Distr
f Sett
ment in Inner
?
NO
?
Sweden
o2 is—
Annaler 42, 1960,
1—
?
CWPWN, J.D.
?
' ?
Tha StatU
133s o Gdogr P
h
Y
.
"
225-31•
?
10 (3), 1966,
3-44
CLAIM, A.B.
'The
Shee /SwinQ Ráti&) as a GuidS to a CenturYts Chan
g
e
in the
LiVet0cl
CCOePhY of Nova Scotia,
EC0fl0Tt1
c,cPh 38,
raphy
1962, pp. 38-55.
IsRistorical GeoraPY,' j
3arneS &
Jones,
1
InVCflt0l
a
nd Ptc ect,
1954, pp. 70-106.
- ----- -- -
COLEtTT, R.J.
?
'BUit
?
lode1a o
?
1970, pp. log
.
-152.
urLn Gro.'th and Spatial Structure,
in
Boatd, )r!
Leal.152.
?
?
H.C.
?
e ?
Lii1
?
' ?
117, 1951,
,• ) ?
pp. 377-98.
---- -
U ?
0n the R1ti0. of GC0C hv and UioY,"
TeflS.
of the InBt.
of
?
itih ?
C
19, 1953, pp. 1-114
- -------- -
'The prob1c o Co
LhiCl DCCriPtt0n,
Trns• o
t
he 1nt.
30. 1962, PP 1-16.
DOS,
?
eogPL Sp
?
.Cø
?
(tcptLon: Past
1' 197
Approach
and Vututa ProsPeCts'
in
Board,
?
_20
in Wagner &
0, pp. 65-lOB.
?
ACERSD. T.
?
'he
PropOati0
of IrnoVati0n
WaveS,
?
ideae11
Readfl ?
1962, pp.
35568
piS, C.R.
?
b'Htorc GcogrePY in Ca,
?
ãian0h
?
D.
?
'4odClO o the
oluti0fl
of Spatial Patterns
?
Geography
1967, pp
,
. 235
.
25
0.
?
9 j
uma ?
609.
in
ChorleY & tlaggett,
?
L1cLiflO7r3
?
1967, PP-
54
?
KDROSCIL, F.M.
?
•1ictOttC
GeoraPhY
A
?
urtCCti0fl,'
JoU°1 ?
CeoVtOPhY LX
?
7, Oct. 1971,
pp. 415-420.
?
LIBG, Olof
?
'An Ec0noice0 ?
hica Study of the Localization of the
Swdiah Papt IndtrY
?
kaAnnaler 35, No. 1, 1953,
28-40.
LowravukLD. &
?
PRINCE, H.C.
?
fl1i
Landscape Tastes,"
ratCa1R2!i
?
55, 1965, pp. 106
222.
?
tRILL, R.L.
?
"The DcVe10Pflt and Spatial flistributb0 ofToUnS in Sweden: an
flifltOtt1 Frye Approach. Annn1,
?
53, 1963. pp. il4.
. ?
C(IIU3,
R.M.
?
"TWC1V
?
OriL1
AOc.
to
iiitoril ?
ogrztphY.
?
c
.
27-51.
Tren
ii2!.
oc_L
?
Co;t ?
31, 1969, pp
?
1
.I4CE, fl.C.
?
roXT
?
j
?
ric10LPtY 1 in Cooke & John0fl.
• Co" irpV
?
122.
C .0. ?
o1U;Y
1969
01 U
?
L:CPe
PP•
1111
(i the Ict2O
110
lity of' j.xj.C:()
• ?
in Leih1Y.
?
and LiLAlt)Ofl I romthc Uritin
?
( .'.
The
5iti r, 1.963.
?
nn Prosp
?
-
?
hUiu,ral GeogrflPhY Current Trenthi
?
Cts,
in cüCL'
-"
?
cl T,1Ch!1, 1962, PP'

 
SENATE
COMMITTEE ON UNDRCADUAT.
I.WLt:S
NEW
C
OURSE PROPOSAL FORM
1. Calendar Infurati0fl
?
Department:
GEOGRAPHY
Abbreviation Code: GROG
?
Course Number: 41-9
?
Credit Hours:
5
Vector:______
Title of Course SELECTED TOPICS IN PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY
Calendar Description of
Courie:
The topics will vary from semester to semester
depending
UpOfl
the
interests of faculty and students. NOTE:
This
course may not be
counted more than once toward the degree.
Nature of Course Two hour seminar and
three hour
lab
Prerequisites (or special instructions):
At least-60 semester hOurs credit and completion of 12 semester hours of Geography
- Division A courses.
is being dropped from the calendar if
this course i
What course (courses) if any,
approved:
?
None.
2.
Scheduling
How frequently will the course be
offered? ?
Yearly
'SciesLer in which the
courne will first
be offered?
76-1
o f
otti. prcaen faculty would he available to make the proposed offering
?
possible? C.B. CramptOn, F.F. CunninGhat1, E.J. Hickin, M.C. Kellman & R.B. Sagar.
3.
9
,
ective3 of the Course
SEE ATTACHED.
6.
1111(11L_tPr
L
dSpace
C5
?
s
(for
information only)
What additional resources will be required in the following areas:
FacultyThe frequencY of course offerings in
the
Geography i1ndrgradua1
e
Currtculen
ff ?
has been. modified
to accommodate the faculty,
staLL
and space requirement-,
S
-of
this
course. Library & Audio Visual materials required
for
this
cour$.
Library
?
are presently available in
the UniversitY.
No additional equipment is
Audio
Space
Equipment
* Mprov.i1. \
?
1c
Cruzu
?
Dean
?
Chairman, ,CU:

 
j act iy?
t
_P
03.
To develop to
?
in physical geography not normally treated in depth
s. These might include special local weather
in other established course
effects, the character of physical hazards such as ).and and snow slides,
local vegetation problems local erosion problems and other topical
subjects in physical geography. In addition, the course will he used
to explore
particular areas of traditional physical geography - e.g.,
coastal erosion and control with special reference to B.C.
.

 
S
Title of
Course:
?
Special Topics in Physical Geography: the physical consequence,;
of human interferenc
e
with rivers.
Instructor:
?
E.J. Itickin
Course
_•
rse Outline
General
of the enviroflmet has arrived. The physical
The age of awareness
0nseqUeflc of human interfere
with rivers for'--'--the overall, framework of
this course. This framework is established by dealing first with general
concepts and with specitic topics such as flood flows
and volumes,
mininer
flows and volumes,
water quality, and water
USCS
related to the envirOflm1flt.
The balance of the course deals with fluvial processes and sedimentation.
Stress is placed on loca, upstream and downstream
?
of water diversions
l u
into
and
out of the river system, and of technical works for specific
purposes
31
such as dams, dikes and river training systems.
I. ?
Introduction
2.
?
physical effects on the environment
political, and Social
Dani failures
S ?
flood control
mlnitflur&l flows
water levels
ice -
physical aspects of water quality
fish
?
3. ?
Intarbaoin Water Transfer
Nelson, Churchill and Seal River Basins
'Eastern tributaries of James Bay
International interbasin Water transfer
Texas water plan
SiberianArctic-flowing rivers to Aral Sea
Tadoga Lake and Dnieper River in USSR
Arctic-flowing rivers to Caspian Sea in USSR
?
4. ?
Fluvial Processes and Sedimentation
Drainage areas
Flood
j)lUlLS
Channel
proCCSSCS
River cc1n;t.tictt0
Reservoir fiedimCflt8tin
A gra(la (
j
00 nI)0Vl- ?
;L
rvoirs
S
?
?
Dural Jon
tu
Low rexrvOirS
?
hive r basin

 
S
• ?
Future investigations and integrated planning
Extensive data banks
Data collection for preproject conditions
Use of systems analysis
Comprehensive planning
6.
?
General Conclusions
Course Work:
?
The
course will take the form of an intensive literature review.
Students will be required to present two major seminars based on selected ref ercucL
in the bibliography. Laboratory assignments (in fluvial proces&:s and sedimentation)
and field excursions also represent an important component of
the
course.
Cradinjj: ?
Grades will be assigned on
the
basis of:
(a)
a term paper
(b)
a final 3-hour examination
S

 
RE F ER ENCCS
Academy of Sciences of USSR, 1967a. Behavior of fish in :w
hydraulic works (in Russian). Science Publishing
iIc,ii,
Moscow.
?
W ?
Academy of Sciences of USSR, 1967b. Effect of diversion of
flob
of northern rivers to basin of Caspian Sea on national
economy of Komi ASSR. Komi
Branch,
Science Publishing Hou,
Leningrad (partial translation available).
Academy of Sciences of USSR, 1971. Biologic studies of norther:.
rivers within ancient lake depressions (in Russian). Publ
cation No. 22 of Komi Branch, Sykyvkar, Komi ASSR.
All-Union Academy of Agricultural Science, 1969. llork in tail-
water reaches of hydraulic
structures
(in Russian). Kolos
Publishing House, Moscow.
Altunin, S.T., 1958. Reservoir sedimentation and channel degra-
dation below dams.
Academy
of Scicncs of USSR,
,
Moscow
(translation available).
Biswas, A.K. and S. Chattel-ice, 1971. Dam disasters
,
an asses.-
mont. Engineering Journal, Montreal, Mar. 1971.
Biswas, A.K. and R.W. Dune, 1971. Sociological aspects of
wat
development. Water Resources Bulletin, American Water Re-
sources Association, Doc. 1971.
?
• ?
Rrat.scv. L.A. Rnd
V
.A. Vit
y
ftzeva, 1969. Nov
.,
concepts in technc'
f101utiOflS
of prob)c,r o diver'; .
ion of flow of north.rn ri' e:..
Procccdins of Komi Branch of Geographic Society of USSR.
11-2-12. $yktyvkcr, Komi
ASSR
(transJ.atioravailablC).
Bray, D. 1., 1971. Computer print-out for river data tables.
Research Council of Alberta, Highway and River Engineering
Division,
Edmonton, July 1971.
Ilutorin, N.V., 1969. Hydrologic processes and dynamics of
masses in series of reservoirs on Volga River (in
Russian).
M.4erny of Sciences of USSR, Science Publishing House,
. er,R.IL. A.W. Peterson and T. Blench, 1972. Critical review
?
f sediment transport experiments. Journal of Hyd. Div.,
.V
i
er. Soc. of Civil Engineers, May
1972.
p.11. and R.K.. Linsley, 1966. Digital simulation in
I
t
yjrology: Stanford later;hcd Mod1 IV. Technical Report
No. 39, Ucpt. of Civil Engineering, Stanford University.
.•.-tu of Fish and Came, 1965. Prediction of thcnwil energy
djtrjhut ion
in
streis and rorvoir. State of
California.
?
S ?
U.J. • A.S. Coodcu ;t:,J H.C. ren:iington, 1967.
?
Land
c;sp;bi ) it y l(,r
Wi
1 dli N
?
iFCJtICt 1L1 and
Ut i
IL
:0 t
ion in
western ?
,hutchewm Rv(r D.'lta. Govt. of Canada and
Govt.
?
• ?
o)j •,.skit•ch'_;...n ,
..••' ?
I
:h•sn1ov, S.A. and A.
I. :\kaev,
1)58. ?
Sedimentation of reservoirs
?
orinouiitai
rinu:. rivers. Academy of
Sciences of USSR
• 'IOSCOW

 
o
o
?
5teifl, H.A. ,
1961. NeedS
iI sCdinCn1tt ?
Jour. of tyd.
Proc. of Amer. Soc. of Civil l
?
161.
t
gifl
tS
necriflg News Record,5, 1972.
1972. Corps may dcstTOY
?
other sobs
in question. May 2
J.W. , 1970. Water for Tea through the Texas Water
Plan. Water Resources Bulletin.
WatC
csource5
ASSOc-F
ju1yAUg. 1970.
;:;tmun, C.A., 1967. An
?
of the diversion
ofanitoba,
of
nO t
Manitoba waters
into Lake
WiflfliPC ?
University
?
M
1cng, C., 1970. SedimeTit balance of C1YdC Engi \ T
estUarY. Jour. of
Hyd. Div., Proc. of AmC. Soc. of Civil
?
S
Issue 11.
orbeS, F.J. and R.C.
odgCS,
971. New aproac
ources 5 to conPrC
hensive p1a
fl
ni1 in Canada. Water Res
?
Bull-,
Water
Resources AssOc., Oct. 1971.
?
1971. peace-Athabasca
?
ct
?
the
?
basca Delta
p5 ?
-
prob1Cm5 proposals and action take
?
Ottawa,
DEC.
1971.
oVt.
of Canada,
ishanin, .V., 1969.
Dyflaic5
of
chaflfl
?
flow (in Russian)*
HydrornoroboSi Publishing
Mouse,
Leningrad.
Grishanin, K.V.,172. Theo>' o ch2nne
?
1 proc'sS'.'S (in Ru'sian).
*
Transport
1'ub1ihi
n
S i ioul l e,
oScO'.
Ha.ad, H.Y., 197.2. Riverbed degradatio
n
after closure of dams.
Jour. of Hyd. Div., Proc. of Amer. Soc. of Civil Engineers,
April 1972..1 ? .'
transport measurements in
Hollingshead, A.., 1971. Sediment
gravôl rivc. Jour. of Hyd. DiV. Proc. of Amer. Soc. of
Civil Enginoors. Nov. 1971
Johon, JC.,, 1910.
State flood-plain maflagCThOfltactivities.
Jour. of I!y:. Div., Proc. cfAa'r.
Soc. of Civil EnglnrS,
Oct. 1970.
KalQsnik, SV., 1969.
Ladoga Lko
(in Russian). 1ineteoroJ0-
gic Publishing House, Lenin:d.
KellerhalS, R. and D. Gill, 1972. Downstream effects of large..
storage projects in northern Canada. University of Alberta,
Edmonton. Canada (for presentation to Intornfttional corn-
issiofl on Largo D....s,
Madrid, Juno 1973).
Kerr,, J.A.,
1960. Control of roving Ice in the USSR. The
1nginooriflg
JCLLm1,
Montra1, Feb. 1960.
Kerr, 3. A. , 1961.
?
Set i rit ;Ltion niiit erosion problems in don
construct lc.
?
.i. ib
?
;
?
• LorntO.
Ke9.-r,
J.A. • ]9(
' 7. ?
F J
i:
iL
N'. ?
Trr ?
r'rlrn
?
iiv"
for )
t >d;.ttI ic
?
nnd gcreration
;.tiiit&t
:n ?
hyOI Iiii. L :.y.tI.
and water rosourcos jnvcstiatiOfl. Ranitot UyirO.
ijJinnipu.
I ?

 
Kerr, J.A., 1971. Preliminary analysis of surface wator availa-
bility. Proc. 14th Congress, Inter. Assoc. of Hyd. Research,
S
Paris, Aug. 1971.
Kerr, J.A., 1972a. Report on effects of diversions to Qu'Atpcfle
River
from Lake
Diefenbaker on Sa,Latchewan River
system.
Environment Canada, Regina, Apr. 1972.
Kerr, 3.A.,
1972b.
Zlultireservoir
analysis techniques
in
water
quantity
studies.
thiter Resources Dull., Amer. Water
.Resources Assoc., Oct.
1972.
Kerr, J.A.,
L. Parmloy
and Others, 1972. Hydrology and hydraulic
control of Peace-Athabasca Delta region. Prepared for Govt.
of
Alberta, Cdonton, June 1972.
Kuiper, E., 1960. Sediment trausport and delta formation.
Journal of hyd. Div., Proc. of Amer. Soc. of Civil
Engineers, Feb. 1960.
Kuiper, E., 1965. Water resources development. Butterworths,
London.
Kuiper, E.
?
1963. Feasibility of water export. Jour, of Ityd.
Div., Proc. of Amer. Soc. of Civil Engineers,
July 1968.
Landine, R.C. , 19(). Prediction of dissolved oxven levels in
the South Saskatchewan River. University
of Saskatchewan.
SSaskatoon.
Lane:, E. '. • 19S. The importance of fluvial riorpi;oio;y in
hydraulic cn;ineerin. Jouria1 of Hyd. Div., Proc. of
taer. Soc. of Civil Engineers, July i9S.
Latyshenkov, A.M., 1960. Problems of hydraulics of artificially
constricted channels (In Russian). Academy of Construction
ei4 Architecture of USSR, Moscow.
L.aycock, A.H.,
1971. Interbasin transfer - the international
'dimension.
Water ResourcosBull., Amer. Water Resources
Assoc.,
Oct. 1971.
Lee, T.M., 1972. Effect oftrisporttion planning on flood-
plain management. Jour. of Hyd. Div., Proc. of Amer. Soc
of Civil Engineers,
Mar.
1972,
LeFeuvre, A.R., H.D. Altinbilek
and
M.R. Carstens, 1970.
Sediment-pickup function. Jour, of Hyd. Div., Amer. Soc. of
Civil Engineers, Issue 10.
Li'gett, J.A.
anc. K.K.
Lee, 1971. Properties of circulation in
stratified
lakes. Jour. of Hid. Div.,
Proc. of Arer. Soc.
oi
Clvii Engineers, Jan.
,
1971.
S ?
McNauhtori,
w.
• 1957. Sedimentation
in
Fanshwe Lake - 195-57.
Conservation Branch, Govt. of Ontario, Toronto.
Moor,
3.11.
and C.R. Watson,
1971. Field
tests of ice
jam
pre-
vention
tehniuc. Jour.
of liyd.'Div., Proc. of Amer. Soc.
.c'.f Civil E ?
in:rs , .lue 197,1

 
0
W.
Moscow University, 1972. Complex inwestigations of Caspian Sea
(in Russian).
'Negev, M.,.1967.
A
sediment
-
model on a digital computer.
Technical Report Jo. 76, Dept. of Civil Engin., Stanford
University, USA.
NeU1, .R., 1964 (;opinted 1970). River-bed scour. Roads and
Trmzportation Assoc. of Canada,-Tech. Puhi. No. 23, Ottawa.
Neill, C.R. 0.1. Bray, M.F. Schouten and J.R. Card, 1970.
Selocted characteristics of streaf1ow in Alberta. River
Engin. and Surface Hydrology Report 70-1, Research Council
of Alberta, Edmonton.
Nelson,-1.L.
and D.M.
Rockwood, 1971. Flood regulation by
Columbia Treaty projects. Jour. of Hyd. Div., Proc. of
Amer. Soc. of Civil Engineers,, Jan.' 191 (closure
May 1972).
Newsletter, 1970..
WatEr
Resources Bull.,' American Water Resources
Assoc., Mar.-Apr., 1970.
Perkins, F.E., 1970. Flood plain modeling. Water Resources Bull.,
Amer. Water Resources Assoc., t1ay-June 1970.
Perm State University.'1968. Storage reservoir on Votkinsk Hydro
Station on Kama River (in Russian). Laboratory of Water
Economy Problems, Penn, USSR.
Popov, IV., 1969. Deformation of river channels and hydraulic
'construction (inRussian). Hydroiteteorologic Publishing
Hou,e, Leningrad.
t ?
'
Quebec Press Release,. 1972. ttarch to tho
,
North. Reclamation,,
'Canadian Water Roou'ces Assoc., Summer X972.
Remillioux, M., 1953. Study of improvement of navigability of
Niger River bet'en'Kou1ikoro and Sogou (in French).
National Hydau1tCi' Laboratory, ch&tou, France.
Saskatchewan-Nelson Ba5in Board, 1972. Series of reports.
Environment Canada, Regina.
Saskatchewan Water Resources Commission, 1963.
. ?
Minirum stream-
flow
requiremeAts,downstrcani from South Saskatchewan Dan.
Regira. ? '
'
Saskatchewan hater Resources Commission, 196S. Report on experi-
?
mental release of water from Lake Diefeñhaker. , Regina.
Smith, LG.,
1969.
Towd's
anationa1wacr
plan. Irrigation
Age,, Apr. 1969.
Smith. ,O.. C.P. Vetter, G.B. Cu2ings and Others, 1960. Cpre-
hensive surve
y of sedimentation in
Lake
Me.d. L.S. Govt.
Printing Office, Wshir.ion.
Snaitod, G.
?
1c'S.
?
rz -oa Se-il tziver3;.
f%r ?
Jr.,hinr.ipi.'. ?
..
?
.-

 
Sza:t'
tv:,'y
iite. ?
. ?
' . it.I
on
?
nii
?
f1.. 'c'
. ?
rt.1'..)
?
1 ?
1.
?
I'' I Sit
L'
cL'ust' • Ln i
(partial :i ns1tii.)n .iv.ii1at'1t'.
Task
Committee on
?
.It i':
?
'ir:ii
to
?
tt' t.t .:
'.i
Quality, 1971.
?
I t1w ?
IIflt
.11
1
?
'1 u.% : r
?
;:a I
an inventory of
?
th n'J
4 .
?
'urn. I ?
1 ?
of Amer. s':.
'i 1v 1 )ti't'r ,
Task
Con.'nftt 'c for Vr.r.tt ii of S'J i,.:'it .it in 'anua 1 , 1971
Hvdrau1i
relations, for alluvial st t'.u;ts.
?
of
lIvd.
Uil
Proc. of
A.'er.
Soc.
of
Civil ?
giiirs, Jan.
191.
Task Committee
for rre-aration of
SoJiriontatiol
l
'htiu.i1. 1972.
Sediment sources an!
sediment itIs. Jurn.t1
of iIvJ.
Div.,
Amer. So.. of
Civil
Engineers. Closurt'
\!.I\19.:.
Texas Water Dev1opntmt .&oavd, 19OS. The Toxas
I.itt'r Plan.
Austin.
Texas Water
De'clop
nt Board, 1971. Simulat
it
of wat't'r.
qII;I
Ii ty
in streams
and canals.
Report 12
1
%,
Austin.
Timofeer,
V.T. , 1960. ltCt
flWSStS
of Arctic R.isu
'(ifl
iZnssian.
Hydrometeoro10 ic Publishing
house, Len I ngr.d.
Tinney, E. R.
and F.J •
Quinn,
1969. Canada hjs no mor.i I re.pans i-
?
bility
to
supply water to
arid areas of U.S. Canadian
Consulting
Engineer, Mar. 1969.
S ?
Turova, V.V. , 1969. Fauna - inanunals and birds -
in
zone of cutur
water reservoir
on Pechora live.
rul)1 cat
RI NO.
21 of Korni
Branch of Acadniy of .Siences of LJSSI, Sykyvkar. Koni ASS!
(partial trans1atofl avatlahe).
University
of Alberta, 1971. Proceedings of
the I-ttliabasca
Delta Syinpsiwn. Water
Resource Centre, U of A, Limontuli.
U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers,
198. Annual
Report or
hydrologic
Engineering
Center.
California.
U.S. Water Resources Council, 1972. 1975
national and regional
• ?
- ?
assessments. National
Programs and ttscssiuent
Committee,
Washington.
Vladimirov, A.M., 1969. Minimum flows of rivers of USSR. Hydro.
meteorologic Publishing House, Leningrad (partial translation
available).
White, W.A., L.F. Tischler
and T.A. Austin, 1972. Water
quality
prediction within an
interbasin
transfer system. Water
Resources &1l., Amer. Water Resources Assoc., June 1972.
Wolan, A.,. 1970. l4uttiplo purpose river development. Jour. of
American
Water Works Assoc., Feb. 1970.
. ?
.
?
Zncmnskaya, N.S., 1967. Calculation of mxliuin possible depth
?
of chnnol
croion. Mctooro1ogy and Hydrology, No. 4
(translation available).
0

 
SENATE COiMITTEE ON UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES
?
I ?
NEW COURSE PROPOSAL
FORM
p
?
'11cndir Information
?
Department: ?
GEOGRAPHY
Abbreviation
Code:GEOG Course Number: 129
?
Credit Hours: 5 Vector:230
Title of Course: SELECTED TOPICS IN ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
Calendar Description of Course:
The topics will
vary fxom
semester to semester depending upon the
interests of faculty and students. NOTE: This course may not be
counted more than once toward the degree.
Nature of Course One 2-hour lecture and One 3-hour seminar.
Prerequisites (or special instructions):
At least 60 semester hours credit -and completion of 12 semester houis of Geography
Division A courses.
What course
(courses), if any, is
bein& droppud from the calendar if this course is
approved:
?
None ?
S
2.
Schedu].inJ
How frequently will the course be offered?
Yearly'
Semester in which the course will first be offered? Fall 1975
W
nich of your present
faculty'vould be available to make
'the proposed offering
ossibla? B.C. B:ovn, N.E. Eliot Hurst, T.K. Peucker and G.P.F. Steed.
3.
objectivesof the Course
?
:
To analyze issues nd topics in the area of economic geography not
treated in depth
in
existing courses. A suggested outline for one
such course, on the multinational enterprise, is attached. Other
topics might includePoverty, etc.
4.
tory and
Space Reguirem3nt (for information only)
What additional reoources will be required in the following areas:
Faculty
The frequency of course offerings in the Geography Under-
graduate .Curriculum has been modified to accommodate
Staff ?
the. faculty, staff and space requirements of this course.
Library
?
?
Library and Audio Visual material required for this course
are presently available in the University. No t4ditiona1
Audio Visual
?
equipment is necessary.
Space
? . ? •
Equipment
il royal
:L(_J
L4"r.
\
D&prrti4lu
i*r
?
icin ?
Chairman,
CIhj
A7
?
nt C

 
•ypP.Steod
GEOGRAPIW !ND. THE MTMATIONA
L
ENTERPRISE
CoureeObtectte8
the economic geogra
phy
of thu world
The rate patterns and processes
tinational
enterprise,
of change
whose
very
in
have been crucially affected by the rise o the mul
strength and geographic in
?
poses a ley challenge to the
indepefldCUC
of nation ?
etattS. Thin
cOurDC
provides a focus on the geographic evolution mid spatial
riatiC
jmparativ
in
ho
of these juggrnaUt9, as well as their location
al impact and distinct va
?
i ?
st
country
recpOfl9(
?
S.
It as
?
the
h
validity of the .nolOgiCal determi.fli3 implicit
in
the
arguir.flt
that
"the conflict of our era is between ethnocentric nnticfltliCm and
geocentric technolOgY." (Sidney Rolfe). The latte
r
c d major
portiOU
of the our
io
oted to intercountrY comparisons and
c3
ctudiei of leading world induotrico and
&
.1-eruational-corpor&tions.
to provicO a iound hiatoriCal and empirical basin from which
p,- N
cu view the earlier and ioe th3tiCCl cdirQti0
Nature
of the Cour
There will be two lectures and two
tutorials/B
?
per week. Students will be
a topic chosen
encouraged to undertake independent research on
?
in
cOt18Ulti0
With the
professor. 40% of the final grade
will be based upon
a term paper, 30Z on
soma
short
asoigntnants and 30% on
a final
take ho exrz based on claaE)
raerial.
-
?
()

 
..
I.
•0•
Ge
o r
?
hend the
Adelinan,
)A.
The World patroleUI' 1ark0t
Johns Uopkifl
?
13.1?., 1972.
Baltimore:
The foreign Unvestmeflt DecisiOn Process
1966,
oni ?
Y.
utbrid83, m
a
ss.:Harvard U.?.,
C.
Bannock,
The JuggOrtaUt
?
An Age of the Big Corporation
P
elican Books edition,
1973.
HarfldSW0rth,
Mtdd1.eX
olephan
?
aria
?
223-272.
t!
Part
3. ?
autOOt1V0
Aut
omotive Industries
i
nDeveloping Countries
1969.
BaraflsOfl, J.
Baltimore ?
Johns Hopkins Press
DieselExperie.flC
Problems
in
India:
?
The Cummins
Manufacturing
Baranson, J.
New York:
?
SyraCU.)
C
13.?.,
1967
the multinational Enterprise
flehrnan, J.N.
National
TcnSiOflS
over
EflglCWOOd
cltffa, N.J.: Prentice Hall 1970.
J.H.
Sorn3 Patterns
in
the Rise of t.tultthatiottSl
?
rise
North Carolina, Grad. School of Bus.,
Bohrninfl,
chpcl Hill, N.C.
?
Univ. of
Bes. Paper 18,
1969-
CorpafliC5
in L atin American Integratioa
The Role of
intetnatioflal
J.N.
$v-sgton
?
Heath Books, 1972.
U.S. intcati0flal
BuSiflCSS
and Governments
Behan,
3.N.
N.Y. ?
}tcCrtrt4
?
i1l
1971.
Automotive Agrcerflt:
?
an Eva1tXati°
The
Canada - U.S.
1970.
A
Beigie,
C.E.
Montreal:
?
Canadi
?
American Cotii ttee,
BourgaUlt, P.L.
Innovation.
a
?
the Structure
Canada ?
o
1972.
f Canadian industry
?
Science Council Special
OtttrJa ?
In formation
Study to. 23.
Brash, 1). T.
American InvGBtn2at in
?
ustralian Industry
Autr4iLLn
National Univ. Press,
1966.
Caabrra
Brooke, M.Z. and
H. L. (eds.)
?
The Hultinationa
l
Company
in
Europa
BsX1s,
London
?
Loniflaa,
1972
in an international
Ch.
9 ?
Problems of
resource
allocation
corporation-
m. Z.- and
The Strategy of
the multinational Enterprise
Brooke,
1nanern,
Il.L.
London, Longnan
U
, 1970
Investxrlt and Canadian
Cordell, A.J.
The
MulUnaUOntd
Firm, Yoroigil Direct
Science Policy
Canada
1971
?
Science Council Special Study
OttcJit.
?
InformtiOfl
.
No. 22.
LC.
For3ign Invest in New Zalrnd Mauuf3CtUrit
Donnc,
London:
?
Sweet and Maxwell, 1970.
Dickic,
?
R.B.
Yorui
?
Inruzt;flt in
?
a Ctsu Study
Ttvhn ?
jjthoff. 1970.

 
.1
?
..
...-
• ?
_•••• ?
. ?
.• ?
S..
?
.t ?
••.. ?
.•
?
,. ?
..
?
, ?
.•
•5 ?
•g.
?
••• ?
:..
•0
?
. ?
•.•.
S
i-
?
I •,
cXURSE oi..rrLrE
Week
Section A: The IA..IltinrticvftA E
tr'irori ?
(I-RE)
1.
Nature of
Sigriificcnco
• ?
Formof
IZE
2.
Spatial
patterns of ME growth
DetortiflCI1t3
of direct
foxeigu invetw2flt
3.
Location
dociiofl3
Gøogrophic atruCturO
4.
Locatiotutl iupact: trade and cotipetittOtl
Locational iinct industrial
it
and regional. doveloP3nt
Section B: Boat
CountLCC
e
Stud
ie
s
•.-. Canada
6. Australia and NevZcai..nd
Unitod iingdotzt
7 • Franca and the N3thurlafldG
India
8.
Latin
Axrorica ? .
Section C: Indu3try
CEm3
Studio
9.
Oil: the "seven
oibtOr&'
as "OPEC tax-collectors"
10.
Automobiles: auto-pact
?
d world intcgrtio
Section D: }E C--se
Studic3
• ?
11. Nzisaey Ferguion cad Cm=inn Diuc381
12. IBM and tLL1evt3r
Rending Uut- On oaratO po
U

 
.I . ?
*
The worldwide
Industrial
Enterprise
F.G.
?
New York:
?
McGr J
Hill, 1967.
S
T ?
jnnifl, JR.
?
(ad.)
V
international
Investment
Uaruiondsworth,
Middl000X
?
Penguin
Booka, 1972..
Dunning, 3.11. (ad.)
Themultinational Enterprise
1971.
New York:
?
Praeger,
The Role of
Auriccfl investment In the
British
Econoczy'
Dunning, J.B.
London:
?
PEP
Broadcheet
507, ?
1969.
France,
B •
IBM in
France
Washington:
?
National. Planning
Association.
?
U.S.
BusinaeG
108
IBM in
Performanc
e
Abroad, Tenth Case
Study,
1961,
pp.
W.C. &
n
Joint internationa
l
Venture3 i
?
Developing Countries
Friedmann,
Bcgtiia, J.P.
N.Y.:
?
Columbia U.P.,
1971
in
World
Markets:
?
wholly 0ned Sub-
Ch.
12 (IBM) ?
Computers
nidiaries and
AffilictC3.
Ncvin9,
A.
and Hill
Ford:
?
Decline and Rebirth, 1933-1962
F.E.
New York:
?
Scribners,
1963
ch. 4
?
overseas donifl
11 ?
outer emprie:
?
war
and
peace
16
?
foreign scene:
?
post
war world.
Government
of Ccnda Foreign
Direct Inventnieflt
in Canda
Ottawa: InfortiatiOr Canada
1972.
?
,Martohorn, J.E.
?
oil
CompanieD and Governments
Lcidofl Fztho' & Faber, 1967.
?
Joheotone, AL
?
United States Direct Invotteflt in Prance
Cabridg0, Mass.: M.I.T. PresS, 1965.
$1.0!
Foreign Invo
p
tinzrnt in India
Oxford Univ. Press,
1965.
Asaricafl Business Abroad
New Haven: Yale U.?., 1969.
The International
Corporation
Cambridge, Hans.: M.I.T.
Press, 1970.
Silent Surrcndur The 1ltinatioaal Corporation in Cafla(!a
Toronto: Macmillan, 1970
256
pp. paper $4.95.
Dual Loyalty: CanadianU.S. Buzjiiacos Arringet1tB
Toronto: McGrew
Hill
1971.
Foreign In,e.stt2flt The
Experience
of Host Countries
IZew York:
Prager,
1970.
LocitiOnttl AdvutagC9
in
the Farm Machiner
y
Industry
OttzMa: Que:n'ri Printer, 1970. Royal Cotziioaion
on Farm
Mchinery
Study No. 6.
Foreign Inv;t, nt in
the
Petroleum and Mineral Indujtr13
Bu1t1nozQ: Joh.i IopLi'3, 1971.
?
A Glcal Cor;c)rittOfl.
A ltintory
of the IntcrntLtiOal
L)1o'
of
?
}'c.ts(
Ltd.
Toronto:
TYciv.
of Toronto Prose, 1969.
Kidlon, M.
jnd1Cberger, C.P.
jndleherger, C.P.
(ed.)
Levitt, K.
Litvak, l.A.,
)laule,
C.
&
Robinson, R.D.
Ljtvak, I.A. and
flaule, C.J. (eda.)
MacDonald, N.B.
• Mikesell, R.F.
0
!'lcufeld, E.P.

 
I.
'Oil and World Power:
?
A
Geographical Interpretation
)dal1,
P.R.
armaadworth, I4iddlcoex:
?
Penguin, 1970
The Large International Firm In Developing CountireS
?
The
.eerOo, E.T.
International Petroleum Irtduntry
London:
?
AUcn & U;in, 1968.
W.
THINK:
?
a Bioraph; of the VatsonS and IBM
1todgsr,
New York:
?
Stein t&d Day, 1969
ch. 13
?
The International
A.E.
Foreign Onerhip of Canadian Industry
jafarc.n,
Toronto.
?
McGraw
Hill,
1966.
Schreiber, JC.
U.S. Corporate Inveetn2flt in Twan
Universitiec Press, 1970.
Cbridg3, Hasa.:
SchjartZlflan, D..
Oligopoly in the Farm Machinery Industry
1970 ?
Royal CoimnissiOn on Pars Machine.
Ottawa: ?
Queofl'O Printer,
Study, N6..12.
SthenitakY, P.
Mericzfl Direct Invaatnflt in
the
Netherlands Industry
1970.
Rotterdam:
?
Rotterdam
UnierO1tY Prcua,
The Political Economy
of
international Oil and the UndrdGwlOPC
Tnzer, H.
Countri.eø
Boston
?
Beacon
Press, 1969.
Task ?
Force on the
Structure of Canadian Industry, Report-,
Foreign Otnorchip c.nd the Structure of Can
cMan
Indwtt7
Ota:
?
Privy Concil
Office
J.U.C.
The Joint Venture Proc3sa
in International
?
nes ?
India and
Toitlinaon,
pakiotan
Canthridga, 1,tase.:
?
flervard U.P. 1970.
Tuandhat, C.
Oil: ?
The BiggoGt tusincasS
London:
?
Eyra and
SpottitNOOda,
1968.
• ?
Tuendhat, C.
The
Hu1tinetiQn:3
Barnonds7orth, tidd1ce'
?
Pelican Books edition,
1973.
Vanpol, LW. and
The W.king of Mult1ntiCnal 1itorprisO
1arvard Vaivoraity, Grad. School of Bun. Ain., 1969.
Curhan, J.P.
Boston
sovereignty at Bay:
?
The Multinational Spread of U.S. EatCit
VeZm)u,
R.
New York:
?
Ba3ic Books 1971.
Wt1l, L.T., Jr.
(ed)
The
Product Life Cycle
and. Internatioflo]. Trade
Grad. School of Bus. Adzmdu., 1972.
.,Boston:
?
fforvoxd Univ.,
h1to, L.J.
The Autxobi1e In1uztzy Since 1945.
Ccbrid3,'M0., Harvard U.P., 1971.
Wilkins, H.
.
?
The Emorganco of raltinational Enterprise
CLbridrct, Mcee.:
?
Uarvard U.?., 1970.
11k1ni,
M.
and
Amarieva Busiaemie Abroad:
?
Ford on
six
Cc,ntinentP
• ?
U.tIL, F.E.
• ?
Detroit:
?
U.n.,
's..j111Bou, C.H.
?
.
tiailovr 1')65-65
1Lcnccn:, c:.t.1111968.
• ?
:- ?
:. ?
.
.
?
..
4• ?
.4
?
..
.. ?
. ?
•• ?
• ?
I ?
• ?
.;
•.
?
• ?
I

 
a
•'
?
. ?
)
RN
ADUATE STUDIES
SENATE CO1tMIT
?
ON UDE .
0?9S AL FORM
C.iICfld3t
Inforr13tiOfl
Couree Nu1nber:j2_..._.__ Credit Hours:5
?
Vector: 2-3-0
Abbreviation Code:
r___
Title of Course:
SELECTED
TOPICS IN CULTURAL GEOGRAP1
ColCfldC
Descriptio
n
of Course:
The topics viii vary, from semester to semester depending
,
upor. the
NOTE ?
course nay not be
interests of faculty and students.
co unted
more than once toward the degree
Nature of
Course
One
2--hour lecture and One 3-hour seminar
PrerequiSiteG (or 6pecial instructions):
At least 60 semester hours edit and completion of 12 semester hours of Geography
Division A courses.
dropped from the calendar if this course is
What
approved:
course
Noe
(courses),
if any, is
being
2. Sec
ILow
frequentl
y
will
the
course be offered?
yearly
9(5
enCHtei in which the coui.e viii first
be offered? Fall. 1
htch
of
your present faculty ou1d'b available to rnae the proposed offctrng
posiblc L.J.Evenden, E.M.Gibson, R.D.H0r5tfl
? ,
p.M.Koroscil,
?
A.
?
tCi'hCr
G.A.RheunIer, p..wagner
?
3. ?
i
jc
' ct1v. ?
of the Courue
?
.
See attached statement
taryfl' S
,
aco
RouitCDt0
(for inforr'.atiOn only)
what
.
additional resources will
be required in the following areas:
Faculty ?
The frequency of course offerings in the Geography Undergra,
Curriculu
m
has been modified to accoOdate
ifl
the faCultY, st
and apace requirements of this course. Library and AudiO V.
rary
?
?
material required for this courS(' are presently available
?
in
the UniversitY. No additional equipmelIt is
nec532Y'
All Ito
Visual
E.qu L
10
ITO! n
t
?
.
?
Atrov.Il
L41
PC
-.__________ __
?
. ...
fl ?
1)piirtmiflt
C irivaE ?
DLn ?
.
?
Ch&ii.tn,
?
C(i:)

 
GEOGRAPHY 449
The object of this course is to present from time to time courses on
geographical themes not offered in the department's regular programme
but capable of being offered by the present faculty and with existing
library resources.
?
The themes stud-ted under this number will be
approached from the perspective of cultural geography methods.
?
The
particular them exemplified in this proposal is the history of man
on earth with special reference to the impact of the scientific
revolution on the social and physical environment.
?
The.out]inC and
bibliography arc derived from a cultural geography course taught at
S
the Department of Geography
?
University of Victoria.
•/-

 
Siiofl Fraser UniversftY
?
-
?
Geography 449
E. N.
Gibson
Department of Geography
CULTURAL
GEOGRAPHY OF iusolrRCE USE SINCE THE ENLIGHTENMENT
1.
?
Continuum
1. Cosmic Quandary
2 ?
GeologiCal Neo_CattStr0Phm
3.
. HoneoStat[C Circulation
4.
NegentrOPic Biology
5.
AnachrOnistic. PsychologY
II. ?
Disjunction
6.
The Archaeology of Consciousness
7, The Power
of Wisdom
8.
Organic Sensibility
9.
Mechanical t)issejnblaflce
10.
The Withering of Wisdom
U. The Testimony of Cities
12.
Sys
t
ematic Dehumanization.
13.
1ncut1bent Ecologies
Refinement
14.
The
Apparition
of 'Progress
15.
The
I11LSlofl
of
Freedom
History
of
16.
The
Juge.rflaut
17.
The
Blindness
0f.Urbanology
18.
The
Reduction
to Resources
IV.
?
Machinations
19.
The
Eradication
of Self-sufficiency
20.
The
Engineering
of Habitat
21.
The
Pursuit of
Growth
22.
The
Realizatio
n
of Fantasy
23.
The
Promise of
Behaviorism
V.
?
Revestmeflt
24.
Romantic Nostalgia
25.
Radical Spite
26.
The Simplicity of Fulfillment
27.
The philosophies of Authenticity
28.
Artistic
Magic
29.
Altruistic Isolationism
30.
The
Tfeat
of Titans
31.
The
Amorality of Law
l'h ,. .h
0•
Catalytic DtmographY
i;iot I
c
Ati]nflt
d
P0
1 ui
in
1)j1etiuF
1.00phOlL
.h
1.. S

 
Geography 449
. f—
Reading
List
Morrow
Conservation for Survival
Rams ay
Managing Environment
1)asmanfl
Planet in Peril
Ecr'logist
blueprint for Survival
Ct.'
L
Jman
Spoils of Progress
Gordon
Environmental_M
?
age men
Jackson
Man and Environment
Caldwell
In
Defense of Earth
Perrin
With Man in Mind
Murphy
Man and his Environment
Harte
Patient Ea
rth
Krutilla
Natural Environments_
N.R.C.
Earth and Human
Affairs
French
Love of Earth
Saslaw
Emerging Universe
Bernal
Ext&wiofl of Man
lodge.
Concepts of-the Universe
Ki1irimel
History of Earth
Morgan
Emerpent_Evolutions
Darwin
Voyage of Be
Darwin
Origin of Species
Koest ler
?
Bey2nd Reductionism
Gardner
?
Quest ior Hind
Struevor
?
PrehistoririCUltüre
de Cande11e ?
Orijin of Cultivated Plants
Isaac ?
Geography of Domestication
But
zer
?
Environment and Archaeo10
Wittfogel ?
Oriental De!jtism
Mumford
?
M yth of Machine
E. H. Gibson
K0e53t1er
Breasted
Fu.s tel
Wheatley
Hammond
Coon
Mat thia4son
Blechieri
. ?
Love joy
Turnbull
nil °1
Se denhe rg
T'1thnrd du
Chard In
Lotus and Robot
Development ofThouhtinyj
Ancie nt
Pivot of Four uarters
City of Ancient World
lIuntinc )'eoale';
Under Mountain Wrtl].
S
rTody
Primitivism in Antiquity
Mi)ulItaln
People
1:ir.
Soc!ety
Pont-LU tori
C Min
1
1
1
.tCC
in ?
:tt
nt
1
r tfl
t;

 
I.
Geography
449
Reading List
White
Roman Framing
Frank
Economic histor
y
of Rome
SchtaflitZ
An
ji
rsOfl
Plants Man and Life
CivtllZatlO
fl
In China
Keedham
Science and
Mum ford
?
Pent
11
of Power
Waddell
Desert Fathers
White
Science
and Sentiment
Hut zi
n ga
njthddi2_
Buckle
cjV1-ljil inhaL
Whewtti].
History of Inductive Sciences
Fo ib
C
a
Lonquest of Nature-
Bul ding
aninA2f. TwentIctl! çtury_
Ber t
, on
LastpikC
Poor
History of Railroads
Cermtno
Bejon.d Ideolog
Ke.rIel
In Search of Authori
)lose.n
PublicWorks
thlko
Triump0f_Cons'ervatism
Schneider
Auto md vs Mankind
.
Jerome
Death
of_Automobile
Rob inaon
Lw;'wCll
Ana)vRi
?
of Political BchaVIOr
Arendt
Oripinsof Totalitarianis1r,
Uoi,hes
Levi ath!L.
Carlyle
itu6ifl H.ero Worship
Arnold
o1s of Government
Carnegie
Haymond
LealtkL.
Coverttrnt
and
Pacific
Railroads
Dickens
Hard
T1MA
I.ewis
}iain Street
Marx
Cp1tal
;ti'ffans
Sh
ame
of Citie s
anifl
?
In Fronj!E...
Town Pl n
lire
pj,Q2phyofMaflufaCtUres
Parker
Myti, of
Middle Class
Or,iib
Open Fields
Olmated
urney In Back Cowitry
Critnger
Woodsmen of We:;t
1)isiiiflt
_Ifl.es of
Rural
Ec(jnoiy
Adtms
Con ue;t of Tropics
• ?
B nsle
F armi g
W
,
?
Maitland
T)oirrdny Book

 
cography 449
?
-3-
Reading
.
?
List
?
pincht
?
eak1.ng New Ground
Hays ?
L
Price ?
and We_', Ivu ILL'
Young
?
Travels
in
France
P
air
male
fakis
Reform in
_—
Spain
?
?
Wharton
?
Subsist
en
ce
and
Dcve1OPmt
Peder ?
Rape of
?
Frankel
?
Thdi a
s Green RevolutiOfl
Dumont
False Start in Africa
Drown
?
Agricultmfh
DevC1OPTflflt in India
?
Hunter ?
0dCrfliZifl
Vea3aflt Societies
?
Franklin
?
Etp(afliI5tY-.
Pet ra&
?
Purt ado
?
!eSt0D!22it
• ?
Whyte ?
Last
La
n
dscap
e
?
flcward
?
--
Gardnfl
Cities
?
Osborn
?
CreCflb.elt Cities
?
Abrams ?
•jontier
?
flixiadis ?
Architecture_in TransitiOfl
?
Scott ?
^
to
ry
•' ?
Osborn
Vane
tOUlit3
Ei
chler
)lehelyNagy
?
Matrix of Man
lis
Ro dw
in
• Alpert
Partnership or Confrontation
?
liphoff
?
poiitica.L
Econom y
of Deve1Opflt
?
Levy
?
Moder'.!E!2____
Johnson
?
iiizatiofl of Space in Dcv
?
ap t
?
Faber ?
TTi1ann1 n
g
?
Cole
?
fl0P11t
Falcon ?
avolop•tJ Paki5t1.
PC1iHtf
Levris
Aidagh ?
Nw
lrenCh RVOlUti0fl
t o ifliu2nee
My rdai
.
Tobin
?
National
EconoIciC Polic
y
----
?
Gtjflfl ?
ntt
One
llul.Cy
?
.
Hnm::LVlSt
Yrau
Es
t
enli
ary
)i&rt In
?
CoTvuiAd zid Sct_.
. '
?
1leot'Li (1
?
r)r-" (:onclI
ttcinal
It(,51(iflfky
?
iFutIlr!
I A!,., y
Woodward
?
Ut...ji
r)i
TL'101-1012L-ical
Man.
Ferkia

 
ogrphy
449.
Reading List
Burke
Kostalafletz
Boyko
Sarason
Scott
Ruskin
Norris
Goodman
Thoreau
Wheeler
Wolfe
D
o
wning
Crown
Orwell
Snyder
Bromfield
Rousseau
ileldegger
ii us e ri
Girvet z
Hook
Tolstoy
Wilson
Read
0-
) ?
a
-4-
New
Technolo$Y
and H
uman
Valu
es_
Human AlternatiVes
Science
and
Future of Man
Creat i o n
of Settings
Social
Control
Unto
this Land
-
Ma
Communities
p
s
from
nowhere
Waldon
Selkirk
Range
Son of
Wilderness
?
of
Fan
dsc
ane
poiiyntegratJ
?
Agri
c
ul
t
ure
Road to Wigan Pier
Eatth House Hold
Malabar.Fa1
ConfeSi0fl
On Time and l3einc'
Cartesi.In aditatiCfl5
S c
iL
. LIC e
Folk )re anL_^h^
ilos^
OPIIY
Art
and Philoaphy
What
is Art
ArtiHt in Society
At
and
Alienati
on
.,

 
SENATE COMMITTEE ON tJNDRGRADUATE STUDIES
?
NEW COURSE PROPOSAL FORM
Amr -
j
endar
?
Department:
Abbreviation Code:
GEOG
?
Course Number:
1175 ?
Credit Hours:
c.00
ii
GEOGRAPHY
5 Vector: 2-3
Title of Course: HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY II
Calendar Description of Course: An examination of the ways in which the study
historical geography has been adapting to new proble'ms, new methodologli,.
new techniques, and new sources. The course will attempt to deal
primarily with the application of historical geography to a North Americ:
context with an emphasis on Canada and British, Columbia.
Nature of Course One two-hour lecture and one two-hour seminar.
Prerequisites (or
special instructions):
Geography 375-3 (or Geography 345-3)
What course (courses), if any, is being dropped from the calendar
if this course is
approved:
?
None
2.
Scheduling
Row frequently will the course be offered?
?
Yearly.
Semester
in
which the course will first be offered? Fall 1975
4&icF of your preser4
1
-- faculty would be available to make the proposed offering
possible?
P.M.
?
Koroscil
3.
Ob]ccti eu of
the Course ?
For remarks related to SCUS 73-74a document —
?
see
course outline. ?
The objective of the course could be viewed from two
points of view:
(I) To provide the
?
student with an opportunity to furthe:
his knowledge
of historical geography in light of the new, problems,
methodologies,
techniques, ?
and
?
sources ?
arising ?
in the
?
field. ?
(2) ?
To
provide the
student with an opportunity to apply this knowledge to a
specific
?
problem.
4.
Budgetary and
Space Requirements
(for information only)
What add1tionl
rwmrces will be required
in
the
following areas:
Faculty
The frequency of course offerings in the Geography undergraduat
curriculum have been modified to accommodate the faculty,
?
staff
Staff
and space requirements of this and other new courses
?
in the
Library
Upper Level Review.
?
Library and audio visual materials
?
requires
for this course are presently available in the University and
Audio Visual
require ?
no ?
additional ?
acqiisitions. ?
The only budgetary
Space
requirement
?
is ?
the cost of a field trip to the Provincial
Archives ?
in Victoria. ?
The ?
cost ?
is
?
$20.00.
Equipment
.
.5. Approval
'T")ate:_2. Z.
li k-
C.iirrz:.rt
It( L.
3 ?
( '
SCUS
. 1
' -i / ih :
?
(When cOrnolotina thin
form.
Dean
?
Chairman, ;us
fnr 1nrtr,tci-'forin
g no
P . ?
irinhtyn S('l? ?
71-1!:

 
4
Historical Geograp)!
?
P.M. Koroscil
• Coura
An examination of the ways in which the study of historical geography
has been adapting to new problems, new me
t
hodologies, new techniques, and
new sources. The course will attempt to deal primaril
y
with the application
of historical geograph
y
in an North American context with an emphasis on
Canada and British Columbia although examples of studies from other countries
will be examined.
Objectives of the Course
The objective of the course could be viewed from two points of view:
(1) To provide the student with an opportunity to further his knowledge
of historical geography in light-of the new problems, methodologies,
techniques, and sources arising in the field. (2) To provide the student
with an opportunity to apply this knowledge to A specific problem.
III ?
0becti
Vefl
and Content in Relation toep!megt.
The material of study of geography is the surface of the earth and
humanity's use of it; geography is concerned with the special character of
places and landscapes and with how these have developed. historical
geography plays a significant role in understanding the character of places
and landscapes and how: they have developed in the past.
The department offers undergraduat
e
and graduate instruction in the
traditional aspects of geography, the so-called physical, social and
economic aspects,,
pect, tending to stress the area of human geography. In this
latter case historical geography is an important aspect of inquiry in the
area of human geography. The proposed 645-5 historical geography Course
falls into Division B of the upper levels portion of our programme which
indicates that the courses in this division are extensions of work at the.
300 division. In this case, the pre-requisite for the 445-5 course will
be Geography 345-3, Historical Geography.
?
IV Course
?
Over4p
Existin courses in the Departme
.
nt of
Of the thirteen weeks which make up the course, there. is a two week
overlap with Geography 345, i.e. Week 4 and 5. See Course outline.
V ?
t a ry Req_r!i
Twenty dollars for field trip to Victoria.
Vi ?
Required Text
Baker, Alan R.H., ed.
?
David and
Charles, England, 1972.
II

 
.OcrHe
-
Ojii.1tl0
.-
?
There will be two seminars each week. One will be two hours, the other three hours
V
gth. One seminar will be devoted to lecturing and
the
second
sc,n
j
n:lr wi]
I.
ist of student reports. There will be a field trip to
the
Public
Archive!; in Victoria.
The course Grade will be de
t
crmIned by the
?
ttS
parti.CiPatiofl and
presentation of written reports together with a final term paper to >e
handed in
at
the end of tie
semester.
be D1.CU5SCd
Week 1
and
2
An
Overview
of
historical.
geography
(a)
An examination of the f.Lcl.d in such areas a; Hr j
Li
i u,
'
Aust
ralia:,
New Zealand, France, Canada and
the.
U.S.A.
(b)
Differentiati
on
of viewpoints between the.
areas.
Refc renceS
Baker, Alan
RJI. ,
?
Required
text.
Harris, C.R. "Historical Geography in Canada", Cmadini'i.2L2.i. 11
(4),
1967, pp. 235-250.
\4ctk
3
Delimiting the field of study
for purposes of
using
a commou series
of
approachGS to examine a
problem area in historical
geography.
References
Baker, Alan R.H.,
Progress
i
n
Historical Ceogjjy. Required text.
Baker, Alan R.H., "The Future of the Past," Area: Inst
i t u
.t
e
oL_Hrjtlsh
Geo
.
rapherS, 4, 1969.
Prince, H
.
C. "Progress in Historical Geography," in Cooke & Johnson,
Trends in Ceogra py,
1969,
Pp. 110-122.
Prince, H.C. "Three Realms of Historical Geography"
?
ress in
Historical Ceography
..
Vol. 3, pp. 4-86.
Smith, C.T. "Historical Geography: Current Trends and
Prospects,"
in Choricy & Haggett, Frontiers inGeoZrapj.iCa..l 'rea
ch
ing, 1962,
pp. 118-143.
Clark,
A-11.
"Historical Geography," in James & Jones,
Americ
an
Geography
Inventory and Prospect, 1954, pp. 7006,
Sauer, C.0. ,
?
"Foreward
to Historical Geography", Annals As
^
;ocjaLi
on
of Awericnn Gccje
r ,
1941,
pp. 1-24.
i.7

 
I..-.
.' ?
V....
.Ii•
,•
I
?
.•
..,•.,
'I
ihe
literattlre.
ttlC Prc';Cflt
A
RcvlCW
of the common
?
od'° cxe%flPh1U
?
in
) pgt Geographies b) Gcogr0Pl11
?
a
t
gc c) Past in
and
d)Bel,avioura
fenC
C
S
?
of To
?
Clark,
Ail,
?
U.
?
ronto presS, 1959.
?
—.
I
?
cal
(
.
. j
nge: A Theme t or
t
• 000;nl
c
His i) ry"
Vol. 20, 1960, PP. 6075
It Us
Lo ry
?
14. 3.
?
"The Verc.CP ti
1.O1
of the es tern In e r i or or il,e n I ted
DowStatcS, 1800_1870; A robl(' in HiSto Cal
, pp.
3.6-21-
DarhY, U.C. "The changing
tngliSh
Landscape,
111,
1951, PP 377-98.
,
?
Cambridge
,
U.
a
Land,
KorosdflI
P.M. , "The
?
.LafldScaPe
of 1h.i tehor', Yukon Territory:
Press 1952.
?
A Historical PerSPeCt1
?
3. Min' (ed.)
Taflt3S,
VanCO"1 1972.
?
KoroSCil P.M.,
tchaVb0
?
Anal ?
in
flistori cal. cogr3PhY"
to An0
?
C0 ?
tut
Daeri
A.R.1l. "A Note on the
?
ye and RctroPSP
tV'-
Approaches
8, PP- 243-
Ge
?
cal
in Historical Geography"
?
22, ?
ss"
196
Allen, John L., "An Analysis of the Exploratory Proce,
Review, 1972, pp. 13-29.
id the
River and the
'Bay -
Ross,
Eric;
Ruggles, R.I.,
"The
vest of Canada.
196
3
,1mag
' tion and RealitY'
15, 1971.
The Canadinn Geographer
Vol*
HeathCotC,
R.L.
?
in
Se ?
Arid
Australia
'
Melbourne U. Press, 1965.
?
Kiefer,
?
"An Agricultural Settlement Complex in Indiafla"i Anna
er
Sept • 1972.
-
)
n American-r'COP5 _p
h
of Associati(
Ross,
S.1I.,
?
fleginnings The Ca", for Copper in the
muthwest"
Anna
?
A
oCj.t1
Prehistoric A ctiCáfl So
?
0fl
of
?
er1ca0?
ra1CrS,
June,
1968.
.
Week
LL" 0
I'
311
grapllical In
t
crp tatl0flS of 1istor1c
(;co ?
sourcC
?
a) Typet
'
of av.iilaL1c
6
ourCC material. PriTnaIY, Secondary, and Tertiary.
Ike
fcrflCC5
1.antO,
P) 1O. ?
41

 
e
;l ?
. ?
,j-..
•:
?
. ?
'H
CeograiThtcal Researchand Writing. T.Y.
Crowd1
b Co.
)urtOfleLb'
$w York, 1971.
Wo(k
8
a
nd
9
Qu
C
niqeO used in historical geographY.
?
ctlitadVO
and Qu;irtttatiVe.
nce9
Darby, 1L.C. "The Problem of CcograPhic
?
Dcscri1i0t1," Trans.2L...!i!.
30 1962, pp.
Inqt - 911
Survey"
Darby, 11-C- "DomesdaY book and the first Lana P11 Ii zaLLoll
March 1970,
LOfldOfl,
pp. 416-423.
Dick. T.R.B. "Network AnalY;is
and
ltistorlc
?
CcorilPhY"
?
Vol. 4, No 1, 1972, pp. 3892.
Fitt, F.R., "A Graph
Theoretical
ApPrOadhl to
?
1OrLtal
Geography
profciOn1CzL
?
Vol. 17
9
1965, pp. 15-20.
Gentfl
core, R.L. "ChtngC In Settlement in
Ontario,
?
00-50: A
corrC1.1t30n
An;iiy;is f Historic Source Ha t,dal ;" Prorecd.!i.
iternatio.0 ?
(p.l.G.) ?
1972.
1iistorcal
Tyman
J.L.
3.L. "Te U;c of the
KeydeX System in proC Sine.
Data" PIGG 1972.
tors in r.netee11t
h
1
century Ontario
A. G.
"An)YSi
of site
5ett1Crflt" PIGG 1972.
KoroSCil,
P.M. "Behaviour
al
Analysis in Historical Geography
"
-
Clark, A.H. "The Seep/Swe Ratio as a Guide
10
a Century's
Change
GeographY of Nova Scotia,"
?
38,
in
1962 pp. 38-55.
the Livestock
Week 10
in
historical
geography from
Student c1arifiCatt°' of a problem area
previous readings.
-
?
•0
11 12 13
.C.
Student
appl ica
t
ion of
problem area to Canada, hopefully, B
mi tica on Untht3t0
Studies
X Senate Com
?
New Course proposal Form.
----- ----
do
r ra
--
-
4!-.
67

 
4
SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
?
MEMORANDUM
To ............
H.Yan5...... ..... ...................... ............................................... ......
.
From ..... 0.4..
.Rheumer....... Chairman.
........................
Undergraduate Studies Committee
.......... .i.ira;r .................................................................................
......
...
Geography ?
Department
.......................
Subject
............ Geogr3phy ..... k9.8...5. ........ ....... ................
....................
?
Date......
Nov ember...
1.
3
.
.....
1
97
M..
...............
..................
This course will normally be offered In the period
from the end of exams in one semester to the beginning of
classes in the subsequent semester, but a report and/or,
seminar will be required which will, of necessity, be
prepared after the beginning of the subsequent semester.
In the Inter-semester period intensive library and
seminar work will occupy the first two or three days.
Following this period, two weeks will be spent in the
field, during which time the student will apply the various
experiences derived from the earlier seminar and library
work, in field mapping and analysis. Normally seminars
will be held In the evenings to discuss the day's activities.
GAR: b s
ccs: I. Nugridge
W.A.S. Smith
N.E. Eliot Hurst
Stan Kanehara
.
0

 
4
?
I ?
C.
?5711
SENATE COMMITTEE ON UNDERCADUATE STUDIES
NEW
COURSE PROPOSAL
FORM
1.
Ljfr12tio!
?
bepàrtuent:GEOGRAPIIY
Abbreviation Code:
GEOG
?
Course Number:
498
?
credit
Hours:
5
?
Vector:_________
Title of Course:
?
FIELD STUDIES
Calendar Description of Course:
Special Studies and Practical Problems in Field Techniques.
Nature of Course
?
Five-hour field/lab.
Prerequisites (or Special instructions):
At least 60 semester hours credit and completion of
-
12 semester hours of Geography
Division A courses.
What course (courses), if any, is being
dropped from the
calendar if this course is
approved:
?
None
2.
Schedul
How
frequently
will th course be
offered? ?
Yearly
Smester in which. the
' course will first
be offered? ?
)'a1I 1975
tch of your prect'it faculty would be available to uake
the propoaed
offering
sihle? ?
All faculty
from time to time
3.
tves_of the Course
To provide the opportunity for field 'work, a crucial component of
geography, only partially recognized elsewhere in the geography
programme.
4. fitidgeLaEy and S
p
ace Reguiresents (for information only)
What
ndditionil
resources will be required in the following areas:
Faculty ?
The frequency of course offerings in the
Geography
Undergraduat:
Staff ?
Curriculum bas been modified to accommodate the faculty,
stuff
and space requirements of this course. Library and audio viuui
Library
?
materials required for this course are presently available in
Audio Visual the University. No'additional equipment is necsary.
Space
Eq ul pme n t
5. Approval
')e:
Z,
2
•-g ''L
L' ?
o.-
O
(
A
A
Dtp . r
1ita
t
Cita triTlan
Ac ?
Ci"
0,
S
D.'
(In
?
Chairman, :(;Us
?
70
J
(rt,C
11 '•

 
Field Course
'Geography 498
Basic Outline - a sample (498)
Approx. 1/3 1 Classroom - Library work*
1. Map reading and air photo. interpretation
2. Mapping techniques in the field
a.
observation and recording
b.
classification - e.g. A.R.D.A., T.V.A. etc.
C.
compilation
3. Methodological approaches to.special topic - e.g. Historical
Geography, Land Use, etc.
4. Analysis of Resource Materials for particular area/areas to be
visited in field.
- including: essays, theses, local histories, government
documents, etc.
Approx. 1/3 It Field Study
?
1. Sample studies of a day or two duration according to particular
interests of participants followed by evening seminars in
• ?
which the work is discussed
2. Major Field Problem - according to the student's particular
interest
?
Approx. 1/3 111 Writing of Ficld Report
8
Includes lecture-tutorial(seminar)
.
?
0
.7/
,.

 
Geogzaphy 698
?
Basic Outline - continued
?
2.
Bibliography - a sample
Board, Christopher
?
"Field
Work
in
Geography with Particular
Emphasis on the Role of Land
Use-Survey"
Frontiers in Geographical Teaching, ed.
chorley, R.J., Haggett, P. London,
1965,
pp.
186-214.
Clark, Andrew H.,
?
?
"Field
tesearch in Historical Geography"
Professional
Geographer, Vol. 4 (1946)
pp. 13-23.
Corey, ICE., Hill, A.D., Hart, 3.?.,
Salisbury, N.E. and Lewis, P.?.,
?
Field Training in Geography A.A.C.,
1968
Technical
Paper 1,
Washington, D.C.
Gunn, Angus N.,
?
Field Studies with Particular
Reference
to Geography, C.A.G. Bulletin 13, 1966.
Holmes, John,
?
"Problems in Local Sampling" Annals A.A.G.
Vol. 57(1967)
pp.
757-780
• ?
Lattman,
L.H.
and Ray, R.C.,
?
Aerial
Photorp ?
in
Field Geo1oi.
Holt Rinehart and Winston, Toronto.
1965.
Nunley, R.E.
?
Li
4,
Maps of the Field Plotter A.A.G.
Technical Paper 1/4, 1971 Washington, D.C.
O'Hern, James H.,
?
"Geographic
Field
Study Techniques"
Journal
of Geogra
p
hy, Vol.
66(1967)
pp.
360-
363.
Platt,
Robert S.,
?
"The
Role of Field Work" Introduction
Selectcd
Readin
g
s, Dohrs, F.E.
and
Soiniiers, L.M., New York, Crowell
1967
pp. 183-187.
Wheeler, K.S. and Harding, N.,
?
?
raphica1 Field Work: A Handbook,
?
London, Blond, 1965.
I.
0
7Z

 
... ?
p
SENAT;: COiMjTTi:E ON UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES
?
NEW COURSE PROPOSAL FORM
1.
467
?
lend.ir
ry
iionCodvOG
Information
?
Course
Number:
499
?
Credit
Department:
Hours:
GEOGRAPHY
15
Vector:_________
Title of Course:
?
DIRECTED READINGS/FIELD STUDY
Calendar
Description of Course:
A course in
which reading and research, and/or fieldwork will be
supervised by faculty members.
Nature of Course
?
Fifteen-hour seminar/field lab.
Prerequisites (or special instructions):
At least 60 semester hours credit and completion of 12 semeter hours of
Geography Division A courses.
What course (courses), if any, is being dropped from the calendar if this course is
approved:
None
Z.
Scheduling
Row fr(quently will the course be offered?
?
Yearly
Semester in which the couro will first be
offered? ?
Spring
1976
,tch of your present faculty would be available to make the proposed offering
£
?
:lhle?
All faculty from time to time
.
?
tcives of the Course
To provide on a .one-semester basis the opportunity for intensive
individual study.
Budgetary
and Space Requirements (for information only)
What additional resources will be required in the following areas:
Faculty
?
The frequency of course offerings in the Geography Undergraduat.
Sff ?
Curriculum has been modified to accommodate the faculty,
staff
and space requirements of this course. Library and audio
vi-11%.
Library ?
materials required for this course are presently available in
Audio Visual the University. No additional equipment is necessary.
Space
Equipment
pprovaL
/
V ?
J ?
&tL
C
Ciaji-. ?
Dcn ?
Chaiiin, CUS
( /.( ?
C
IA Ø
1
r...-.. c
US
t
73-361.):- (When compltiT)g
this form, for instructions_sc Mern
q
andum
SCU ?1-.1I
_ ?
-
?
_______________

Back to top