Media releases

  • Historic Welland Canals Mapping Project details now-hidden routes

    MEDIA RELEASE: 29 March 2018 – R00067

    Hunting for buried shipwrecks and close calls with coyotes may not be the first thoughts that spring to mind at the mention of Thorold — or of digital mapping software. But they were among the adventures had by Colleen Beard during her research into the historic Welland canals.

    Beard, Head of the Map, Data & GIS Library at Brock University, has spent the past eight years working both on the ground and buried in stacks of maps to create an open-source digital resource showing the routes of 19th century Welland canals as they would appear on today’s landscape.

    On Tuesday, April 3, she will share her research in a public talk, “Mapping the Historic Welland Canals One Lock at a Time — My Story.” The presentation is the last in this year’s MA in Geography Speaker Series.

    The research process, called Historical Geographic Information Systems, is characterized by the use of current mapping technologies applied to a historical subject.

    “It is a relatively new area of research,” says Beard, “but it’s becoming very popular with colleagues across Canada.”

    In the early stages of the project, Beard and her team focused on digitizing historical maps and aeriel photos, and then showcasing them using Google Earth. She detailed this phase of the research in a contribution to the 2014 book, Historical GIS Research in Canada.

    More recently, she has created the Historic Welland Canals Mapping Project (HWCMP), an interactive ArcGIS Online web application that allows users to explore the now-mostly-hidden routes of the canals.

    “Mapping the routes and features on the current landscape made me realize the vastness of these canals,” Beard says. “The amount of land that was occupied by water, mainly the weir ponds that engineered the locks, is expansive.

    “Comparing historical canal images to the current landscape reveals some stunning contrasts.”

    The project wasn’t without its challenges. In addition to her extensive archival research and digitization work, Beard hiked every metre of the three historic canals in St. Catharines and Thorold to document the landscape with local canal advocate, Rene Ressler.

    “Scaling wing walls, traversing lock walls and dodging wildlife is all very exciting, though it has an element of danger,” Beard says. “Yet, it was necessary, in order to map every remnant of the canals that remains visible today.”

    Beard gives much credit for the success of the project to the staff of the Map, Data & GIS Library, particularly Sharon Janzen for her geographic information system (GIS) expertise, and to Ressler, who captured many of the photos included in the project.

    The fruits of Beard’s labour on the HWCMP have already been put to use. As she points out, “The digital map data created for the canals has been used by architectural students for 3D modelling of the canals, as well as faculty for planning a local archaeology dig of a ship buried on the bank of Twelve Mile Creek at the old Shickluna Dry Dock site.”

    Beard, herself a graduate of Brock (BSc ’83), is also excited to use the HWCMP to showcase the ArcGIS geographic information system that allows users to tell stories about spatial information.

    “If there is a story to be told, this technology is an easy way to share it,” she says.

    What: Colleen Beard presents “Mapping the Historic Welland Canals One Lock at a Time — My Story”

    Where: Mackenzie Chown C405

    When: Tuesday, April 3 from noon to 2 p.m.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    Brock University Marketing and Communications has a full-service studio where we can provide high definition video and broadcast-quality audio.

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Brock students to reveal ‘Life Stories’ with residents of Tabor Manor Monday

    MEDIA RELEASE: 29 March 2018 – R00066

    What do 20-year-old university students and 90-year-old seniors have in common? As it turns out, more than either of them thought.

    Nearly 50 students in a third-year Brock University Leisure and Aging course have had a unique experiential learning opportunity as they spent the past three months working with aging adults at Radiant Care Tabor Manor in St. Catharines.

    Recreation and Leisure Studies Associate Professor Colleen Whyte teaches students in her RECL 3P12 every Monday morning at the long-term care home. They spend an hour in a makeshift classroom at the facility and then another hour working one-on-one with residents.

    “Many students come in saying, generationally, we’re just so different and we’re not going to have a lot in common,” Whyte said. “But they meet with these older adults who have grandchildren their age and they’re asking about television shows like Stranger Things. The course is building those connections and breaking down barriers.”

    With the Winter Term coming to a close, the Leisure and Aging students will wrap up their time at Tabor Manor on Monday, April 2 from 10 to 11:30 a.m. when they present ‘Life Stories,’ a collection of short, photo-based biographical books they’ve produced about the lives of the older adults they’ve come to know.

    The 12-page Life Story books have been produced for 100 Tabor Manor residents, many of whom are dealing with memory loss and will have the books in their rooms as a way to help stimulate conversation and memories as visitors come and go.

    Monday’s event will bring together the students, residents and their families, as the books are presented.

    “It’s anticipated that these books will be a valuable resource and keepsake for residents and their families,” said Radiant Care CEO Tim Siemens. “Students used their skills as recreationists and their skills of engagement and communication to elicit the personalities, stories and memories of the residents they partnered with.”

     

    Media are invited to attend Monday’s Life Stories presentation at Tabor Manor. Whyte and Siemens, along with students and residents will be available for interviews and photos.

     

    What: Presentation of ‘Life Stories’ by Brock RECL 3P12 students

    When: Monday, April 2, 10 to 11:30 a.m.

    Where: Radiant Care Tabor Manor — Great Room, 7 Tabor Dr., St. Catharines

    Parking: Available next door at Scott Street Church

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    * Tim Siemens, CEO, Radiant Care tims@radiantcare.net, 905-934-3414, ext. 1052

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    Categories: Media releases