2010-2011 Undergraduate Calendar

Geography  
Chair Michael Ripmeester Professor Emeritus John N. Jackson Professors David Butz, Hugh Gayler, John Menzies, Michael Ripmeester, Anthony B. Shaw Associate Professors Christopher Fullerton, Alun Hughes, Marilyne Jollineau, Phillip Mackintosh, Catherine Jean Nash, Dragos Simandan Assistant Professors Jeffrey Boggs, Daryl Dagesse, Ebru Ustundag, Romila Verma

Adjunct Professor

Dong-Ho Shin

Lecturer

Neil Pilger Adjunct Professor Dong-Ho Shin Director, Co-operative Programs Cindy Dunne Academic Adviser Melissa Ferguson
 
General Information Go to top of document
Administrative Co-ordinator Virginia Wagg 905-688-5550, extension 3484 Mackenzie Chown C322 brocku.ca/geography

The Department of Geography offers programs leading to BA and BSc degrees at the honours and pass levels and participates in a number of combined major programs.

Geographers study the distribution of physical and human phenomena over the Earth's surface and the interrelationships of humans and the natural environment. Their work ranges from description and mapping, through scientific analysis and explanation, to forecasting and planning for the future. The discipline of geography has a broad scope and combines elements of both the social and natural sciences. Two principal divisions of the subject exist-human geography and physical geography-linked by a common background, a mutual concern for humans and the environment and a body of related theory and methodology. Geography majors at Brock may choose from the following degree programs: BA Human Geography, BSc Physical Geography, BA Geography and BSc Geography. The first two are relatively specialized, while the last two strike a balance between the physical and human sides of the discipline. Within each program students may be admitted to the honours degree program at any time. An honours degree program provides students with an opportunity for a more intensive examination of issues in the discipline. These programs are described in detail in subsequent sections. The Department of Geography also participates in four-year Co-op programs leading to a BA or BSc Honours degree. In addition, the Department offers four-year Honours programs leading to either a BA or BSc degree in Geography with a Concentration in Geomatics. This program combines Brock courses with those offered by Niagara College. The Department and the Faculty of Education co-operate in offering a Concurrent BA (Honours) or BSc (Honours)/BEd degree at both the Junior/Intermediate and Intermediate/Senior levels. Most courses emphasize structured labs and seminars in early years and progressively more independent work in later years, culminating in an optional honours thesis in year 4. Field work features prominently in some courses. Students should note that a nominal fee may be charged in courses having a field work or laboratory component. Two field courses, GEOG 3P56 and 3P57, are held in September in the week following Labour Day, with follow-up seminars/labs during term. One of these courses is mandatory for students entering year 3; prospective students must register with the Department by April of the preceding academic year. GEOG 4F99 is an optional internship program in year 4, enabling students to obtain work experience while still at the University. Prospective students must register with the Department by April of the preceding academic year. Laboratories and equipment are available for work in biogeography, geomorphology, climatology, cartography, surveying, remote sensing, geographic information systems and human geography. The University Map Library, containing an extensive collection of maps, atlases and air photos, is housed within the Geography department.
 
Policing and Criminal Justice-Niagara College Go to top of document
The Policing and Criminal Justice program involves courses offered through Brock and Niagara College of Applied Arts and Technology. This four-year program combines training in policing and criminal justice with an education in a chosen academic discipline, which may be Communications Studies, Human Geography, Political Science, Psychology or Sociology. For students majoring in Human Geography, this four-year program leads to a BA (Honours) in Human Geography and a diploma in Police Foundations from Niagara College. The program caters to the increasing demand in society for professionals who possess both solid applied skills and the substantive knowledge needed to apply them to the areas of policing and criminal justice. Normally, this involves attending college after gaining a university degree, but the Brock and Niagara program combines the two in a single integrated package. Applicants must have a minimum 70 percent overall average to be considered for admission to the program. Volunteering experience is considered an asset. Successful applicants must maintain a minimum 70 percent overall average during Year 2 and meet other program requirements to continue in the program. Enrolment in this program is limited. Admission to the program is not guaranteed by attainment of the minimum requirements. Application forms for the Policing and Criminal Justice program are available from the Office of the Dean of Social Sciences. Please consult the Policing and Criminal Justice entry for a listing of program requirements.  
Co-op Program Go to top of document
The Geography Co-op programs combine academic and work terms over a four year period. Students spend the first two years in an academic setting where their exposure to courses in the core areas of Geography provides the necessary background for their first work placement. In addition to the current fees for courses in academic study terms, Geography Co-op students are assessed an annual administrative fee (see the Schedule of Fees). Eligibility to continue in the Co-op program is based on the student's major average and non-major average. A student with a minimum 70 percent major average and a minimum 60 percent non-major average will be permitted to continue. A student with a major average lower than 70 percent will not be permitted to continue in the Geography Co-op program, but may continue in the BA or BSc Geography non Co-op program. For further information, see the Co-op programs section of the Calendar and contact the Department of Geography. The Geography Co-op program designation will be awarded to those students who have successfully completed a minimum of twelve months of Co-op work experience.  
Program Notes Go to top of document
1.  GEOG 2P07, 2P12, 2P13, 2Q96, 3F91, 3F93, 3P04, 3P05, 3P07, 3P50, 3P76, 3P79, 3P83, 3P95, 4F99, 4P03, 4P07 and 4P83 can be taken for either BA or BSc credit.  
2.  In the case of GEOG 3V60-3V69, 3V90-3V99, 4F90, 4P95 and 4P96 the content in a given year determines whether the course yields BA credit or BSc credit.  
3.  Students may hold credit for only one of GEOG 3P56 or 3P57.  
4.  For students with a specific interest in geomorphology and soils the following ERSC courses are recommended as elective credits: ERSC 2P15, 3P61 and 4P61.  
5.  This credit must be other than GEOG.  
6.  The Social Science credit must be from CHYS, COMM, ECON, FILM, LABR, POLI, PCUL, PSYC, SOCI, TREN or WISE.  
7.  One Science credit is required and must be from BCHM, BIOL, CHEM, COSC, ERSC, MATH and PHYS (excluding ASTR 1P01, 1P02, BIOL 1F25, CHEM 1P00, ERSC 1F90, 1P92, SCIE 1P50 and 1P51).  
8.  One Science credit is required, must be from BCHM, BIOL, CHEM, COSC, ERSC, MATH and PHYS and must be numbered 2(alpha)00 or above.  
9.  WRIT 1P93 recommended.  
10. 

In 20 credit degree programs a maximum of eight credits may be numbered 1(alpha)00 to 1(alpha)99; at least three credits must be numbered 2(alpha)90 or above; at least three credits must be numbered 3(alpha)90 or above; and the remaining credits must be numbered 2(alpha)00 or above.

In 15 credit degree programs a maximum of eight credits may be numbered 1(alpha)00 to 1(alpha)99; at least three credits must be numbered 2(alpha)90 or above; and the remaining credits must be numbered 2(alpha)00 or above.

 
Course Offerings Go to top of document
Courses offered by the Department fall into two main groups, group A in human geography and group B in physical geography. A third group (C) emphasizes geomatics approaches to geographical problems. Group A:
- GEOG 1F90
- GEOG 2P01, 2P02, 2P03, 2P06, 2P10, 2P12, 2P13
- GEOG 3F90, 3F91, 3F92, 3F93, 3P41, 3P45, 3P50, 3P51, 3P53, 3P57, 3P60, 3P63, 3P66, 3P69, 3P74, 3P79, 3P80, 3P83, 3P84, 3P86, 3P87, 3P91, 3P93, 3V60-3V69, 3V90-3V99
- GEOG 4F90, 4F99, 4P11, 4P46, 4P51, 4P55, 4P60, 4P61, 4P62, 4P63, 4P66, 4P67, 4P68, 4P70, 4P71, 4P72, 4P75, 4P77, 4P83, 4P84, 4P87, 4P92, 4P95, 4P96
Group B:
- GEOG 1F91
- GEOG 2P04, 2P05, 2P09, 2P11, 2P12, 2P13, 2P97
- GEOG 3F91, 3F93, 3P12, 3P13, 3P24, 3P25, 3P26, 3P33, 3P35, 3P36, 3P50, 3P56, 3P79, 3P83, 3P85, 3P90, 3Q99, 3V60-3V69, 3V90-3V99
- GEOG 4F90, 4F99, 4P12, 4P13, 4P26, 4P28, 4P83, 4P85, 4P95, 4P96, 4P97
Group C:
- GEOG 2P07
- GEOG 3P04, 3P05, 3P07, 3P95
- GEOG 4P03, 4P07
 
Bachelor of Arts in Human Geography Go to top of document
Honours Year 1
- GEOG 1F90 and 1F91 (may be taken in Year 2)
- one Humanities context credit
- one Social Sciences context credit (see program note 5)
- one elective credit (see program note 9)
Year 2
- GEOG 2P07, 2P10 and 2P12
- one and one-half credits from GEOG 2P01, 2P02, 2P03, 2P06, 2P13
- one Social Sciences credit (see program note 6)
- one elective credit (to include GEOG 1F91 if not completed in Year 1)
Year 3
- GEOG 3P57
- one and one-half GEOG credits numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from group A
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from either group A or C
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from group C
- two elective credits
Year 4
- One GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group A or C
- three GEOG credits numbered 3(alpha)90 or above from group A or C
- one elective credit
 
Human Geography Co-op (Honours only) Go to top of document
Students admitted to the Co-op program must follow an approved program pattern. The most common pattern is listed below. For other approved programs consult the Co-op office. Year 1
- GEOG 1F90 and 1F91
- one Humanities context credit
- one Social Sciences context credit (see program note 5)
- one elective credit (see program note 9)
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- One elective credit
Year 2
- GEOG 0N90, 2P07, 2P10 and 2P12
- one and one-half credits from GEOG 2P01, 2P02, 2P03, 2P06, 2P13
- one Social Sciences credit (see program note 6)
- one GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group A
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- GEOG 0N01 and 2C01
Year 3 Fall Term:
- GEOG 3P57
- one and one-half GEOG credits numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group A or C
- one-half elective credit
Winter Term:
- GEOG 0N02 and 2C02
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- GEOG 0N03 and 2C03
Year 4
- One GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group A or C
- three GEOG credits numbered 3(alpha)90 or above from group A or C
- one elective credit
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- One and one-half elective credits
Pass Satisfactory completion of the first three years of the Honours program entitles a student to apply for a Pass degree.
 
Bachelor of Science in Physical Geography Go to top of document
Honours Year 1
- GEOG 1F90 (may be taken in Year 2) and 1F91
- MATH 1P97
- one Humanities context credit
- one Sciences context credit (see program note 7)
- one-half elective credit (see program note 9)
Year 2
- GEOG 2P07, 2P11 and 2P12
- one and one-half credits from GEOG 2P04, 2P05, 2P09, 2P13
- one Science credit (see program note 7)
- one elective credit (to include GEOG 1F90 if not completed in Year 1)
Year 3
- GEOG 3P56
- one and one-half GEOG credits numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from group B
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from group B or C
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from group C
- one Science credit (see program note 8)
- one elective credit
Year 4
- One GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group B or C
- three GEOG credits numbered 3(alpha)90 and above from group B or C
- one elective credit
 
Physical Geography Co-op (Honours only) Go to top of document
Year 1
- GEOG 1F90 and 1F91
- MATH 1P97
- one Humanities context credit
- one Sciences context credit (see program note 7)
- one-half elective credit (see program note 9)
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- One elective credit
Year 2
- GEOG 0N90, 2P07, 2P11 and 2P12
- one and one-half credits from GEOG 2P04, 2P05, 2P09, 2P13
- one Science credit (see program note 7)
- one GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group B
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- GEOG 0N01 and 2C01
Year 3 Fall Term:
- GEOG 3P56
- one and one-half GEOG credits numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group B or C
- one-half Science credit numbered 2(alpha)00 or above (see program note 8)
Winter Term:
- GEOG 0N02 and 2C02
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- GEOG 0N03 and 2C03
Year 4
- One GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group B or C
- three GEOG credits numbered 3(alpha)90 and above from group B or C
- one half Science credit numbered 2(alpha)00 or above (see program note 8)
- one-half elective credit
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- one and one-half elective credits
Pass Satisfactory completion of the first three years of the Honours program entitles a student to apply for a Pass degree.
 
Bachelor of Arts in Geography Go to top of document
Honours Year 1
- GEOG 1F90 and 1F91
- one Humanities context credit
- one Social Sciences context credit (see program note 5)
- one elective credit (see program note 9)
Year 2
- GEOG 2P07, 2P10 and 2P12
- one credit from GEOG 2P01, 2P02, 2P03, 2P06, 2P13
- one credit from GEOG 2P04, 2P05, 2P09, 2P13
- one Social Sciences credit (see program note 6)
- one-half elective credit
Year 3
- GEOG 3P57
- one GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from group A
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from group A or C
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from group B
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from group B or C
- two elective credits
Year 4
- One GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from groups A, B, C
- three GEOG credits numbered 3(alpha)90 or above from groups A, B, C
- one elective credit
 
Geography Co-op (Honours only) Go to top of document
Year 1
- GEOG 1F90 and 1F91
- one Humanities context credit
- one Social Sciences context credit (see program note 5)
- one elective credit (see program note 9)
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- One elective credit
Year 2
- GEOG 0N90, 2P07, 2P10 and 2P12
- one credit from GEOG 2P01, 2P02, 2P03, 2P06, 2P13
- one credit from GEOG 2P04, 2P05, 2P09, 2P13
- one Social Sciences credit (see program note 6)
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from group A
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- GEOG 0N01 and 2C01
Year 3 Fall Term:
- GEOG 3P57
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group A
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group A or C
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group B or C
- one-half elective credit
Winter Term:
- GEOG 0N02 and 2C02
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- GEOG 0N03 and 2C03
Year 4
- One GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from groups A, B, C
- three GEOG credits numbered 3(alpha)90 or above from groups A, B, C
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group B
- one-half elective credit
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- One and one-half elective credits
Pass Satisfactory completion of the first three years of the Honours program entitles a student to apply for a Pass degree.
 
Bachelor of Science in Geography Go to top of document
Honours Year 1
- GEOG 1F90 and 1F91
- MATH 1P97
- one Humanities context credit
- one Sciences context credit (see program note 7)
- one-half elective credit (see program note 9)
Year 2
- GEOG 2P07, 2P11 and 2P12
- one credit from GEOG 2P01, 2P02, 2P03, 2P06, 2P13
- one credit from GEOG 2P04, 2P05, 2P09, 2P13
- one Science credit (see program note 7)
- one-half elective credit
Year 3
- GEOG 3P56
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from group A
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from group A or C
- one GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from group B
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from group B or C
- one Science credit (see program note 8)
- one elective credit
Year 4
- One GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from groups A, B, C
- three GEOG credits numbered 3(alpha)90 or above from groups A, B, C
- one elective credit
 
Geography Co-op (Honours only) Go to top of document
Year 1
- GEOG 1F90 and 1F91
- MATH 1P97
- one Humanities context credit
- one Sciences context credit (see program note 7)
- one-half elective credit (see program note 9)
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- One elective credit
Year 2
- GEOG 0N90, 2P07, 2P11 and 2P12
- one credit from GEOG 2P01, 2P02, 2P03, 2P06, 2P13
- one credit from GEOG 2P04, 2P05, 2P09, 2P13
- one Science credit (see program note 7)
- one-half GEOG numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group B
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- GEOG 0N01 and 2C01
Year 3 Fall Term:
- GEOG 3P56
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group A or C
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group B
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group B or C
- one-half Science credit numbered 2(alpha)00 or above (see program note 8)
Winter Term:
- GEOG 0N02 and 2C02
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- GEOG 0N03 and 2C03
Year 4
- One-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group A
- three GEOG credits numbered 3(alpha)90 or above from groups A, B, C
- one GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from groups A, B, C
- one-half Science credit numbered 2(alpha)00 or above (see program note 8)
Spring/Summer Sessions:
- One and one-half elective credits
Pass Satisfactory completion of the first three years of the Honours program entitles a student to apply for a Pass degree.
 
Concurrent BA/BEd and BSc/BEd Go to top of document
The Department of Geography and the Faculty of Education co-operate in offering two Concurrent BA (Honours)/BEd programs and two BSc (Honours)/BEd programs. The Geography BA (Honours)/BEd program combines the BA Honours program or BA Honours Integrated Studies program with the teacher education program for students interested in teaching at the Intermediate/Senior level (grades 7 - 12) and at the Junior/Intermediate level (grades 4 - 10). The Geography BSc (Honours)/BEd combines the BSc Honours program or BSc Integrated Studies program with the teacher education program for students interested in teaching at the Intermediate/Senior level (grades 7 - 12) and at the Junior/Intermediate level (grades 4 - 10). Refer to the Education - Concurrent BA (Honours), Education - Concurrent BA Integrated Studies (Honours)/BEd, Education - Concurrent BSc (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) or Education-Concurrent BSc Integrated Studies (Honours)/BEd (Junior/Intermediate) program listings for further information.  
Combined Major Program Go to top of document
The Department of Geography participates in combined major programs with the following departments: Biological Sciences (BSc), Child and Youth Studies (BA), Computer Science (BA and BSc), Earth Sciences (BSc), Economics (BA). The requirements are listed in the calendar sections of the co-major discipline. Combined major programs with other disciplines are also possible; students interested in pursuing one of these should consult the Chair of Geography and of the other department/centre involved. As in the single major programs, students pursuing a combined major may be admitted to the Pass program at any time. The Pass program provides students with an opportunity for a more intensive examination of issues in the field. All combined major students are required to complete the following courses:
- GEOG 1F90 or 1F91
- GEOG 2P10 or 2P11
- GEOG 2P12
- GEOG 3P56 or 3P57
In addition, BSc Combined majors are required to complete MATH 1P97
 
Minor in Geography Go to top of document
Students in other disciplines can obtain a Minor in Geography within their degree program by completing the following courses with a minimum 60 percent overall average:
- GEOG 1F90 or 1F91
- one and one-half GEOG credits numbered 1(alpha)90 to 2(alpha)89
- one and one-half GEOG credits numbered 2(alpha)90 or above.
 
Brock/Colleges Articulation Agreement Go to top of document
Concentration in Geomatics-Niagara College Go to top of document
The Concentration in Geomatics combines an education in the fields of cartography, geographic information systems (GIS), remote sensing and surveying with an education in Geography. This is a four-year Honours program and involves courses offered through Brock University and Niagara College. Students completing the program receive a Brock Honours degree in Geography with a Concentration in Geomatics and a post-graduate certificate in Geographic Information Systems - Geospatial Management from Niagara College. The degree may be a BA or BSc, depending on whether human or physical geography is emphasized. The program caters to the demand in society for professionals who possess both a solid background in Geomatics and the substantive knowledge necessary to apply those technologies successfully in the real world. Normally, this involves attending college after gaining a university degree, but the Brock and Niagara program combines the two in a single integrated package. Students should note the following about this program:
1.  Students normally enter the program at the start of Year 2 and should apply for admission at the end of Year 1. Enrolment is limited, depending on the availability of lab space at Niagara College. Admission to the Concentration will include concurrent admission to the Niagara College post-graduate certificate program in Geographic Information Systems - Geospatial Management.
2.  The Niagara College courses are taken in Year 3 and extend over three terms, Fall, Winter, and Spring. They are taught at the college's Glendale Campus.
3.  Upon completion of the requirements for the post-graduate certificate at Niagara College, with a minimum 70 percent overall average, students will have 5.0 unspecified transfer credits applied to their Brock degree.
 
BA (Honours) Geography with Concentration in Geomatics Go to top of document
Year 1
- GEOG 1F90 and 1F91
- one Humanities context credit
- one Social Sciences context credit (see program note 5)
- one elective credit (see program note 9)
Year 2
- one credit from GEOG 2P01, 2P02, 2P03, 2P06, 2P13
- GEOG 2P07, 2P10, 2P12, 3P05 and 3P07
- one GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group A
- one-half elective credit
Year 3
- taken at Niagara College
Year 4
- GEOG 3P04, 3P57 and 4P07
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 or above from group A
- two and one-half GEOG credits numbered 3(alpha)90 or above from group A
- one-half elective credit (see program note 2)
 
BSc (Honours) Geography with Concentration in Geomatics Go to top of document
Year 1
- GEOG 1F90 and 1F91
- one Humanities context credit
- one Sciences context credit (see program note 7)
- one elective credit (see program note 9)
Year 2
- One credit from GEOG 2P04, 2P05, 2P09, 2P13
- GEOG 2P07, 2P11, 2P12, 3P05 and 3P07
- one GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)89 from group B
- MATH 1P97
Year 3
- taken at Niagara College
Year 4
- GEOG 3P04, 3P56 and 4P07
- one-half GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 or above from group B
- two and one-half GEOG credits numbered 3(alpha)90 or above from group B
- one-half elective credit (see program note 2)
 
Policing and Criminal Justice-Niagara College Go to top of document
Consult the Policing and Criminal Justice entry for a listing of the program requirements.  
Master of Arts (MA) Program Go to top of document
The MA Program in Geography is designed to train students broadly in geographical approaches to understanding social and human/environment relations, with emphasis on how contemporary processes affect spatial relations aross a range of scales from the local to the global. For details about the program, see the Graduate Calendar or contact the Geography Graduate Program Director.  
Description of Courses Go to top of document
Note that not all courses are offered in every session. Refer to the applicable term timetable for details. # Indicates a cross listed course * Indicates primary offering of a cross listed course  
Prerequisites and Restrictions Go to top of document
Students must check to ensure that prerequisites are met. Students may be deregistered, at the request of the instructor, from any course for which prerequisites and/or restrictions have not been met.

GEOGRAPHY COURSES

GEOG 1F90 Introduction to Human Geography Practical and problem-oriented examination of spatial patterns of human organization and their links with social, cultural, economic, political and ecological processes. Lectures, seminar, 3 hours per week. GEOG 1F91 Principles of Physical Geography The interactions of atmosphere, soils, vegetation and landforms occurring at the surface of the Earth. The development of natural environments and impacts upon people and their activities. Lectures, lab, 4 hours per week. GEOG 2C05 Co-op Reflective Learning and Integration V Provide student with the opportunity to apply what they've learned in their academic studies through career-oriented work experiences at employer sites. Restriction: open to GEOG Co-op students. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 0N90. Corequisite(s): GEOG 0N05. Note: students will be required to prepare learning objectives, participate in a site visit, write a work term report and receive a successful work term performance evaluation. GEOG 2P01 Introduction to Social Geography Understanding the connections between space, society and knowledge; minds and bodies, communities, cities and streets, nations, economies and institutions, and ruralities. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 1F90 or permission of the instructor. *GEOG 2P02 Economic Geography (also offered as LABR 2P02) Growth of the world economy since 1500 AD and how this shapes the location of manufacturing, agriculture and services today. Contemporary impact of global economic forces and their roots in the growth of worldwide trading networks, colonialism, the Industrial Revolution, the Fordist crisis and transition to post-Fordism. Lectures, tutorial, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) and LABR majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 1F90, LABR 1F90 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 2P03 Urban Geography Basic concepts and problems underlying the growth of cities, the urban system, land-use patterns in the city and urban policy making. Lectures, seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 1F90 or permission of the instructor. *GEOG 2P04 Introduction to Meteorology (also offered as ERSC 2P04) Principles, structure, composition and processes of the atmosphere; its energy budget, moisture balance and motion. Weather forecasting in middle and low latitudes, forecasting techniques and special problems in applied meteorology. Lectures, lab, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior), and ERSC (single or combined) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 1F91, ERSC 1F01 or permission of instructor. Completion of this course will replace previous assigned grade and credit obtained in TREN 2P04. #GEOG 2P05 Earth Surface Processes (also offered as ERSC 2P05) Earth surface processes and geomorphology within global environments. A dynamic and physically based account of processes and the Earth's surface, linking the fields of sedimentology, physical geography and fluid mechanics. Lectures, lab, field work, 5 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior), and ERSC (single or combined) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 1F91, ERSC 1F01 or permission of the instructor. Completion of this course will replace previous assigned grade and credit obtained in TREN 2P05. *GEOG 2P06 Cultural and Historical Geography (also offered as PCUL 2P06) Interactions among culture, society and landscape. The material and symbolic manifestations of culture in processes of landscape change. Lectures, seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) and PCUL majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 1F90, COMM 1F90, PCUL 1F92 or permission of the instructor. *GEOG 2P07 Foundations of Geomatics (also offered as ERSC 2P07 and IASC 2P07) Introduction to spatial, metric, graphic and other concepts common to cartography, photogrammetry, remote sensing and geographic information systems (GIS). Properties of maps, air photos and satellite imagery. Principles of map compilation and design. Practical experience in computer mapmaking, image interpretation and GIS analysis. Lectures, lab, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) and IASC (single or combined), ERSC (single or combined) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 1F90, 1F91, ERSC 1F01 or permission of the instructor. #GEOG 2P09 Principles of Biogeography (also offered as ERSC 2P09) Autoecological aspects of soils and plants including the human impact at all scales. Patterns of soils and plants and their explanation. Spatial patterns of soils and vegetation communities and their explanation. Lectures, lab, 5 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior), BIOL, and ERSC (single or combined) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 1F91, CHEM 1F92, ERSC 1F01 or permission of the instructor. Completion of this course will replace previous assigned grade and credit obtained in TREN 2P09. GEOG 2P10 Qualitative Research Design and Methodology Aspects of qualitative research: project formulation, methodologies, writing-up; relation of theory and methodology. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 1F90 or permission of the instructor. *GEOG 2P11 Research Methods in the Geosciences (also offered as ERSC 2P11) Appraisal of scientific method. Problems of research design and the acquisition of information from the field by mapping, instrumental measurement, sampling and the use of published and unpublished data sources. Quantitative analysis of data, interpretation and the communication of results. Lectures, lab, seminar, 5 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 1F91, ERSC 1F01 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 2P12 Quantitative Research Design and Methodology Introduction to basic concepts and techniques in descriptive and inferential statistics. Measures of central tendency and dispersion; populations and samples; correlation coefficients; bivariate regression; probability theory; Law of Large Numbers; Central Limit Theorem; Normal-, Z- and t-distributions; hypothesis testing. Naturalist and anti-naturalist epistemology. Realist and anti-realist ontology. The relationship between research questions and research designs. Lectures, lab, 5 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 1F90, 1F91 or permission of the instructor. Completion of this course will replace previous assigned grade and credit obtained in MATH 1P98. GEOG 2P13 Resource and Environmental Geographies Analysis of the relation between resources, global environmental dynamics, and the management of uncertainty. Emphasis on the changing pattern of energy flows. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 1F90, 1F91, ERSC 1F01, 1F90, INTC (INTL) 1F90, TREN 1F90 or permission of the instructor. #GEOG 2P15 Introduction to Oceanography (also offered as ERSC 2P15) Overview of the oceans, their origin, composition, circulation, geology and biota, from the costal zone to the abyss. Importance of oceanography to humans, history of oceanography, overview of marine hazards and resources, ocean-atmosphere interactions and the global climate. Lectures, lab, 5 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 1F91, ERSC 1F01, 1F90, BIOL 1F90. #GEOG 2P16 Sedimentology (also offered as ERSC 2P16) Basic clastic sedimentology (grain size, shape, porosity/permeability, fabric) including fundamentals of unidirectional and oscillatory water flows, sediment transport under such flows and resulting sedimentary structures. Clastic rock classification. Lectures, lab, 5 hours per week. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 1F91 or ERSC 1F01. #GEOG 2P17 Earth Science Methods (also offered as ERSC 2P17) Introduction to the study and description, in the field and the lab, of surficial deposits, sedimentary, igneous and metamorphic rocks; structural analysis of geological maps and imagery. Lectures, lab, field trips, 6 hours per week. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 1F91 or ERSC 1F01. GEOG 2P50 Geography of Canada Analysis of factors underlying the development of Canada's distinctive regions emphasizing major metropolitan areas, resource regions and areas of decline. Lectures, seminar, 3 hours per week. Note: major credit will not be granted to GEOG majors. *GEOG 2P97 Introduction to Soil Science (also offered as OEVI 2P97) Physical, chemical, biological, and hydrological processes within the soil system, their interrelationships, and relationships between these processes and the potential use of the soil. Emphasis on soils in Southern Ontario and individual student analysis of those soils. Lectures, lab, 5 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) and OEVI majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 1F91 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 3F90 London Field Course Growth and development of London as a global city, capital of Britain and major metropolitan area through an examination of its major functions, institutions, peoples and internal spatial structures; major planning issues involved in achieving an enriched urban environment. Restriction: permission of the Department. Prerequisite(s): two GEOG credits. Note: students are expected to pay their own expenses. Completion of this course will replace previous assigned grade and credit obtained in GEOG 3F92. GEOG 3F91 Environmental and Development Issues in Thailand Examination of development approaches, environmental issues and cultural practices through visits to small-scale village projects, national parks and urban areas. Assessment of the traditional versus the Western-style economy within the context of sustainable development. Environmental constraints on development. Restriction: permission of the Department. Prerequisite(s): two GEOG credits. Note: students are expected to pay their own expenses. GEOG 3F92 London-Paris Field Course Contrasts and similarities between London and Paris in terms of their roles as global cities, national capitals, metropolitan cities and local places; examination of major functions, institutions, people and internal spatial structures. Focus on planning issues in achieving an enriched urban environment. Restriction: permission of the Department. Prerequisite(s): two GEOG credits. Note: students are expected to pay their own expenses. Completion of this course will replace previous assigned grade and credit obtained in GEOG 3F90. GEOG 3F93 Costa Rica Field Course Natural tropical environments occurring along a cross-country transect. Historical and contemporary uses and development of these different environments. Current management practices within the context of environmental sustainability. Restriction: permission of the Department. Prerequisite(s): two GEOG credits. Note: students are expected to pay their own expenses and ensure all required vaccinations have been obtained before departure. GEOG 3P04 Map Design and Production Advanced aspects of map design. Methods of statistical mapping. Evolution of cartographic technology. Monochrome and colour map production using Adobe Illustrator. Issues and trends in cartography. Lectures, lab, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P07 or permission of the instructor. *GEOG 3P05 Geographic Information Systems (also offered as ERSC 3P05 and IASC 3P05) Principles and use of computer-based systems for capturing, managing, manipulating, analysing and displaying data relating to the Earth's surface, emphasing raster applications. Practical work using Idrisi. Lectures, lab, 5 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) and IASC (single or combined), ERSC (single or combined) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P07 or permission of the instructor. *GEOG 3P07 Remote Sensing (also offered as ERSC 3P07) Theory and practice of remote sensing. Photographic, thermal, multispectral, radar and laser imaging of the Earth's surface from airborne and spaceborne platforms. Image interpretation and image-analysis techniques. Lectures, lab, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) and ERSC (single or combined) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P07 or permission of the instructor. *GEOG 3P12 Climate and Winegrape Production (also offered as OEVI 3P12) Climatological aspects of winegrape production emphasizing selected wine regions of the world. Effects of climate, weather-related diseases, topography, soil and viticulture practices on winegrape production. Lectures, lab, field work, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) and OEVI majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P04 or permission of the instructor. Note: students enrolled in the OEVI program and OEVI certificate students are permitted to register without the prerequisite. *GEOG 3P13 Applied Climatology (also offered as ERSC 3P13) Studies in selected topics from the field of energy and moisture exchanges, air pollution, climatic change, climatic impact assessment and bioclimatology. Human impact on the climate along with applied micro-climatological investigations and climatic data analysis. Lectures, lab, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) and ERSC (single or combined) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P04 or permission of the instructor. #GEOG 3P24 Glacial Geomorphology/Geology (also offered as ERSC 3P24) Introduction to glaciology; glacial processes, glacial deposits; their genesis and sedimentology. Relationship of glacial processes to landforms and surface topography. Glacial systems and facies associations. Applied aspects of glacial geology such as drift exploration. Lectures, lab, field work, 5 hours per week. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P05 or permission of the instructor. #GEOG 3P25 Quaternary Geology (also offered as ERSC 3P25) Glaciations in the geological record, causes of glaciations, biotic responses to climatic changes, eustatic and isostatic sea level changes in response to glaciation, Quaternary stratigraphy and correlation of glacial and non-glacial events, application of Quaternary geology to economic and environmental problems, methods of paleoclimatic reconstruction. Lectures, lab, 5 hours per week. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 3P24, ERSC 2P16 or permission of the instructor. #GEOG 3P26 Glacial Soils and Sediments (also offered as ERSC 3P26) Applied aspects of glacial deposits. Geotechnical and pedochemical properties and structural attributes of glacial soils and sediments. Micromorphology, glacial soil discontinuity analyses. Introductory aspects of soil mechanics. Drift exploration. Landfill problems and issues related to glacial soils and sediments. Lectures, lab, 5 hours per week. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 3P24, 3P25 or permission of the instructor. #GEOG 3P33 Biodiversity (also offered as ERSC 3P33) Dispersal and migration; adaptation; speciation; extinction; ecological interaction; species invasion; plant and animal introductions; habitat fragmentation and application of biogeographical theory to conservation biology; human impacts on fire regimes. Lectures, lab, field work, 6 hours per week. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P09, BIOL 2P05, 2Q04 or permission of the instructor. #GEOG 3P35 Biomonitoring and Environmental Stress Assessment (also offered as ERSC 3P35) Use of biodiversity indicators, field methods and passive and active sensors to assess environmental quality. Collection and analysis of quantitative and qualitative data to investigate urban air and water pollution and forest health. Restriction: students must have a minimum of 10.0 overall credits and permission of the Department. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P09, ERSC 1F01, BIOL 1F90 or permission of the instructor. Note: one-week field study in the last week of the summer session with labs for 3 hours per week during the Fall term. Students are expected to pay their own expenses. #GEOG 3P36 Fluvial Geomorphology (also offered as ERSC 3P36) River basins, channel morphology, flood frequency analysis, elementary flow mechanics and sediment transport; analysis of river records; long term changes in river systems. Introduction to HEC-RAS flow modelling. Lectures, lab, 6 hours per week. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P05 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 3P41 The Modern City in Historical Perspective The modern city and its public spaces, including city and park planning and urban reform. Historical investigation of class, race and gender as they intersect with the bourgeois production of the public city. Planning and design, politics, economy and culture from the late eighteenth to the mid-twentieth centuries. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P01 and 2P06 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 3P45 Urban Growth Processes and Planning Economic, social and political forces underlying population growth, land-use change and spatial expansion in cities in advanced industrial societies. Technological innovations and urban morphology. Urban planning issues relating to suburbanization, small-town development, urban countryside, new towns, urban sprawl versus containment and intensification, and the loss of valuable resource areas. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P02, 2P03, 2P06 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 3P50 Resource Management: Discourses, Policies and Ethics Ethical and political implications of competing discourses of both human and natural resource management. Emphasis on the production and uses of power from the level of individual leadership and network-building to that of the global governance of resources. Lectures/ seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P02, 2P13, POLI 2F20, 2F30, SOCI 2P73, SPMA 2P05, TREN 2P11 or permission of the instructor. *GEOG 3P51 Popular Music, Identity and Place (also offered as PCUL 3P51) Examines links among places, music and cultural identities focussing on globalization, migration and mobility, place identity, music tourism and the role of companies and technology in music's diffusion, innovation and commercialization. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) and PCUL majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P01, 2P02, 2P06, PCUL 1F92 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 3P53 Community Development and Social Planning Geographical approach to conceiving community and planning for community empowerment. Theories and empirical studies from Canada and around the world. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P10 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 3P56 Physical Geography Field Course Application of geographical principles and field techniques to problems in physical geography. Restriction: permission of the Department. Prerequisite(s): completion of year 2 GEOG requirements in the BSc GEOG (single or combined) programs. Note: field work in September in the week following Labour Day. Students must register with the Department by April of the preceding academic year. Students are expected to pay their own expenses. Completion of this course will replace previous assigned grade and credit obtained in GEOG 3P57. GEOG 3P57 Human Geography Field Course Application of geographical principles and field techniques to problems in human geography. Restriction: permission of the Department. Prerequisite(s): completion of year 2 GEOG requirements in the BA GEOG (single or combined) programs. Note: field work in September in the week following Labour Day. Students must register with the Department by April of the preceding academic year. Students are expected to pay their own expenses. Completion of this course will replace previous assigned grade and credit obtained in GEOG 3P56. GEOG 3P60 Geography of Transportation Geographical aspects of transportation, emphasizing the automobile dependence problem, including its causes, consequences and potential solutions. Sustainable transportation and its implications for land use planning, transportation and urban design. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P01, 2P02, 2P03, 2P06, 2P13 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 3P63 Themes in Contemporary Rural Geography Geographic perspectives on social, economic and environmental change in rural settings. Emphasis on issues and challenges facing rural communities and regions within industrialized nations. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P01, 2P02, 2P03, 2P06, 2P13 or permission of the instructor. Completion of this course will replace previous assigned grade and credit obtained in GEOG 4P65. GEOG 3P66 Introduction to Urban and Regional Planning Evolution of planning theory and history. Investigation of key concepts in planning since the late 19th century. Current trends and challenges in urban and regional planning. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P03 or permission of the instructor. *GEOG 3P69 Geography of Cultural Industries (also offered as COMM 3P69 and PCUL 3P69) Theories and models of cultural production including, Cave's organizational model of cultural industries, Scott's model of cultural-product agglomerations, Veblen's theory of the leisure class, and Bourdieu's work on the creative field and habitus. Geography of artistic attraction and regional impacts of cultural policies. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior), COMM and PCUL majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P01 or 2P06; GEOG 2P02, PCUL 2P20 or permission of the instructor. *GEOG 3P74 Geography and Gender (also offered as WISE 3P74) Work of feminist geographers. Relationships between gender and space across scales, including scale of the body, domestic space, public spaces, the city, nation and globally. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) and WISE (single or combined) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P02, 2P03, 2P06, WISE 2P90, 2P91 or permission of the instructor. *GEOG 3P79 Nature, Development and the Politics of Knowledge (also offered as INTC 3P79) Recent theories regarding the social construction of nature and their implications for refiguring the colonial and postcolonial history of development and for envisioning a more just world order. Analysis of the production of old and new knowledge of nature and of their translation into environmental and development polices. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P13, TREN 2P28, 3P19, 3P21, POLI 2F20, 2F30, ENGL 2P52, SOCI 2P73, 2P85, WISE 2P96, HIST 2P99 or permission of the instructor. *GEOG 3P80 Geography and International Development (also offered as INTC 3P80) Analysis of international development theory, policy and practice. Development's relation to globalization, imperialism and neo-colonialism. Development solutions to environmental problems. Selected case studies from the developing world. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 1F90, INTC (INTL) 1F90 or permission of the instructor. *GEOG 3P83 Geography of Water Resources (also offered as ERSC 3P83) Physical and human factors affecting patterns of use and development of water resources. Emphasis on patterns of supply and demand, approaches to development and management of the resource, problems and alternative strategies. Lectures, lab, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) and ERSC (single or combined) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 1F90, 1F91, ERSC 1F01 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 3P84 Themes in Political Geography Introduction to political geography with primary emphasis on contemporary themes, including geopolitics, economic globalization, global sustainability theory, evolution and emergent issues of the nation-state, new regionalism and place-based politics, and the local-global role of the new social movements. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P02, 2P06 or permission of the instructor. #GEOG 3P85 Ecology of a Changing Planet (also offered as BIOL 3P85 and ERSC 3P85) Impact of environmental change and human activity on ecosystems. Topics include climate change and global warming, habitat fragmentation, extinction, invasive species, conservation biology and the management of ecological integrity. Lectures, lab, 5 hours per week. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P09, BIOL 2P05, 2Q04. GEOG 3P86 Themes in Cultural Geography Geographies of culture and cultural politics emphasizing heritage issues focussing on ways in which relationships of power become manifest in material and symbolic landscapes. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P06 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 3P87 Themes in Historical Geography Literature, philosophies and methodologies of historical geography, including sections exploring the traditions of the field as well as current debates. Uses and limitations of primary source materials such as newspapers, oral traditions and government documents. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P06 or permission of the instructor. #GEOG 3P90 Volcanology (also offered as ERSC 3P90) Survey of volcanoes, their distribution, forms, composition, eruptive products and styles, and potential hazards. Lectures, lab, 5 hours per week. Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 1F91, ERSC 1F01, 1F90; GEOG 2P05; one of CHEM 1F92, MATH 1P97, 1P98, one-half PHYS credit numbered 1P21 to 1P93. GEOG 3P91 Chicago Field Course Cultural and historical geographies of Chicago. Emphasis on the urban spectacle of the modern city and the contrasting geographies of race and class inequalities through the examination of public space, architecture, housing and suburbanization, and cultural production. Restriction: permission of the Department Prerequisite(s): two GEOG credits. Note: students are expected to pay their own expenses. #GEOG 3P92 Advanced Field Methods in Quaternary Science (also offered as ERSC 3P92) Introduction to Quaternary landscape evolution in Alaska. Mapping of active glacial margins, analysis of stagnant ice terrain, paleosol mapping, relative dating techniques, glacial hydrology, subglacial sediment sampling, surface exposure dating and lake/bog coring. Collecting, recording and interpreting field data and preparing a comprehensive field report. Lectures, 1 hour per week; fieldwork, 2 weeks. Restriction: permission of the Department. Note: lectures will be held at Brock University during winter term and fieldwork will be held in Alaska during spring/summer session. Students must be a minimum of 18 years of age, have a valid passport and are expected to pay their own expenses. *GEOG 3P93 Niagara's Changing Economic Geography (also offered as LABR 3P93) Changes in Niagara's industries and occupations; international trade and specialization; circular and cumulative causation; agglomeration and the contemporary world economy; regional growth machines; economic restructuring and income inequality; deindustrialization; agricultural decline; tourism; structural unemployment; brain drain and transition to cognitive-cultural economy. Lectures, seminar, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P02, 2P03 or permission of the instructor. Note: GEOG 2P12, MATH 1P98, SOCI 2P13 or equivalent is recommended. Completion of this course will replace previous assigned grade and credit obtained in GEOG 3P47. *GEOG 3P95 Advanced Geographic Information Systems (also offered as ERSC 3P95) Further study of geographic information systems emphasizing vector and database applications and advanced analytical operations. Practical work using Idrisi and MapInfo Professional. Lectures, lab, 5 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) and ERSC (single or combined) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 3P05. #GEOG 3Q99 Field School-Quaternary Geology (also offered as ERSC 3Q99) Field and laboratory methods for analysis of Quaternary landscapes based on field sites including fluvial, hillslope, coastal, glacial, and biosphere examples. Restriction: permission of the Department. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P17. GEOG 3V60-3V69 Special Topics in Geography Topics selected from year to year on the basis of faculty expertise. GEOG 3V90-3V99 Selected Field Studies and Directed Readings Application of geographical methods and techniques to the analysis of field data and problems; two weeks of field work in a selected area. Restriction: permission of the Department. Note: experience in hiking and wilderness travel recommended. GEOG 4F90 Honours Thesis Individual research project carried out under the direction of a faculty adviser. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) majors with a minimum 80 percent major average and approval to year 4 (honours) or permission of the Department. Note: students contemplating a thesis must consult with the Department by March 15 of the preceding academic year. Regulations governing the thesis may be obtained from the Administrative Co-ordinator. A detailed proposal must be submitted in writing before May 1 prior to entering year 4. GEOG 4F99 Honours Internship Internship on a specific geographic problem or task under either the direction of a faculty member, or in a government or private agency working under the supervision of that agency. Internship, 8 hours per week for 15 weeks; seminar, 3 hours per week for 9 weeks. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) majors with approval to year 4 (honours) and permission of the Department. GEOG 4P03 Advanced Cartography Research, discussion and synthesis of a selected issue in modern cartography or the conception, compilation and design of a map illustrative of a specific theme. Lab, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): GEOG 3P04 or permission of the instructor. *GEOG 4P07 Advanced Remote Sensing (also offered as ERSC 4P07) Theory and practice of in situ, airborne and spaceborne remote sensing. Emphasis on techniques used to study natural and human-made environments. Topics include data acquisition and preprocessing, image analysis, accuracy assessment and the production of information products. Image processing and analyses using commercially available image-analysis software. Lectures, lab, 4 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) and ERSC (single or combined) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): GEOG 3P07 or permission of the instructor. #GEOG 4P11 Critical Approaches to Applied Social Research Design (also offered as POLI 4P11 and SOCI 4P11) Application of social science skills in community and public-sector settings, including various qualitative and quantitative research strategies to empower communities and inform social policy development. Includes evaluation of a community agency or social program of choice. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior), CHYS (single or combined), POLS (single or combined) and SOCI (single or combined) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P10, 2P12, CHYS 3P10, 3P15, POLI 2P80, SOCI 2P11 or permission of the Department Administrator. GEOG 4P12 Research Topics in Applied Climatology Climatological investigations of selected problems in winegrape production, air pollution and climate change. Seminar, lab and field work, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P04 and 3P13 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 4P13 Research Topics in Climatic Hazards Special topics relating to climatic hazards, their impacts and societal adjustments. Seminar, lab and field work, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P04 and 3P13 or permission of the instructor. #GEOG 4P26 Advanced Fluvial Geomorphology (also offered as ERSC 4P26) Steep, rough river systems emphasizing boulder bed and rock bed channels. Seminar, lab, field work, 3 hours per week. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 3P36 or permission of the instructor. #GEOG 4P28 Advanced Glacial Sedimentology (also offered as ERSC 4P28) Sedimentology of present day glacial environments and of Quaternary sediments. Thermo-mechanical principles of glacier physics as applied to past and present glacier ice conditions. Glacial lithofacies associations. Glacio-tectonics and diagenesis. Principles of glacial erosion, entrainment and deposition. Lectures, lab, field work, 5 hours per week. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 3P24, 3P26 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 4P46 Cities and Globalization Major debates on urban change under the impact of globalization. Topics include relations between economic restructuring and urban form, spatial relations within and among cities, social and cultural composition in globalizing cities, and the role of architecture and urban design. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): GEOG 3P53 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 4P51 Advanced Geography of Music Selected debates, themes and research topics examining the relationships among music, cultural identity, political economy and place. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 3P51, 3P69, 3P84, 3P86, 3P87 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 4P55 Queer Geographies Contemporary conceptual and theoretical research on sexuality, gender, embodiment and space. Topics include geographies of sexualities, queer and trans geographies. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P01, 2P06, 3P74, 3P86 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 4P60 Advanced Urban-Economic Geography Conceptual and theoretical background to recent developments in global cities and service industries. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): one GEOG credit numbered 2(alpha)90 to 3(alpha)99 from group A. GEOG 4P61 Research Themes in Urban-Economic Geography Methodological and ethical issues related to empirical research on global cities and service industries. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): GEOG 4P60 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 4P62 Advanced Transportation Geography Selected debates, themes and research topics related to urban transportation. Application of geographical knowledge and skills to selected local transportation problems. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in the registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): GEOG 3P60 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 4P63 Geography of Rural Development and Tourism Overview of tourism as it intersects with rural development theory, processes and planning. Examination of various social, environmental, cultural and economic problems, consequences and opportunities of tourism in a rural development context. Incorporates examples of rural festivals, wineries and agri-tourism in order to understand appropriate rural tourism development. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): GEOG 3P63. Completion of this course will replace previous assigned grade and credit obtained in GEOG 3P65. GEOG 4P66 Advanced Urban and Regional Planning Evolution of planning theories based primarily upon the work of influential planning figures and visionaries. Application of planning skills to selected local and regional growth and development problems. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): GEOG 3P66 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 4P67 Economic Growth and Urban Expansion in Developing Countries Theories and realities of economic growth and urbanization with reference to East Asia. Topics include economic and industrial policies and strategies of three countries, China, Japan and Korea, and their impacts on urban life in the post-war era. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in the registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P02, 2P03 or permission of the instructor. #GEOG 4P68 Social Movements and Globalization (also offered as POLI 4P68 and SOCI 4P68) Restructuring of social movements from around the world in new alliances for global justice. Topics may include relationship between local and global scales, cross-cultural collaboration, tensions between unity and diversity, conflicts and unequal power relations in networks and North-South inequalities. Movements may include indigenous movements, transnational feminism, the anti-corporate globalization movement and environmentalism. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined), GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior), POLS (single or combined) and SOCI (single or combined) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to Year 4 (honours). GEOG 4P70 Advanced Cultural and Social Geography Selected debates and theoretical themes in the spatiality of culture and social well-being. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P01, 3P51, 3P53, 3P80, 3P86, 3P87 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 4P71 Research Themes in Cultural and Social Geography Methodological and ethical issues related to empirical research on the spatiality of culture and social well-being. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P01, 3P51, 3P53, 3P80, 3P86, 3P87 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 4P72 Landscapes of Knowledge, Power and Resistance Thematic consideration of different notions of knowledge, power and resistance, as forms of geographical phenomena, and contested conceptualizations of identity, subjectivity, social relations and spaces in Western landscapes. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 3P74, 3P79, 3P86, 3P87 or permission or the instructor. GEOG 4P75 Resources and Social Movements Conflicts over resource use and distribution and the mobilization of social movements with strong disruptive potential for political and economic life. The dynamics of these conflicts in relation to the role of the media and to processes of globalization. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 3P50, 3P74, 3P79, COMM 3P15, 3P93, HIST 3P52, 3P75, POLI 3P21, 3P33, PSYC 3P33, SOCI 3P66 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 4P77 Advanced Topics in Labour Geographies Relationship between the geographies of the brain and the geographies of labour. Emphasis on the relevance of psychoanalysis and neuroscience for understanding workplace performance and the uneven geography of human resources. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 2P01, 2P02, 3P50, 3P74 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 4P83 Research Themes in Water Resources Major debates and conflicts over water resources and their distribution. Topics include the environmental, social, economic and political aspects of water, water resources and their management. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): GEOG 3P83 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 4P84 Cities and Public Space Politics and policies governing streets and public spaces of the modern metropolis, and the various social responses to them. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): one credit from GEOG 2P01, 2P06, 3P86 or permission of the instructor. #GEOG 4P85 Ecosystems and Changing Disturbance Regimes (also offered as BIOL 4P85 and ERSC 4P85) Terrestrial ecosystem response to large-scale environmental change. Topics may include disturbance regimes, adaptation, alteration of biogeochemical cycles, invasive species and range shifts, carbon cycle feedbacks, predicting future climate and vegetation impacts, change detection, scaling-up and nonlinearity. Lectures, seminar, 3 hours per week. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 3P85 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 4P87 Advanced Historical Geography Spatial and temporal articulations of power relations. Selected debates examining the relationships among power, identity, and place in Canadian settings. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): one of GEOG 3P51, 3P69, 3P74, 3P86, 3P87 or permission of the instructor. GEOG 4P92 Critical Engagements in Contemporary Human Geography Major theoretical, conceptual and philosophical approaches influencing contemporary Western geographical thought and practice including representations of truth, knowledge, power and reality, nature of research questions and methodological considerations. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd (Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). GEOG 4P95 Directed Readings I Topic not covered in the Department's regular course offerings. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: permission of the Department. Note: topics must be chosen in consultation with a faculty member willing to supervise the tutorial. GEOG 4P96 Directed Readings II Topic not covered in the Department's regular course offerings. Seminar, 3 hours per week. Restriction: permission of the Department. Note: topics must be chosen in consultation with a faculty member willing to supervise the tutorial. GEOG 4P97 Soil Physics Analysis of fundamental processes occurring within the physical environment of soils including the structural, mechanical and rheological properties of porous materials. Characterization, measurement and movement of soil water under both transient and steady state conditions. Seasonal changes in soil physical properties. Lectures, lab, 5 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG (single or combined) and GEOG (Honours)/BEd Intermediate/Senior) majors until date specified in Registration guide. Students must have approval to year 4 (honours). Prerequisite(s): GEOG 2P97 or permission of the instructor.

CO-OP COURSES

GEOG 0N01 Co-op Work Placement I First co-op work placement (4months) with an approved employer. Restriction: open to GEOG Co-op students GEOG 0N02 Co-op Work Placement II Second co-op work placement (4months) with an approved employer. Restriction: open to GEOG Co-op students. GEOG 0N03 Co-op Work Placement III Third co-op work placement (4months) with an approved employer. Restriction: open to GEOG Co-op students. GEOG 0N04 Co-op Work Placement IV Optional co-op work placement (4months) with an approved employer. Restriction: open to GEOG Co-op students. GEOG 0N05 Work Placement V Optional co-op work placement (4months) with an approved employer. Restriction: open to GEOG Co-op students. GEOG 0N90 Co-op Training and Development Framework for the development of learning objectives for individual work terms. Includes orientation to the co-op experience, goal setting, career planning, résumé preparation and interview skills preparation. Lectures, presentations, site visits, 2 hours per week. Restriction: open to GEOG Co-op students. GEOG 2C01 Co-op Relective Learning and Integration I Provide student with the opportunity to apply what they've learned in their academic studies through career-oriented work experiences at employer sites. Restriction: open to GEOG Co-op students. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 0N90. Corequisite(s): GEOG 0N01. Note: students will be required to prepare learning objectives, participate in a site visit, write a work term report and receive a successful work term performance evaluation. GEOG 2C02 Co-op Reflective Learning and Integration II Provide student with the opportunity to apply what they've learned in their academic studies through career-oriented work experiences at employer sites. Restriction: open to GEOG Co-op students. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 0N90. Corequisite(s): GEOG 0N02. Note: students will be required to prepare learning objectives, participate in a site visit, write a work term report and receive a successful work term performance evaluation. GEOG 2C03 Co-op Reflective Learning and Integration III Provide student with the opportunity to apply what they've learned in their academics studies through career-oriented work experiences at employer sites. Restriction: open to GEOG Co-op students. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 0N90. Corequisite(s): GEOG 0N03. Note: students will be required to prepare learning objectives, participate in a site visit, write a work term report and receive a successful work term performance evaluation. GEOG 2C04 Co-op Reflective Learning and Integration IV Provide student with the opportunity to apply what they've learned in their academic studies through career-oriented work experiences at employer sites. Restriction: open to GEOG Co-op students. Prerequisite(s): GEOG 0N90. Corequisite(s): GEOG 0N04. Note: students will be required to prepare learning objectives, participate in a site visit, write a work term report and receive a successful work term performance evaluation.
 
Last updated: July 19, 2012 @ 09:15AM