Vancouver and its region

Bibliographic Information

Vancouver and its region

edited by Graeme Wynn and Timothy Oke

UBC Press, c1992

  • : pbk

Available at  / 7 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [299]-316) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

"Vancouver and its Region" is a broad-ranging account of one of the world's most spectacular and liveable metropolitan areas. It presents a historical geography of the city and its surrounding area, commentary on the contemporary city, and a report of the impacts of urban growth on the biophysical environment. A collaborative enterprise involving 19 members of the UBC geography department, the book traces the physical, social, economic, historical, and environmental development of a relatively small but highly important area of British Columbia and Canada. Vancouver's story has many facets. It is the home of a complex and vigorous Native society, whose culture was based on the exploitation of rich local resources well into the 19th century, but was disrupted and marginalized with astonishing rapidity by the impact of the fur trade, the gold rush, the railroad and the urbanization of its territory. During the latter part of this century Vancouver has developed into a dynamic international metropolis but has also had to deal with the accompanying social, ethnic, and political tensions. Opening with a photo essay which presents several original views of the metropolitan area, "Vancouver and its Region" is illustrated with many original maps, diagrams, and photographs which are filled with local detail yet point out issues and processes that are relevant far beyond Vancouver. Vancouver's story has many facets. It enjoys a magnificent physical setting shaped over many millennia but sculpted into approximately its present form in the last few thousand years by glaciers and volcanism and more recently profoundly altered by urbanization. It is the home of a complex and vigorous Native society, whose culture was based on the exploitation of rich local resources well into the nineteenth century, but was disrupted and marginalized with astonishing rapidity by the impact of the fur trade, the gold rush, the railroad and the urbanization of its territory. During the latter part of this century Vancouver has developed into a dynamic international metropolis but has also had to deal with the accompanying social, ethnic, and political tensions. Opening with a vivid photo essay which presents several original views of the metropolitan area, "Vancouver and its region" is richly illustrated with many original maps, diagrams, and photographs which are filled with local detail yet point out issues and processes that are relevant far beyond Vancouver. "Graeme Wynn is Professor in the Department of Geography and Associate Dean of Arts at the University of British Columbia. Timothy R. Oke is Professor and Head of the Department of Geography at the University of British Columbia.". This book is intended for.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction, Graem Wynn
  • views of the metropolitan area, Alfred H. Siemens
  • the primordial environment, O. Slaymaker, et al
  • the lower mainland 1820-81, Cole Harris
  • the rise of Vancouver, Graeme Wynn
  • primordial to prim order - a century of environmental change, T.R. Oke, et al
  • Vancouver, the province, and the pacific rim, T.J. Barnes, et al
  • Vancouver since the Second World War - an economic geography, R.N. North and W.G. Hardwick
  • time to grow up? from urban village to world city 1966-91, D. Ley, et al
  • the biophysical environment today, D.G. Steyn, et al
  • epilogue, Derek Gregory.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

Page Top