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Browsing NiCHE : Network in Canadian History & Environment | Nouvelle initiative Canadienne en histoire de l'environnement by Subject "British Columbia"
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Item Open Access Nature's Past Episode 002: Natural Resource Development in British Columbia(Network in Canadian History and Environment, 2009-01-19) Kheraj, Sean; ; dc. description. abstractThis month’s episode focuses on resource development in British Columbia. Last November, the Nature/History/Society group hosted a roundtable on hydro in BC, featuring Jeremy Mouat (University of Alberta), Tina Loo (University of British Columbia), and Paul Hirt (Arizona State). In this episode we highlight a selection from Tina Loo’s talk on hydro-electric development and high modernism called ‘Towards an Environmental History of ‘Progress’. You can listen to the full roundtable on hydro in BC here.Item Open Access Nature's Past Episode 005: The Storm History of Stanley Park(Network in Canadian History and Environment, 2009-04-22) Kheraj, SeanIn 2006, Vancouver’s Stanley Park was struck by an extreme windstorm event, which blew down more than ten thousand trees in the park. This was just one of a series of regular windstorms to strike the park in the twentieth century, including major storms in 1901, 1934, and 1962. The nature of windstorms in British Columbia’s Lower Mainland is incredibly complicated and the research of Wolf Read, a graduate student in the Department of Forest Sciences at UBC, will help us try to make sense of it. Also, Professor Joanna Dean from Carleton University’s Department of History tells us about the upcoming Canadian History & Environment Summer School in Ottawa.Item Open Access Nature's Past Episode 018: Local and Regional Parks(Network in Canadian History and Environment, 2010-11-21) Kheraj, SeanThe provincial government of British Columbia describes Desolation Sound Marine Provincial Park as a “yachter’s paradise” located at the confluence of the Malaspina Inlet and Homfray Channel just north of the town of Power River. The calm, warm waters of Desolation Sound are a popular destination for boating tourists, swimmers, and scuba divers. Most visitors to this marine provincial park, however, are largely unaware of the interconnections between this park and the province’s history of colonization and the displacement of the region’s Aboriginal population. On this episode of the podcast we interview Jonathan Clapperton, a history doctoral candidate from the University of Saskatchewan, about his research on the history of the relationship between Desolation Sound Marine Provincial Park and the local Sliammon First Nation. Also, we continue the conversation about local and regional parks by speaking with participants from the recent NiCHE-sponsored symposium, Historical and Global Perspectives on Provincial and Local/Regional Parks.Item Open Access Review: British Columbia by the Road(Network in Canadian History and Environment, 2017-12-18) Flamand-Hubert, Maude