Description |
1 online resource (xxvi, 352 pages) : illustrations (chiefly color), maps, portraits |
Physical Medium |
polychrome |
Description |
text file |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Contents |
Invocation The Magnificent Seven -- Part 1. West We Had: Foundations of Place. A Walk into the Past: Setting a Context of Place -- Creation: Monumentality and Place -- Creation: People and Place Before European Contact -- Exchanging What We Had for What We Want: The Fur Trade Era in the Canadian West -- Coming of Death: Diminishment and Loss among the First Peoples of the West -- Part 2: West We Have: Making the Mountains Our Home. Giving Meaning to Mountains and Making Them Ours: Mountaineering and the Aesthetics of Place -- Brushes with Eternity: Landscape Art and Photography in the Canadian Rockies -- Crystal and Cold Blue Chasms: The Literature of the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site -- Stemming the Tide of Loss: The Give and Take of Modern Management In and Around the Mountain Parks -- Countering Dispossession: Saving Our Unique Mountain Culture -- East Slope: Flowing Toward the Atlantic. Birthplace of Canada's National Park Ideal: Banff National Park -- North Slope: Flowing Toward the Arctic. Birthplace of Western and Northern Rivers: The Columbia Icefield and Jasper National Park -- West Slope: Flowing Toward the Pacific. Roof of the Canadian Rockies: Mount Robson Provincial Park -- Small, Remote, but Utterly Wild: Hamber Provincial Park -- Geography of Wonder: Yoho National Park -- Road to Radium: Kootenay National Park -- Matterhorn of the Rockies: Mount Assiniboine Provincial Park -- Part 3. West We Want: Creating a Culture Worthy of Place. Respecting and Honouring the Great Bear: The Grizzly as a Symbol of the West We Want -- Seeing What Is Hidden in Plain Sight: Triumphing Over Diminishment and Loss -- Expanding the World Heritage Site Designation: Managing for Future Integrity Instead of Loss -- Creating a Culture Commensurate with Place. |
Summary |
Ecology & Wonder makes several remarkable claims: The greatest cultural achievement in the Western Canadian mountain region may be what has been preserved, not what has been developed. Protecting the spine of the Rocky Mountains will preserve crucial ecological functions. Because the process of ecosystem diminishment and species loss has been slowed, an ecological thermostat has been kept alive. This may well be an important defence against future climate change impacts in the Canadian west. Ecology & Wonder is a must-read for those who appreciate Western Canada's breathtaking landscape. |
Local Note |
eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America |
Subject |
Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site (Alta. and B.C.) -- Environmental conditions.
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National parks and reserves -- Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site (Alta. and B.C.) -- Management.
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National parks and reserves. |
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Management. |
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Environmental protection -- Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site (Alta. and B.C.)
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Environmental protection. |
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Ecology -- Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site (Alta. and B.C.)
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Ecology. |
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Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site (Alta. and B.C.) -- History.
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Genre/Form |
Electronic books.
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History.
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Electronic books.
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Added Title |
Ecology and wonder |
Other Form: |
Print version: Sandford, Robert W. Ecology & wonder in the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site. Edmonton : AU Press, ©2010 9781897425572 (OCoLC)502633420 |
ISBN |
9781897425589 (electronic book) |
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1897425589 (electronic book) |
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1897425570 |
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9781897425572 |
Standard No. |
9786612851971 |
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