Table of contents for Regional geography of the United states and Canada / Tom L. McKnight.


Bibliographic record and links to related information available from the Library of Congress catalog. Note: Contents data are machine generated based on pre-publication information provided by the publisher. Contents may have variations from the printed book or be incomplete or contain other coding.


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Contents
List of Vignettes
Preface
About The Author
Chapter 1 The North American Continent 	1
Continent, Subcontinent, or Culture Realm? 	1
Continental Parameters 	1
A View from Space 	1
The Countries 	3
Amicable Neighbors 	4
Selected General Bibliography on Canada and the United States 	6
Chapter 2 The Physical Environment 	8
The Pattern of Landforms 	8
The Pattern of Climate 	17
The Pattern of Natural Vegetation 	20
The Pattern of Soil 	23
The Pattern of Wildlife 	25
Ecosystems 	25
Selected Bibliography 	26
Chapter 3 Population 	30
Melting Pot or Potpourri? 	30
The Peopling of the North American Subcontinent 	32
The Contemporary Population 	40
Trends and Questions 	56
Selected Bibliography 	58
Chapter 4 The North American City 	60
Historical Development of North American Cities 	62
Metropolitan Areas 	66
Urban Morphology: Changing Patterns 	67
Urban Functions: Growing Diversity 	80
Urban Population: Variety in Abundance 	82
Urban Ills: Massive Maladjustments 	84
Urban Delights: The Proof of the Pudding 	86
Urban Dichotomy: Central Cities Versus Suburbs 	87
Urban Tomorrow: The Outreach of City Life 	87
Selected Bibliography 	90
Chapter 5 Regions of the United States and Canada 	92
The Geographical Region 	94
The Problem of Regional Boundaries 	94
The Problem of Regional Statistics 	95
Determination of Regions 	95
Changing Regions 	101
Regions of the United States and Canada 	102
Selected Bibliography 	103
Chapter 6 
The Atlantic Northeast 	104
A Region of Scenic Charm and Economic Disadvantage 	104
The Physical Setting 	106
Settlement and Early Development 	113
The Present Inhabitants 	119
Agriculture 	120
Forest Industries 	122
Fishing 	123
Mining 	126
Recreation 	126
Urbanism and Urban Activities 	127
The Outlook 	129
Selected Bibliography 	130
Chapter 7 French Canada 	132
A Culturally Oriented Region 	133
French Canada as a Region and a Concept 	134
The Region and Its Parts 	135
The Environment 	135
Settling the Region 	137
The Bilingual Road to Separatism 	138
The Primary Economy 	142
Urban-Industrial French Canada 	144
Tourism 	147
The Outlook 	148
Selected Bibliography 	149
Chapter 8 Megalopolis 	150
Extent of the Region 	150
Character of the Region 	152
The Urban Scene 	153
The Rural Scene 	169
Recreation and Tourism 	172
The Role of the Region 	175
Selected Bibliography 	176
Chapter 9 The Appalachians and the Ozarks 	178
The Regional Character 	178
The Environment 	180
Settlement of the Appalachian Highlands 	183
Settlement of the Ozark-Ouachita Uplands 	184
Agriculture 	184
Forest Industries 	186
Mineral Industries of the Appalachians 	187
Mineral Industries of the Ozark-Ouachita Uplands 	189
Cities and Industries 	189
Resorts and Recreation 	192
The Outlook 	192
Selected Bibliography 	197
Chapter 10 The Inland South 	198
The Physical Environment 	199
Peopling and People of the Inland South 	201
The Changing Image of the Inland South 	204
The Fluctuating Fortunes of Cotton 	205
Agriculture in the Inland South: Productive Diversity 	206
Forest Products 	212
Minerals and Mining 	215
Urban-Industrial Dynamism 	216
The Outlook 	219
Selected Bibliography 	221
Chapter 11 The Southeastern Coast 	222
The Physical Setting 	222
Primary Industries 	228
Manufacturing 	237
Urban Boom in the Space Age 	238
Inland Waterways 	244
Recreation 	246
The Outlook 	247
Selected Bibliography 	248
Chapter 12 The Heartland 	250
Extent of the Region 	251
The Look of the Landscape 	251
The Physical Setting 	253
Human Occupance of the Heartland 	258
The Incredible Opulence of Heartland Agriculture 	261
Farm Operations 	261
Minerals 	267
Heartland Manufacturing 	267
Transportation 	269
The Urban System of the Heartland 	272
The Outlook 	274
Selected Bibliography 	278
Chapter 13 The Great Plains and Prairies 	280
The Changing Regional Image 	280
The Physical Setting 	283
Sequent Occupance of the Great Plains and Prairies 	288
Contemporary Population of the Great Plains and Prairies 	291
Crop Farming 	292
Livestock Raising 	302
Mineral Industries 	304
The Ebb and Flow of Urbanization in the Great Plains and Prairies 	306
A Transit Land 	311
Limited Tourism 	311
The Outlook 	312
Selected Bibliography 	313
Chapter 14 The Rocky Mountains 	314
Extent of the Region 	314
Origin of the Rocky Mountains 	316
Major Geomorphic Subdivisions 	316
Vertical Zonation: The Topographic Imperative 	320
The Opening of the Region to Settlement 	322
The Mining Industry 	326
Forestry 	328
Agriculture and Stock Raising 	329
Water "Development" 	331
The Tourist Industry 	331
Transportation 	337
Settlement Nodes 	339
The Outlook 	340
Selected Bibliography 	340
Chapter 15 The Intermontane West 	342
Assessment of the Region 	342
Topographic Variety 	344
An Arid, Xerophytic Environment 	348
Settlement of the Region 	351
Land Ownership in the Intermontane Region 	352
The Contemporary Population: Varied and Rapidly Increasing 	353
The Water Problem 	358
Agriculture 	360
Pastoralism 	363
Mining 	364
Forestry 	366
Tourism 	367
Specialized Southwestern Living 	369
Suburbia in the Sun: The Southwest's Rush to Urbanism 	370
The Outlook 	372
Selected Bibliography 	373
Chapter 16 The California Region 	374
The California Image: Benign Climate and Landscape Diversity 	374
The Environmental Setting 	376
Settlement of the Region 	379
Population: Sensational Growth Slowing Down 	381
The Rural Scene 	381
Urbanism 	388
California and the Pacific Rim 	395
Tourism 	396
The Outlook 	397
Selected Bibliography 	398
Chapter 17 The Hawaiian Islands 	400
The Physical Setting 	400
Population 	406
Centuries of Political Change 	406
The Hawaiian Economy: Specialized, Lively, Erratic 	407
Urban Primacy: A One-City Region 	413
Problems and Prospects 	413
The Outlook 	416
Selected Bibliography 	417
Chapter 18 The North Pacific Coast 	418
The Terrain: Steep and Spectacular 	420
Climate: Moist and Monotonous 	423
The World's Most Magnificent Forests 	426
Occupance of the Region 	426
Wood Products Industries: Big Trees, Big Cut, Big Problems 	428
Agriculture: Sparse and Specialized 	432
The Ups and Downs of Commercial Fishing 	434
Power Generation 	435
Mineral Industries 	435
Urbanism: Major Nodes and Scattered Pockets 	436
Spectacular Scenery 	441
The Vital Role of Ferries in the Region 	441
The Outlook 	444
Selected Bibliography 	450
Chapter 19 The Boreal Forest 	452
A Harsh Subarctic Environment 	454
The Occupance 	459
The Economy 	460
Subarctic Urbanism: Administrative Centers and Unifunctional Towns 	470
Transportation: Decreasing Remoteness and Increasing Accessibility 	471
Tourism 	473
Native Land Claims in the North 	473
The Outlook 	475
Selected Bibliography 	476
Chapter 20 The Arctic 	478
The Physical Setting 	479
The People 	486
The Subsistence Economy 	487
The Rise of a Money Economy and Agglomerated Settlements 	488
Nunavut 	490
Nodes of Settlement 	490
Economic Specialization 	492
Transportation 	494
The Outlook 	494
Selected Bibliography 	498
Index 	501
List Of Vignettes
"Misery Days" in Canada 	19
TLM
California or Bust? The Future Direction of U.S. Population 'Drift' 	43
David Plane, University of Arizona, Tucson
Changing Patterns of Immigration, Settlement, and the Landscape 	54
Ed Bergman, City University of New York, Dronx
The Rapid Rise of Legalized Gambling 	56
TLM
Regions are Devised not Discovered 	96
Robert A. Jones, Los Angeles Times
Homelands in the United States 	97
Richard L. Nostrand, University of Oklahoma, Norman
The Odd Couple: Saint-Pierre and Miquelon 	108
Gary T. Whiteford, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton
The Stormiest Mountain in North America 	111
TLM
Acid Rain 	114
TLM
L'anse-Aux-Meadows: North America's Earliest European Settlement 	116
TLM
The Decline and Rebirth of a New Hampshire Hill Town 	117
William H. Wallace, University of New Hampshire
A Long-Lot Landscape 	139
TLM
French Foremost 	141
TLM
Anticosti-the Largest Island Nobody Knows 	145
TLM
New York City, Globalization, and the Attacks of September 11, 2001 	162
Barney Warf, Florida State University, Tallahassee
The Pennsylvania Dutch: A World Apart 	173
TLM
Branson: Live Music Capital of the World 	193
George Carney, Oklahoma State University, Stilhoater
River Basin "Development" 	195
TLM
The Irresistible Kudzu 	204
TLM
The Fire Ant-An Exotic Scourge 	208
TLM
Pork Palaces in North Carolina 	213
John Fraser Hart, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
Sunbelt vs. Snowbelt 	220
TLM
Major Wetland Problem Areas 	226
TLM
Florida's Spreading Cities 	241
Peter O. Muller, University of Miami
Winter Texans 	245
TLM
The Twin Cities 	275
John Fraser Hart, University of Minnesota
The Canadian Grain Elevator 	295
John Everitt, Brandon University, Brandon, Manitoba
Feed lots along Alberta's Oldman River 	303
Ian MacLachlan, University of Lethbridge, Lethbridge, Alberta
Potash in Saskatchewan 	307
Robert M. Bone, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon
Whitebark Pine and Bears, Squirrels, and Birds 	323
Katherine Hansen, Montana State University, Bozeman
Advocacy for Hunting 	338
Katherine Hansen, Montana State University, Bozeman
The U.S.-Mexican Border-a Line, Or a Zone? 	356
James R. Curtis, California State University, Long Beach
Recent Charges in California's Viticultural Landscape 	383
Gary Peters, California State University, Chico
Rearranging the Waters: Complex and Controversial 	390
TLM
Renaissance of the Hawaiian Language 	408
Charles W. Berry, Kamehameha Schools, Hawaii
The De-Sweetening of Hawaii 	411
TLM
The Saga of the Salmon 	437
TLM
Vancouver, B.C.-Changing Land Use and Functions 	442
J. Lewis Robinson, University of British Columbia, Vancouver
Landscapes at The Margin: Vancouver's Asian Community 	445
Audrey Kobayashi, Queens University, Kingston, Ontario
SKI Area Development in British Columbia 	448
Alison Gill, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, British Columbia
Food Security in Nunavut 	491
Heather Myers, University of Northern British Columbia, Prince George
Diamonds in Permafrost 	495
William C. Wonders, University of Alberta, Edmonton




Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication: United States Geography, Canada Geography