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Making law, order and authority in British Columbia, 1821 - 1871 /Loo, Tina Merrill. January 1994 (has links) (PDF)
Zugl.: @Diss.
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Gender race, and the making of colonial society British Columbia, 1858-1871 /Perry, Adele. January 1998 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--York University, 1998. / Mode of access: World Wide Web. Includes bibliographical references.
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4500 years of culture continuity on the central interior plateau of British ColumbiaDonahue, Paul Francis, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis--Wisconsin. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 266-304).
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Introduced bullfrogs (Rana catesbeiana) in British Columbia : impacts on native Pacific treefrogs (Hyla regilla) and red-legged frogs (Rana aurora)Govindarajulu, Purnima. 10 April 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Negotiating parenting and places of care in Vancouver, BCBester, Trina Louise 11 1900 (has links)
The home as a site for childcare is linked to notions of 'good' parenting, and the employment of
a nanny is often meant to create an extended family which enables a child to be nurtured in this
private space. Qualitative interviews undertaken with fifty-one families and eleven nannies
indicate that this childcare arrangement is complex and involves shifting and divergent
constructions of what good parenting and good childcare are. This childcare arrangement often
failed because of the complexities of the employer-employee relationship, and a failed attempt at
familial attachment. A partial explanation as to why this fails is that some nannies view their
employment as a 'bad' parenting strategy, and suggest that it is the parents who should be
nurturing the children. This tension around the appropriateness of certain childcare strategies is
indicative of discourses of proper parenting and maternal ideals, and is intimately connected to
place.
Expanding on this theme, interviews were undertaken with ten daycares in the city of Vancouver
to examine how discourses of proper parenting are reworked in a 'public' space. This inquiry
introduces more directly issues of class, opportunity and the socialization of children. The
maternal ideals expressed in the first part of the study are reworked, and sometimes abandoned,
in the delivery of public childcare services. Further, there is a process of normalization that takes
place in the designation and segregation of children based on age, and whether they are 'typical'
or 'special needs'. I argue that greater attention to emotion is needed in the study of childcare,
and greater appreciation of difference is needed in the delivery of childcare. This thesis also
questions its original premise, that of looking at childcare as public and private options, and of
seeing childcare as an employment strategy.
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Demographic perspectives on the rarity and persistence of two mariposa lilies (Calachortus) from southern British ColumbiaMiller, Michael 10 April 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Stratigraphy, sedimentology and coal quality of the Lower Skeena Group, Telkwa Coalfield, Central British ColumbiaPalsgrove, Regan Jane January 1990 (has links)
The Albian Lower Skeena Group in the Telkwa coalfield comprises more than 500 metres of conglomerate, sandstone, siltstone, mudstone and coal deposited during two regressive/transgressive cycles. The stratigraphic sequence is divisible into four lithostratigraphic units. The basal unit, Unit I, may be more than 100 metres thick and comprises conglomerate, sandstone, mudstone, coal, and seat earth. Conglomerate and sandstone are composed dominantly of chert and volcanic rock fragments, and mudstones are kaolinitic. Unit I was deposited in a fluvial environment on an eroded volcanic basement. Gravel and sand were deposited in braided channels and bars, and mudstone accumulated in floodplains. Coal formed in poorly drained, peat-forming backswamps. In the northern part of the study area, coal seams thin and split, a result of periodic flooding of peat swamps with sediment-laden water from nearby streams. Deposition of Unit I ended with a marine transgression and deposition of Unit II.
Unit II consists of up to 140 metres of silty mudstone, bioturbated or cross-bedded, chert and muscovite-rich sandstone, and rare thin coaly mudstones deposited in a deltaic/shallow marine environment. Sand was deposited in distributary channels and mouth-bars, mud accumulated in bays, and thin discontinuous peat beds accumulated in local salt marshes. There is structural evidence for the presence of an unconformity within Unit II, but palynological and paleontological data suggest that the strata are all similarly aged.
Unit III averages 90 metres thick, and comprises bioturbated or rippled, chert and muscovite-rich sandstone, siltstone, carbonaceous mudstone and thick, laterally extensive coal seams deposited in a variety of low-energy, paralic environments. Sand and mud were deposited and biogenically reworked in tidal flats, and siltstone accumulated in a restricted, nearshore marine environment in the eastern edge of the study area. Peat accumulated in freshwater coastal marshes which periodically prograded over tidal flats. All but the lowermost coal seams pinch out eastward into restricted, nearshore marine sediments, and the ash content of the coal increases toward the margin of the seam. Locally, the sulphur content of the coal is high, reflecting occasional inundation of the fresh-water swamps by brackish water. High sulphur coal contains relatively more pyritic sulphur and less organic sulphur, compared to low-sulphur coal.
Unit IV is at least 150 metres thick and is composed of chloritic, green sandstone overlain by silty mudstone, deposited in a marine environment. The basal sandstone is a transgressive lag deposit, and silty mudstone, the predominant lithofacies, was deposited in a nearshore, shallow marine environment.
The provenance of the sediments in the Telkwa coalfield changes from the base to the top of the stratigraphic section. Conglomerate and sandstone of Unit I contain an abundance of volcanic clasts and grains, locally derived from underlying and surrounding volcanic rocks of the Jurassic Hazelton Group, which were uplifted as part of the Skeena Arch and subsequently eroded and reworked. Sandstones of Units II, III and IV, which contain much less volcanic-derived material and an abundance of mica flakes, were derived from high-grade metamorphic rocks in the Omineca Belt. Chert grains are abundant throughout, reflecting continued clastic influx from the Pinchi Belt-Columbian Orogen. / Science, Faculty of / Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of / Graduate
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The Cheam Slide : a study of the interrelationship of rock avalanches and seismicityNaumann, Curt Marcel January 1990 (has links)
It is being increasingly realized that there exists an interrelationship between seismicity and rock slope failures. Possible chronological clustering of rock avalanches in the Fraser River corridor was investigated to determine if a common seismic trigger existed. It was determined that the events occurred throughout the Holocene indicating that either these slides were not seismically triggered or that seismic triggers were chronologically unrelated. Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquakes are believed to have occurred throughout the Holocene (Adams, 1989; Atwater, 1987; Hull, 1987). The ages of the earthquakes were compared to the ages of rock avalanches in the Fraser River corridor, but no distinct correlation could be made.
The lack of distinct correlation between large rock avalanches in Fraser Corridor and paleoseismicity, and the absence of event clustering, indicated either seismicity was not a factor, or that these rock avalanches may not have been susceptible to seismic triggering. A stability study of Cheam Slide was performed to investigate the susceptibility of large rock avalanches to earthquake triggering. The results suggested that the seismic susceptibility of a slope is closely linked to the displacement the slope must undergo for failure to take place. A large critical displacement may render the slope relatively insensitive to seismic triggering, while a low critical displacement may result in high seismic susceptibility.
A comparison was made between the effects of seismic and pore pressure related triggering. The results indicated that a high critical displacement slope, which is close to failure, may be more likely to fail by high pore pressures than by seismic loading. Low critical displacement slopes which are stable enough to surviving hydrodynamic loading may, because of their susceptibility to seismic triggering, pose the greatest hazard. / Science, Faculty of / Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of / Graduate
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Population ecology of yellow-bellied marmots in British ColumbiaDonaldson, Judith Lee January 1979 (has links)
Population dynamics of yellow-bellied marmots (Marmota flaviventris) were studied at Watch Lake, British Columbia. I attempted to determine how population size was regulated and compared life history tactics of the Watch Lake populations with those in other areas. Ninety-three percent of adult females and eight percent of yearling females had litters. The mean litter size was 6'. 1 ± .38. The size and weight of a female's litter were negatively correlated with her reproductive effort in the previous year. The annual mortality rate of juveniles was 62%; mortality of yearlings and adults was 33%. Most yearling males and a few yearling females emigrated. . The populations were expanding at a rate of increase of approximately .27. The Watch Lake colonies were generally larger and denser than those reported from other areas.
Adult males were territorial throughout the active season. Adult females defended territories during pregnancy and lactation. This is the first report of female territoriality in Marmota flaviventris. Experiments indicated that' (1) adult males caused yearling males to emmigrate and (2) adult females inhibited reproduction of yearling females. I predict that numbers will stabilize through the territorial behaviour of breeding females either reducing the breeding success of females or increasing the emigration rate of yearling females. I describe an experiment to test this hypothesis.
Marmot numbers near Watch Lake have been increasing for several decades as new habitat becomes available. Life history tactics of these populations differs from those inhabiting the stable environment of subalpine Colorado. Marmots at Watch Lake suffered greater mortality. They began breeding at a younger age than those in other populations. They allocated relatively more energy to.reproduction, produced larger litters of smaller young, and grew to smaller adult size. These differences are consistent with those predicted by the theory of r- and K- selection for colonizing and stable populations. / Science, Faculty of / Zoology, Department of / Unknown
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Negotiating parenting and places of care in Vancouver, BCBester, Trina Louise 11 1900 (has links)
The home as a site for childcare is linked to notions of 'good' parenting, and the employment of
a nanny is often meant to create an extended family which enables a child to be nurtured in this
private space. Qualitative interviews undertaken with fifty-one families and eleven nannies
indicate that this childcare arrangement is complex and involves shifting and divergent
constructions of what good parenting and good childcare are. This childcare arrangement often
failed because of the complexities of the employer-employee relationship, and a failed attempt at
familial attachment. A partial explanation as to why this fails is that some nannies view their
employment as a 'bad' parenting strategy, and suggest that it is the parents who should be
nurturing the children. This tension around the appropriateness of certain childcare strategies is
indicative of discourses of proper parenting and maternal ideals, and is intimately connected to
place.
Expanding on this theme, interviews were undertaken with ten daycares in the city of Vancouver
to examine how discourses of proper parenting are reworked in a 'public' space. This inquiry
introduces more directly issues of class, opportunity and the socialization of children. The
maternal ideals expressed in the first part of the study are reworked, and sometimes abandoned,
in the delivery of public childcare services. Further, there is a process of normalization that takes
place in the designation and segregation of children based on age, and whether they are 'typical'
or 'special needs'. I argue that greater attention to emotion is needed in the study of childcare,
and greater appreciation of difference is needed in the delivery of childcare. This thesis also
questions its original premise, that of looking at childcare as public and private options, and of
seeing childcare as an employment strategy. / Arts, Faculty of / Geography, Department of / Graduate
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