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The Stansted airport controversy : a pressure group study.Stott, Anthony William January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
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The structure and composition of epilithic diatom communities of the St. Lawrence and Ottawa Rivers, adjacent to the island of Montreal /De Sève, Michèle A., 1947- January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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The Quebec City recreational hinterland.Rajotte, Freda January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
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The Suburbanization of Offices: A Canadian ExampleBlake, Christine D. 04 1900 (has links)
<p> The emergence of the office sector as the largest sector in the Canadian economy has attracted increasing amounts of attention in academic literature. Recently, offices have followed the trends of residential, industrial and retail activity and have chosen to locate in the suburbs of metropolitan areas. North York is a typical example of a suburb where the office sector is growing faster than the offices in the metropolitan CBD. This research paper examines the sectoral growth of office employment in the central areas of North York and the City of Toronto. The research concludes that Metropolitan Toronto exhibits the selective decentralization of offices, that is, the suburbanization of low order, routine office functions to the suburbs leaving a CBD dominated by high order, decision-making office functions. The paper also examines the possible physical and social implications of the suburbanization of offices and the associated planning implications.</p> / Thesis / Candidate in Philosophy
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Intermetropolitan Comparisons of Mortality Patterns in Canada / 1976Muryn, Jerry 04 1900 (has links)
<p> This paper is a descriptive analysis of differences in
mortality rates among Canada's 23 Census Metropolitan Areas in 1976. ·
Life Table output focuses specifically on the life expectancies and
standardized mortality rates as a means to identify CMA mortality
differences. With mention to relevant cause-specific studies and
use of regression analysis an attempt is made to shed some light on
the identified mortality patterns. Major findings are (1) that
mortality rate variation among CMAs reveals an east-west spatial
arrangement - mortality rates in Atlantic, Quebec, and Northern Ontario
CMAs are above the Canadian average while the mortality rates of
Southern Ontario and Western CMAs are at or below the Canadian average;
(2) that Victoria CMA is dominant among the CMAs in 1976 in terms of
favourable mortality probability; (3) that male mortality rates are
significantly higher than female mortality rates but tend to be
positively related; (4) that health expenditures per capita have
significant influence on health status but continued research is
necessary to study and gain a fuller understanding of the effects of
various explanatory variables on mortality. </p> / Thesis / Bachelor of Arts (BA)
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The Evolution of Population in Canada's Metropolitan System / Changes in the Rank-Size DistributionThersidis, Christos 04 1900 (has links)
<p> The purpose of this research paper is to empirically examine
the evolution of the Canadian urban system throughout the
past century. This task is completed with the use of the
rank-size rule and the parameters that emanate from its
logarithmic distribution. This process entails the creation
of a historical data set from the inception of the urban
areas of each one of the twenty-four CMAs that are used in
this study. The collection of the evolving slope and yintercept
parameters during the study's fourteen rank-size
distribution periods, shows how policy decisions are
manifested in the empirical changes of the rank-size rule's
slope. Confederation and expansion of the railroad into the
prairie frontier are distictly evident in the evolving
parameters. It was also found that Canada's geographical
distribution of CMAs apparently limits the rank-size rule
constant to a value of -1.1 . This distribution is steeper
than the optimal market efficiency slope of -1.0 as
presented in Zipf's explanation of the forces of attraction
and dispersion of economic activity. The statistical
results of this paper can be used to· compare different
national systems or take a more regional approach in
comparing Canadian CMA sub-systems. </p> / Thesis / Bachelor of Arts (BA)
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The theoretical and empirical analysis of the population density gradients of urban areas characterized by coast lines providing an amenity to city residents /Smith, Bruce H. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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A longitudinal test of the Burgess concentric zone model in standard metropolitan statistical areas /Ventresca, Carol Ann January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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The residential satellite : an economic case study /McGovern, Francis Glenn January 1966 (has links)
No description available.
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Freezing rain in the Montreal areaLeech, Margaret E., 1953- January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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