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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Spring. Character, distribution, and development of cities in the world, with emphasis on American cities. Topics include locational relationships with respect to land use, areas of poverty, economic bases, urban-rural interactions and delivery of urban services. Applicable to the BG Perspective (general education) social sciences requirement.
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3.00 Credits
Interrelationships between humans and atmospheric environments; implications of air pollution, acid rain, snow, floods, drought, temperature extremes and global warming. Prior completion of GEOG 125 or GEOG 213 or GEOG 303 recommended.
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3.00 Credits
Analysis of the earth's water resources, surface water systems (drainage basins, rivers, lakes, reservoirs), distribution, supply demand, quality and hydrologic extremes. Prior completion of GEOG 125 recommended.
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3.00 Credits
Fall, Spring. Provides practical experience in applied geography, such as land use planning; urban and rural planning; recreational, regional and environmental planning; and location of industrial, commercial and health service facilities. May be repeated. Only six hours may be applied to GEOG major or minor; additional hours are for general electives. Graded S/U.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Readings and research on varied topics to suit needs of student. May be repeated up to 6 hours.
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3.00 - 4.00 Credits
On demand. Problems of subnational areal units in county and regional planning, poverty pockets, delivery of services; emphasis on individual projects.
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3.00 Credits
Fall or Spring. Fundamentals and applications; drought, water resources, human comfort, health, architecture; short- and long-range climatic changes.
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3.00 Credits
Spring. Principles and procedures used to obtain information about natural and cultural features through imagery derived from photographic, multispectral, thematic mapper, and side-looking airborne radar sensor systems.
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4.00 Credits
Fall or Spring. Collection, manipulation, integration, and automated display of data with emphasis on geographic/spatial analysis. Three hours of lecture and three hours of lab. Prerequisite: GEOG 321 or GEOG 422 or consent of instructor.
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3.00 Credits
On demand. Application of advanced GIS techniques to spatial analysis of human issues such as geodemographic, socio-economic, urban, and regional planning. Two one-hour lectures and one two-hour lab. Prerequisite: GEOG 524 or GEOL 503 or consent of instructor.
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