In the fall term, 2008, I conducted an experiment with my fourth-year seminar. We set out to develop, over one term, a class website on an important topic, bridging water history and contemporary energy policy: the proposed Site C dam on the Peace River. I was lucky that a lively group of students joined the class, that some of them were already skilled in web design and that they all put a lot of work into the task. The result, posted yesterday, is a website on Site C which seeks to place the proposal in historical perspective and offer insights and information for the general public. Well done Geog 411 students! Please visit the website at:
http://www.geog.ubc.ca/courses/projects/geog411/2008/sitec/
Monthly Archives: December 2008
Welcome to the Canadian Water History blog
Spuzzum Creek, flowing in the Fraser River
Can water have a history? Is there such a thing as Canadian water?
This blog aims to present occasional posts on how people have interacted with the hydrological world over time. Water problems have become some of the most pressing environmental issues of our times. But why? What historical conditions have produced water problems? The reasons cannot be deduced from current events. They need to be examined with the benefit of historical perspective.
Water also knows no country, despite the claims of nation-states and the precedents of international law. Water falls and flows, evaporates and seeps, and despite our best efforts we can’t contain it. But since most of my work centers on Canada, I will give the blog a national focus, while keeping an eye to international scholarship and events. Some of the most interesting topics in Canadian water history, after all, have occurred at the country’s borders. Canadian water history makes little sense outside a wider, international context.

