The Pacific Rim Explorer


Book Description

This is the perfect guide to the fascinating Pacific Rim area of southwest Vancouver Island. It is ideal for everyone from hikers and kayakers, to sightseers and those who enjoy the outdoors.







The Pacific Rim


Book Description

As the importance of the Pacific Rim as a global centre of large-scale investment, development, and trade continues to increase, so do the potential benefits that Canada and other countries could reap as a result of an increased presence in this diverse region. This book, a revised, and to a large extent new, version of The Pacific Rim: Investment, Development, and Trade (1987), integrates a broad range of current economic data concerning the Pacific Rim with some of the more important theoretical issues in the area of economic development and trade. It demonstrates the paradoxical combination of strength and fragility that characterizes the emerging integrated Pacific Rim economy and attempts to clarify the nature of the framework and constraints that face foreign investors and trading partners.




Fray Juan Crespi


Book Description




Pioneers of the Pacific Coast


Book Description




The Pacific Ocean


Book Description

This book describes the Pacific Ocean, presenting information on its exploration and mapping, its dangers, and its resources.




The Huge Pacific Ocean


Book Description

The Pacific Ocean covers almost a third of the planet and is home to many different plants and animals. Readers find out why this ocean is so important to the plants and animals that live there, why it is so important, and how people can help clean and protect this ocean.




The BC Coast Explorer Volume 1


Book Description

Some places in this world are still wild, remote and untouched. The outer coast of Vancouver island is one such remarkable place. Author and explorer John Kimantas takes you through this phenomenal stretch of coastline, both by foot and by water, in unparalleled detail. It includes the type of detail that made his first series of guide books, the Wild Coast series, the quintessential resource for information on the most remote locations on the BC coast. This is the heir to that series, updated to include changes such as the Maa-nulth Treaty, the initiatives of the BC Marine Trails Network and other political, environmental and social changes that are continuing to shape these lands. Through maps, photography and description, The BC Coast Explorer series provides the building blocks for the adventure of a lifetime. By foot or paddle, this volume will take you to places rarely seen and yet too beautiful to miss. Covered in detail, feature by feature, are north Vancouver Island and Cape Scott, Brooks Peninsula and all five West Coast Sounds: Quatsino, Kyuquot, Nootka, Clayoquot and Barkley sounds. Included are launches, points of interest, campsites and all the necessary details to get you there. The toughest part will be deciding where to go.




New State-Making in the Pacific Rim, 1850–1974


Book Description

European colonial empires were built on private wealth-seeking (gold, silver and oil). These extractive activities required massive public subsidies. Drawing on the experience of three Pacific Rim nations — Australia, Japan and Canada and two territories in the US (Hawaii and Alaska) — New State-Making in the Pacific Rim, 1850-1974: Gold, Silver, Oil, Greed and Government demonstrates how 19th century colonialism contained the seeds of its own destruction. Peter J. Aschenbrenner identifies three factors that marked the turning point in the history of colonialism. First, governments demanded a greater return to the public treasury from private extractive activities and a reduced footprint (measured in environmental devastation and obliteration of local cultures. Second, first residents acquired considerable skill in ‘adaptation for survival,’ that is, fighting back against oppression (manifested in programs of extermination, forced population movement and hostility to language, religion and traditional subsistence practices). Third, colonial nations’ participation in World War I required their armed forces to fill manpower needs by calling on minorities to perform military service. This gave minorities significant leverage in their struggle to achieve equal political rights and access to their fair share of government benefits. Rethinking colonial practices became a realistic option, once national survival was at risk.




Journey to the Pacific Rim


Book Description

Committed to seeing the world, Elaine Raynolds and her husband, Arthur, embarked on yet another world tour, a Pacific cruise, visiting Japan, China, Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia, Australia, New Caledonia, Fiji, Western Samoa, and Hawaii. Beginning their journey with a train ride from North Carolina to Seattle, Elaine and Arthur carefully filled their suitcases and boxes with all they would need for their eighty-day trip. Packed with photos, Journey to the Pacific Rim offers a delightful portrait of one couple's cruise across the date line into varied locales. From the nightly entertainment aboard the ship to encounters with koalas and kangaroos, Elaine Raynolds saw it all. Discover the world of the Journey to the Pacific Rim through the journals of a world traveler.