Browsing Department of Geography by Issue Date
Now showing items 1-20 of 81
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The use of Multinomial Logit Analysis to Model the Choice of Time to Travel.
(Clark University & Wiley Blackwell, 1982) -
The Lithostraitigraphy and Biostratigraphy of a Holocene Coastal Sediment Sequence in Marazion Marsh, West Cornwall, U.K. with reference to relative Sea-Level Movements.
(Elsevier, 1995)A Holocene sedimentary sequence at Marazion Marsh, Mount's Bay, west Cornwall, U.K. is examined with reference to coastal evolution and relative sea-level change. A sample core analyzed in this paper shows the base of the ... -
European Coastal Management: An Introduction
(Samara Publishing Ltd, 1995)Future European coastal management will require the breadth of perspective and the range of skills necessary to evaluate, integrate and incorporate existing and developing knowledge of coastal systems for the benefit of ... -
Late Quaternary Coastal Change in West Cornwall, UK
(Environmental Research Center, Department of Geography, University of Durham, 1996) -
Metalliferous Mine Waste in West Cornwall: The Implications for Coastal Management
(Samara Publishing Ltd, 1996)Metalliferous mining has taken place in Cornwall since the Bronze Age. Copper production in southwest England peaked at 15,255 tonnes of metal in 1860, while c. 12,794 tonnes of tin metal represented its peak production ... -
Introduction in Competitiveness Innovation and Regional Development in Ireland
(The regional Studies Association, 1997)The Introduction written by the Editor's Des McCafferty and James Walsh, in Competitiveness Innovation and Regional Development in Ireland -
Case Study 3: South Kerry Development Partnership
(Oak Tree Press, 1998) -
Rediscovering our Regions
(Lilliput Press, 1999) -
Poor People or Poor Place? Urban Deprivation in Southill East, Limerick City
(Oak Tree Press, 1999) -
Regionalisation and the Geography of Poverty
(Poverty Today, 1999-04)There are been considerable debate on regionalisation since the Government's decision to divide the country into two regions to maximize EU structural aid and the subsequent EU decision to confer Objective 1 status on a ... -
Limerick City Profile (NIRSA) Working Paper Series. No. 13.
(NIRSA - National Institute for Regional and Spatial Analysis, 2001)The purpose of this profile is to provide a comprehensive account of the present state of the city, in order to assist the City Development Board in the preparation of its strategy for economic, social and cultural development ... -
Keeping track mapping and tracking vulnerable young people
(The Policy Press, 2001)The notion of social exclusion, and the need for its existence and effects to be addressed and combated by government social policy, has gained great prominence in recent years, as illustrated by the establishment and work ... -
Climate history through the holocene at Lochnagar, Scotland
(Royal Irish Academy, 2001) -
Balanced Regional Development Polycentrism and the Urban System of the West of Ireland.
(Arlen Press, 2002) -
Geographical mobility family impacts
(The Policy Press, 2003)This study examines the family impacts of geographical mobility, with particular emphasis on employer-initiated relocation. It is hoped that the results from this research will add to the understanding of the impacts on ... -
The reclamation of the Shannon Estuary inter-tidal flats: A case study of the Clare Slobland Reclamation Company.
(The Geographical Society of Ireland, 2005)Extensive reclamation of the sloblands in the Shannon estuary have been under- taken over hundreds of years but particularly in the mid to late 1800s. There is extensive documentary evidence of the various reclamation ... -
Limerick :Profile of a Changing City
(Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick , NIRSA and Limerick City Development Board., 2005) -
Age constraints on Precambrian glaciations and the subdivision of Neoproterozoic time
(Subcommission on Neoproterozoic Stratigraphy, 2005)A review of age constraints on the Neoproterozoic glaciations suggests that at least four distinct glacial events can be recognised, three of which appear to be global. These are (in order from oldest to youngest) the ...