Courses
                            Taught at UB
                      GEO 101:
                            Physical Environmental Geography I
                      GEO 106: Global
                            Climate Change
                           Global warming is constantly
                            in the news – high temperatures, low
                            lake-levels, big storms, and growing
                            deserts. This four credit course examines
                            past, present and future global warming by
                            considering causes of warming, methods of
                            modeling the future, predicted environmental
                            and social impacts, and possible solutions.
                          
                      GEO 347: Climatic
                            Geomorphology
                           Recent events (e.g., flooding,
                            mudslides, sinkholes, tsunamis) highlight
                            the impact of land forming processes on
                            human societies and socioeconomic systems.
                            With these and other events in mind, this
                            course examines how land surface forming
                            processes interrelate with climate and land
                            use. The first part of the course focuses on
                            the role of climate, vegetation, and other
                            factors on landform changing processes. The
                            latter part considers how these processes
                            are expressed in different systems,
                            including humid and semi-arid watersheds,
                            glaciated landscapes, permafrost, karst
                            landscapes, and in coastal environments. 
                          
                       GEO
                            561: Ecohydrology
                        This course deals with hydrologic and
                          ecological mechanisms underlying
                          climate-soil-vegetation dynamics and
                          land-water dynamics. The evolution of
                          terrestrial ecosystems depends on the need of
                          vegetation for inputs of light, water, and
                          nutrients. These inputs are variable in time
                          and space, and how they are assimilated
                          depends on plant characteristics and ecosystem
                          structure. Thus, vegetation plays an active
                          role as both cause and effect of the
                          space-time dynamics of soil water and climate.
                          Specific topics will include preferred states
                          in spatial distribution of soil moisture,
                          hydraulic limits to plant water use,
                          ecological optimality, vegetation-hydrology
                          linkages at catchment scales, carbon and
                          nutrient cycling, and vegetation competition.
                        
                      
                        Courses
                            Taught at University of Wisconsin - Madison
                      
                        
                          - Regional Hydrology
 
                          - Remote Sensing Visual Image
                              Interpretation and GIS Integration
 
                          - Computational Aspects of GIS
 
                          - Environmental Monitoring
                              Practicum
 
                          - Environmental Monitoring Seminar
 
                        
                       
                      Course
                            Taught at the University of Toronto
                      
                        
                          - Geographic Information and
                              Mapping I