Prairie Perspectives: Geographical Essays ERA Journal.
Prairie Perspectives: Geographical Essays 8 (74-92). Kim Lemky. Lemky, Kim, Lee Jolliffe, and Michael Conlin. (2014). Ships, Tourists and Trains: Railway Heritage Tourism and the Cruise Market. Railway Heritage and Tourism: a comprehensive global perspective, Michael Conlin and Geoffrey Bird (eds.). Channel View Publications: Canada. Pp. 55-72.
Prairie Perspectives: Geographical Essays (Volume 5): Bernard D. (Editor) Thraves: Books - Amazon.ca.
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In Plains Anthropologist Memoir Number 38: Changing Opportunities and Challenges: Human-Environmental Interaction in the Canadian Prairie Ecozone, Vol. 51, No. 199, p.230-234. 2003. Prairie Perspectives: Geographical Essays, Volume 6, 2003. Edited by Dion J Wiseman and Derrek Eberts, Department of Geography, Brandon University. Winnipeg, MB.
Prairie grass roots are very good at reaching water very far down under the surface, and they can live for a very long time. Grains are a type of grass, so the prairie grassland is perfect for growing grain like wheat, rye, and oats. North American prairie grass is usually split into three different groups: wet, mesic, and dry. Wet prairie soil is usually very moist, and it doesn't drain water.
The utility of global teleconnections for long-range crop forecasting in the Canadian Prairies, in Prairie Perspectives: Geographical Essays. Volume 3 (ed. Romanowski, J.). Winnipeg: University of Manitoba, 3, 23-61. Blair, D. 1998. The Kirchhofer technique of aynoptic typing revisited.
Curry, George and Fold, Niels and Jones, Roy and Selwood, John. 2008. Cashing in on resources, social and cultural capital: the role of local markets in the Great Southern district of Western Australia. Prairie Perspectives. 11: pp. 173-193.