2021-2022 Undergraduate Catalog
Geography Courses
GEOG 1224 Introduction to Map Use
(3 credits)
GEOG 1400 World Regional Geography
(3 credits)
GEOG 2100 Introduction to Physical Geography
(3 credits)
GEOG 2200 Introduction to Human Geography
(3 credits)
GEOG 2400 Introduction to Planning
(3 credits)
GEOG 2925 People of the Environment: Geography Perspective
(3 credits)
GEOG 3125 Weather and Climate
(3 credits)
GEOG 3226 Cartography
(3 credits)
GEOG 3231 Introduction to Geographic Information Systems
(3 credits)
GEOG 3232 Intermediate Geographic Information Systems
(3 credits)
GEOG 3255 Introduction to Remote Sensing
(3 credits)
GEOG 3400 Economic Geography
(3 credits)
GEOG 3410 Geography of North America
(3 credits)
GEOG 3531 Political Geography
(3 credits)
GEOG 3532 Political Ecology
(3 credits)
GEOG 3550 Site and Resource Analysis in Planning
(3 credits)
GEOG 3560 Metropolitan Land Use Planning
(3 credits)
GEOG 3570 Public Lands Planning
(3 credits)
GEOG 3580 Regional Development Planning
(3 credits)
GEOG 3630 Conservation Biology
(3 credits)
GEOG 3800 Regional Geography
(1-3 credits)
GEOG 3810 Geography of Europe
(3 credits)
GEOG 3820 Geography of East, South, and Southeast Asia
(3 credits)
GEOG 3840 Geography of Africa
(3 credits)
GEOG 3850 Geography of the Middle East
(3 credits)
GEOG 3860 Geography of Latin America and the Caribbean
(3 credits)
GEOG 3870 Planning for Sustainable Cities
(3 credits)
GEOG 4130 Biogeography
(3 credits)
GEOG 4140 Landscape Ecology
(3 credits)
GEOG 4190 Qualitative Methods in Geographic Research
(3 credits)
GEOG 4210 The History and Development of Geographic Thought
(3 credits)
GEOG 4265 Spatial Analysis
(3 credits)
GEOG 4275 Advanced Geographic Information Systems
(3 credits)
GEOG 4910 Directed Independent Study
(3 credits)
GEOG 4917 DIS Tchg Assoc |
(1-2 credits)
GEOG 4970 Internship
(3 credits)
GEOG 4990 Thesis
(3 credits)
GEOG 3570 Public Lands Planning (3 credits)
Comparison and evaluation of natural resource management policies and analytical techniques of the U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Attention is paid to the historical and contemporary land management approaches used to protect, exploit, manage, and/or use public lands in the United States. Especially relevant are jurisdictional issues over public land, federal agencies involved in land management, state and local issues and land management, and contemporary issues associated with land management in the 21st Century. Prerequisites: GEOG 2400 and GEOG 3550, or consent of instructor.
Common Course Outline