© 2020 Landscapes and Landforms of Eastern Canada Editors: Slaymaker, Olav, Catto, Norm (Eds.)  Serves as a complementary book to Landforms and Landscapes of Canada (west)  Includes numerous illustrations presenting the landscapes and of eastern Canada  Provides and informative and attractive overview of the scenic landscapes of eastern Canada This critical book focuses on the geomorphological landscapes of eastern Canada and provides a companion volume to “Landscapes and Landforms of Western Canada” (2017). There are a number of unique characteristics of eastern Canada’s landscapes, notably its magnificent coastlines, the extraordinary variety and extent of , the huge Great Lakes-St. Lawrence basin, the high incidence of meteorite craters, the spectacular Niagara Falls, urban karst in Montreal and Ottawa, youthful, glaciated karst in , Newfoundland, and Nova Scotia, the ubiquitous permafrost terrain of Nunavut, Labrador and northern Quebec and the magnificent arctic fjords and glaciers. Looking at coastlines, the tidal extremes of the Bay of Fundy are world renowned; the structural complexity of the island of Newfoundland is less well known, but produces an astounding variety of coastlines in close succession; the arctic fjordlands of Baffin and Ellesmere islands and the extravagant raised beaches of bear comparison with the classic fjords of Norway and the Baltic Sea raised beaches. As for wetlands, there are distinctive Arctic, Subarctic, Boreal, Eastern Temperate and Atlantic wetlands, and their extent is second only to those of Russia. In the Hudson and regions, between 75-100% of the terrestrial surface is comprised of wetlands. One of North America’s largest basins, the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence basin, has its source in Minnesota, straddles the USA- Canada border and debouches into Quebec as the St. Lawrence River and evolves through its estuary into the Gulf of St. Lawrence, a journey of almost 5,000 km. As far as meteorite craters are concerned, 10% of the world’s total are located in eastern Canada, including some of the largest and most complex landforms. They are preserved preferentially in the ancient Shield terrain of Quebec. Finally, the three million km² of permafrost controlled relief in eastern Canada serves as a reminder of the vulnerability of eastern Canada’s landscapes to climate change. Effects of warming are expressed through thawing of the permafrost, disruption of transportation corridors and urban construction problems, ever-present geomorphic hazards. Table of contents (26 chapters)  Eastern Canadian Landscapes as a Function of Structure, Relief and Process Pages 3-48 Slaymaker, Olav (et al.)  Quaternary Glacial, Glacimarine and Glacilacustrine History Pages 49-77 Catto, Norm (et al.)  Holocene Geomorphic Processes in Eastern Canada Pages 79-117 Slaymaker, Olav (et al.)  Glacial Landform Assemblages of Mainland Nunavut, West of Hudson Bay and Their Palaeoglaciological Significance Pages 121-144 Stokes, Chris R.  Deglacial to Paraglacial History of the Lake Saint-Jean Lowlands: A Geomorphological Perspective Pages 145-158 Nutz, Alexis (et al.)  Northwestern Ontario: The Thunder Bay Region Pages 159-177 Zaniewski, Kamil (et al.)  Labrador and the Northern Peninsula of Newfoundland: Foreshore and Flanking Geomorphology Pages 179-210 Catto, Norm  Landscapes and Landforms of the Hudson Bay Lowlands Pages 211-227 Dredge, L. A. (et al.)

 Anticosti Island: Geomorphological Context of a Unique Karst Area Pages 229-244 Beaupré, Michel  Deltaic Complexes of the Québec North Shore Pages 245-258 Dietrich, Pierre (et al.)  Geomorphology of the Great Lakes Lowlands of Eastern Canada Pages 259-275 Desloges, Joseph R. (et al.)  Karst Geomorphology of the Saugeen-Bruce Peninsula, Ontario Pages 277-296 Cowell, Daryl W.  Ice Masses of the Eastern Canadian Arctic Archipelago Pages 297-314 Wychen, Wesley (et al.)  Melville, Bathurst, and Cornwallis Islands: Low to Moderate Relief Innuitia Pages 315-332 Lamoureux, Scott F. (et al.)  The Avalon of Newfoundland: Geomorphology, People and Landscape Pages 333-367 Catto, Norm  Large-Scale Rock Slope Deformation from the Tablelands and Lookout Hills of Western Newfoundland, Canada Pages 369-380 Spooner, Ian (et al.)  Quaternary Heritage and Landscape in the Témiscouata–Madawaska Valley, Eastern Québec Pages 381-399 Morissette, Antoine (et al.)  Atlantic Canada’s Tidal Coastlines: Geomorphology and Multiple Resources Pages 401-430 Catto, Norm  Landforms and Landscapes of the Magdalen Islands: The Role of and Climate Pages 431-451 Hétu, Bernard (et al.)  The Seafloor of Southeastern Canada Pages 453-471 Normandeau, Alexandre (et al.)  Human-Modified Landscapes Pages 475-507 Catto, Norm (et al.)  Glacitectonic Caves in the St. Lawrence Lowlands of Québec Pages 509-523 Schroeder, Jacques (et al.)  Natural and Human Impacted Landscapes of the Sudbury Mining Region Pages 525-541 Dirszowsky, Randy W.  Do Landscapes Listen? Wemindji Eeyou Knowledge, Adaptation and Agency in the Context of Coastal Landscape Change Pages 543-556 Mulrennan, Monica E.  Protecting Geodiversity in Eastern Canada Pages 557-582 Slaymaker, Olav (et al.) Hardcover….$179.99 ISBN 978-3-030-35135-9