Canadian Geographic Year 2024 Magazine Back Issues
20132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202420252026
- Spirit Bears Ancient Guardians Of A Glacial Past
- Dreams Derailed An Uncertain Future For Passenger Rail
- Candid Camera Ensuring Ethical Wildlife Encounters
- On The Ice With The Little Native Hockey League
- Flying High Charting New Paths With The Rcaf
- Snake Dens Annual Ritual Draws Crowds To Narcisse Manitoba
- An Old Friend Returns To Haida Gwaii
- Reflecting On Nunavut As The Territory Turns 25
- Great Whites Managing Their Return To Nova Scotia Waters
- Hand Talk The Race To Save An Indigenous Language
- Shipwreck Discovery Documentary Filmmakers Find Long Lost Steamship
- Bees With Backpacks
- Polar Bears & Grizzlies
- Co-Exist In Hudson Bay
- South Saskatchewan River Under Threat
- Exploring The Future Of The Deep Sea
- Wild Horse Dispute
- The Push To Rein In Prairie Grazers
- Fire Season Communities Adapt To A New Reality
- Protecting Land And Sea
- Shackleton's Last Ship Found
- 20+ Wildlife Photo Contest Winners
- Whale Language How Ai Could Help Us Communicate
- Mapping Dams And Diversions
20132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202420252026
Canadian Geographic is a magazine published by the Royal Canadian Geographical Society, (RCGS) based in Ottawa, Ontario.
After the Society was founded in 1929, the magazine was established the next year in May 1930 under the name Canadian Geographical Journal. The Society's objective was to produce a popular magazine primarily focusing on Canadian geography. The first editor was Charles Camsell, since 1915 a fellow of the British Royal Geographical Society, as well as a geologist who had been responsible for mapping large parts of Northern Ontario, Manitoba and the Yukon. Originally published out of Montreal, Quebec, the magazine is now headquartered in Ottawa, Ontario. The magazine adopted its current title in 1978.
Typically the magazine contains articles on physical, historical, political and environmental geography, illustrated with photographs, illustrations and maps. Controversial subjects such as acid rain, clear-cut logging, vanishing wetlands, the pollution of the Great Lakes and energy sources of Canadians have also been covered in print and online. The magazine's website contains substantial extracts from current articles and supplementary information not published in the print edition, and a digital edition is also produced for each issue.