1. 1. Some works on single enterprise towns are: Department of Regional Economic Expansion, Single-Industry Communities (Ottawa: dree, Occasional Papers, 1977), revised in 1979 as Single-Sector Communities; In stitute of Local Government, Queen's University, Single Enterprise Communities in Canada (Ottawa: Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation, 1953); and I.M. Robinson,New Industrial Towns on Canada's Resource Frontier(Chicago: University of Chicago, Department of Geography, Research Paper No. 73, 1962).
2. 2. Material on Schefferville includes C. Langlois, ‘L'amenagement des villes a industrie d'extraction du subartique ,’ unpublished ma thesis , McGill University, 1957 ; E. Derbyshire, ‘Notes on the social structure of a Canadian pioneer town,’ Sociological Review, new series 8 (1960), pp. 63-75; E. Derbyshire, ‘Amenities and the notion of permanence in Schefferville, Quebec,’ McGill Subarctic Research Papers, 4 (1958), pp. 17-25; K.L. Jones, ‘Human ecology of Knob Lake - with special reference to the adjustments of the inhabitants to northern living,’ McGill Subarctic Research Papers, 4 (1958), pp. 26-38; W.G. Ross, ‘Knob Lake on Canada's new frontier,’ Canadian Geographical Journal, 54 (1957); CM. Whetstone, ‘Locational Conflicts: A Study of Residential Landuse in Northern Communities,’ unpublished ba dissertation, McGill University, 1977; and J.H. Bradbury and J.M. Wolfe (eds.), ‘Perspectives on social and economic change in the iron-ore mining region of Quebec-Labrador,’ McGill Subarctic Research Papers, 35 (1981); and 38 (1983).
3. Minetown, Milltown, Railtown
4. 5. D.B. Hegadoren , ‘Socioeconomic Mine-closure Problems: An Evaluation of the Marmorton Mining Company Closure ,’ unpublished ma thesis , University of Waterloo, 1979 .