Sense of Place

Sense of place: a response to an environment: the Swan Coastal Plain, Western Australia is a 1972 book by George Seddon.

It documents Seddon's struggle to understand the Swan Coastal Plain, a biogeographic region that he initially found harsh and unwelcoming.

It includes information on landforms, climate, geology, soils, flora, the Swan River, the coast, offshore islands, wetlands, and urban areas.

This information is, however, essentially presented in a literary style; in the words of Mark Tredinnick: "This is the kind of geography an essayist writes.

Among its claims to influence is having given modern currency to the term sense of place.