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NUNAVUT a 100 , 101 H Ackett R Iver , Wishbone Xstrata Zinc Canada R Ye C Lve Coal T Rto Nickel-Copper-PGE 102, 103 H Igh Lake , Izo K Lake M M G Resources Inc
150°W 140°W 130°W 120°W 110°W 100°W 90°W 80°W 70°W 60°W 50°W 40°W 30°W PROJECTS BY REGION Note: Bold project number and name signifies major or advancing project. AR CT KITIKMEOT REGION 8 I 0 C LEGEND ° O N umber P ro ject Operato r N O C C E Commodity Groupings ÉA AN B A SE M ET A LS Mineral Exploration, Mining and Geoscience N Base Metals Iron NUNAVUT A 100 , 101 H ackett R iver , Wishbone Xstrata Zinc Canada R Ye C lve Coal T rto Nickel-Copper-PGE 102, 103 H igh Lake , Izo k Lake M M G Resources Inc. I n B P Q ay q N Diamond Active Projects 2012 U paa Rare Earth Elements 104 Hood M M G Resources Inc. E inir utt Gold Uranium 0 50 100 200 300 S Q D IA M ON D S t D i a Active Mine Inactive Mine 160 Hammer Stornoway Diamond Corporation N H r Kilometres T t A S L E 161 Jericho M ine Shear Diamonds Ltd. S B s Bold project number and name signifies major I e Projection: Canada Lambert Conformal Conic, NAD 83 A r D or advancing project. GOLD IS a N H L ay N A 220, 221 B ack R iver (Geo rge Lake - 220, Go o se Lake - 221) Sabina Gold & Silver Corp. T dhild B É Au N L Areas with Surface and/or Subsurface Restrictions E - a PRODUCED BY: B n N ) Committee Bay (Anuri-Raven - 222, Four Hills-Cop - 223, Inuk - E s E E A e ER t K CPMA Caribou Protection Measures Apply 222 - 226 North Country Gold Corp. -
Technical Report on the Gold and Base Metal Potential of the Sy Property, Nunavut, Canada
NTS 65 I/04 to I/06 and J/01 TECHNICAL REPORT ON THE GOLD AND BASE METAL POTENTIAL OF THE SY PROPERTY, NUNAVUT, CANADA Completed By: APEX Geoscience Ltd. Suite 200, 9797-45 Avenue Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6E 5V8 Completed For: Corsa Capital Ltd. Suite 1440, 625 Howe Street Vancouver, BC V6C 2T6 December 4th, 2007 M.B. Dufresne, M.Sc., P.Geol. TECHNICAL REPORT ON THE GOLD AND BASE METAL POTENTIAL OF THE SY PROPERTY, NUNAVUT, CANADA TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE SUMMARY...................................................................................................................... 1 INTRODUCTION AND TERMS OF REFERENCE.......................................................... 3 RELIANCE ON OTHER EXPERTS................................................................................. 3 PROPERTY LOCATION AND DESCRIPTION ............................................................... 4 ACCESSIBILITY, CLIMATE, LOCAL RESOURCES, INFRASTRUCTURE AND PHYSIOGRAPHY............................................................................................................ 8 HISTORY ........................................................................................................................ 8 GEOLOGICAL SETTING .............................................................................................. 15 Regional Geology ............................................................................................... 15 Property Geology ............................................................................................... 16 DEPOSIT -
198 13. Repulse Bay. This Is an Important Summer Area for Seals
198 13. Repulse Bay. This is an important summer area for seals (Canadian Wildlife Service 1972) and a primary seal-hunting area for Repulse Bay. 14. Roes Welcome Sound. This is an important concentration area for ringed seals and an important hunting area for Repulse Bay. Marine traffic, materials staging, and construction of the crossing could displace seals or degrade their habitat. 15. Southampton-Coats Island. The southern coastal area of Southampton Island is an important concentration area for ringed seals and is the primary ringed and bearded seal hunting area for the Coral Harbour Inuit. Fisher and Evans Straits and all coasts of Coats Island are important seal-hunting areas in late summer and early fall. Marine traffic, materials staging, and construction of the crossing could displace seals or degrade their habitat. 16.7.2 Communities Affected Communities that could be affected by impacts on seal populations are Resolute and, to a lesser degree, Spence Bay, Chesterfield Inlet, and Gjoa Haven. Effects on Arctic Bay would be minor. Coral Harbour and Repulse Bay could be affected if the Quebec route were chosen. Seal meat makes up the most important part of the diet in Resolute, Spence Bay, Coral Harbour, Repulse Bay, and Arctic Bay. It is a secondary, but still important food in Chesterfield Inlet and Gjoa Haven. Seal skins are an important source of income for Spence Bay, Resolute, Coral Harbour, Repulse Bay, and Arctic Bay and a less important income source for Chesterfield Inlet and Gjoa Haven. 16.7.3 Data Gaps Major data gaps concerning impacts on seal populations are: 1. -
Canadian Data Report of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 2262
Scientific Excellence • Resource Protection & Conservation • Benefits for Canadians Excellence scientifique • Protection et conservation des ressources • Bénéfices aux Canadiens DFO Lib ary MPO B bhotheque Ill 11 11 11 12022686 11 A Review of the Status and Harvests of Fish, Invertebrate, and Marine Mammal Stocks in the Nunavut Settlement Area D.B. Stewart Central and Arctic Region Department of Fisheries and Oceans Winnipeg, Manitoba R3T 2N6 1994 Canadian Manuscript Report of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 2262 . 51( P_ .3 AS-5 -- I__2,7 Fisheries Pêches 1+1 1+1and Oceans et Océans CanaclUi ILIIM Canadian Manuscript Report of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences Manuscript reports contain scientific and technical information that contributes to existing knowledge but which deals with national or regional problems. Distribu- tion is restricted to institutions or individuals located in particular regions of Canada. However, no restriction is placed on subject matter, and the series reflects the broad interests and policies of the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, namely, fisheries and aquatic sciences. Manuscript reports may be cited as full-publications. The correct citation appears above the abstract of each report. Each report is abstracted in Aquatic Sciences and Fisheries Abstracts and,indexed in the Department's annual index to scientific and technical publications. Numbers 1-900 in this series were issued as Manuscript Reports (Biological Series) of the Biological Board of Canada, and subsequent to 1937 when the name of the Board was changed by Act of Parliament, as Manuscript Reports (Biological Series) of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada. Numbers 901-1425 were issued as Manuscript Reports of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada. -
Ernest C. Oberholtzer (1884- 1977)
250 ARCTIC PROFILES Ernest C. Oberholtzer (1884- 1977) It was a hazardous undertaking for you to go through that northern country withone Indian who knew nothing ofit. .and I heartily congratulate youon having mude a good adventurous journey which will add materiallyto our knowledge of thatpor- tion ofNorthem Canada. (J.B. Tyrrell to E.C. Oberholtzer, 16 November 1912.) In 1912 Ernest C. Oberholtzer and Titapeshwewitan, an On- tario Ojibwa better known as Billy Magee, made a canoe voyage of some 3200 km, during which they explored Nueltin Lake and the Thlewiaza River, N.W.T. This epic journey, more arduous and commendable than certain of the acclaimed explorations that preceded it, has remained all but unrecorded to the present day. Oberholtzer was born in Davenport, Iowa, on 6 February 1884. At 17 he contracted rheumatic fever and was instructed by doctors to never indulge in any activity involvingstrain. He attended Harvard, taking his A .B. in 1907 and returning for a year’s study of landscape architecture under Frederick Law Olmstead. But his one insatiable yearning was for the north woods, and he spent the summers of 1908-09 along the then still largely pristine Minnesota-Ontario border, traversing, with local Indians, “all the main canoe routes in the Rainy Lake watershed.” It was there that he first canoed prodigious- ly and began a lifelong friendship with “the most wonderful England to write and lecture on the Indians and wildlife of the Ojibway or anyIndian I have ever known,” Billy Magee, southern Shield. Oberholtzer did so; on one memorable occa- whose tribal name meant “Far-distantecho.” sion, as alast-minute substitute for the celebrated Central Asia 1910 found Oberholtzer visiting Europe and England. -
Following the Oberholtzer-Magee Expedition, by David F. Pelly
246 • REVIEWS Yoo, J.C., and D’Odorico, P. 2002. Trends and fluctuations in the likely caribou crossings and waited, the Dene [Chipewyan] dates of ice break-up of lakes and rivers in northern Europe: The were more inclined to simply follow the caribou in their effect of the North Atlantic Oscillation. Journal of Hydrology migration, not unlike a pack of wolves” (p. 64). The hostil- 268:100–112. ity between them made it difficult for anyone to find a guide Zhang, X., Vincent, L.A., Hogg, W.D., and Niitsoo, A. 2000. to conduct him through the territory. Temperature and precipitation trends in Canada during the Pelly does a kind of time-travel through the history of the 20th century. Atmosphere-Ocean 38:395–429. area, going back to the time of Samuel Hearne in the 18th century and up to the descriptions of Bill Layman, who is Thomas Huntington still canoeing the area today. The narrative ranges from the Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences mid-19th century, when the Roman Catholic mission was 180 McKown Point Rd. established in the village of Brochet at the head of Reindeer West Boothbay Harbor, Maine 04575, USA Lake, to the travels of American P.G. Downes, who in 1939 [email protected] covered some of the same route traveled by Oberholtzer and Magee 27 years earlier. Pelly traces centuries of nomadic movement of the Chipewyan, the Inuit, and the Cree as they The Old Way North: following the Ober- followed the caribou across the land, sometimes in co-op- holtzer-Magee expedition. -
MINERAL EXPLORATION, MINING and GEOSCIENCE OVERVIEW 2012 Table of Contents
NUNAVUTMINERAL EXPLORATION, MINING AND GEOSCIENCE OVERVIEW 2012 TABLE OF CONTENTS Land Tenure in Nunavut ........................ 3 ABOUT THE NUNAVUT: MINING, MINERAL EXPLORATION AND GEOSCIENCE OVERVIEW 2012 Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada ... 4 Government of Nunavut ........................ 6 This exploration overview is a combined effort of four partners: Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada (AANDC), Nunavut Tunngavik Incorporated ................. 11 Government of Nunavut (GN), Nunavut Tunngavik Incorporated Canada-Nunavut Geoscience Office ............... 13 (NTI) and Canada-Nunavut Geoscience Office (CNGO). The intent of this publication is to capture information on exploration and NWT & Nunavut Chamber of Mines ............... 16 mining activities in 2012 and to make this information available Summary of 2012 Exploration Activities to the public. Kitikmeot Region......................... 18 We thank the many contributors who submitted data and photos Base Metals ......................... 20 for this edition. Prospectors and mining companies are welcome to submit information on their programs for inclusion in the next Diamonds . 23 Overview. Feedback and comments are appreciated. Gold ............................... 24 Inactive Projects ...................... 30 NOTE TO READERS Kivalliq Region .......................... 32 This document has been prepared on the basis of information Base Metals ......................... 34 available at the time of writing. All resource and reserve figures Diamonds . -
NTI IIBA for Conservation Areas Cultural Heritage and Interpretative
NTI IIBA for Phase I: Cultural Heritage Resources Conservation Areas Report Cultural Heritage Area: McConnell River and Interpretative Migratory Bird Sanctuary Materials Study Prepared for Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. 1 May 2011 This Cultural Heritage Report: McConnell River Migratory Bird Sanctuary (Arviat) is part of a set of studies and a database produced for Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. as part of the project: NTI IIBA for Conservation Areas, Cultural Resources Inventory and Interpretative Materials Study Inquiries concerning this project and the report should be addressed to: David Kunuk Director of Implementation Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. 3rd Floor, Igluvut Bldg. P.O. Box 638 Iqaluit, Nunavut X0A 0H0 E: [email protected] T: (867) 975‐4900 Project Manager, Consulting Team: Julie Harris Contentworks Inc. 137 Second Avenue, Suite 1 Ottawa, ON K1S 2H4 Tel: (613) 730‐4059 Email: [email protected] Cultural Heritage Report: McConnell River Migratory Bird Sanctuary (Arviat) Authors: Philip Goldring, Consultant: Historian and Heritage/Place Names Specialist (primary author) Julie Harris, Contentworks Inc.: Heritage Specialist and Historian Nicole Brandon, Consultant: Archaeologist Luke Suluk, Consultant: Inuit Cultural Specialist/Archaeologist Frances Okatsiak, Consultant: Collections Researcher Note on Place Names: The current official names of places are used here except in direct quotations from historical documents. Throughout the document Arviat refers to the settlement established in the 1950s and previously known as Eskimo Point. Names of -
River Ice Breakup, Edited by Spyros Beltaos
244 • REVIEWS A final criticism concerns the incompleteness of the bib- a substantial body of knowledge that had been published liography. At many places, McGoogan quotes from books in a wide assortment of conference proceedings, technical by members of Kane’s second expedition, including Robert reports, scientific journal articles, and books and to identify Goodfellow, Hans Hendrick, Christopher Hicky, and Amos key gaps in current knowledge. Bonsall, but not one of these works appears in the bibliog- The book attempts to bridge the gap between earlier, raphy. Admittedly this is termed a “Select Bibliography,” largely empirical, approaches to studying river ice breakup but it certainly ought to contain all the works from which and more recent theoretical approaches, with emphasis on McGoogan has quoted. prediction. The theoretical approach uses quantitative appli- In short, while the uncritical reader may perhaps find cation of the thermodynamics of heat transfer, hydrology, this “a good read,” the discerning reader will soon detect hydraulics, and ice mechanics. Beltaos acknowledges both that this biography has been rather carelessly researched. the complexity of predicting these processes and the typical lack of detailed information on channel geometry, bathym- etry, stream bed slope and tortuosity, hydraulics, and REFERENCES hydrology, which require a balance between using quan- titative approaches and applying qualitative or empirical Blake, E.V., ed. 1874. Arctic experiences: Containing Capt. relations. Engineers and water resource managers will find George E. Tyson’s wonderful drift on the ice-floe, a history of many examples of how to apply quantitative approaches the Polaris expedition, the cruise of the Tigress and rescue of using approximations or empirical relations to estimate req- the Polaris survivors. -
First Nations Land Management Gestion Des Terres Des Premières
Melville Beaufort Sea Island Ba ffin Mer de Beaufort Bay B aie de B First Nations Land Management affin Banks Parry Channel Gestion des terres des Premières nations Island Somerset Island Sitidgi Prince of Lake Wales Island r e iv R Conn l e Lake e P Victoria Island Nina Bang B Lake a Bieler ffin Lake Zeta I Lake sl Lake an Gillian d Tahoe Lake er Washburn iv D R on Lake D n uk a o Y Aubry Gulf of k Colville Flint é v e Lac Bluenose u Lake i v Lake t s Y Lake r u Maunoir Lake Boothia e o l S F it Lac t d ra Belot e i Horton t D Lac des Lake a Bois v i M Hall Lake s a c k e Coronation Gulf n z Simpson Lake i e R iv e Kikerk Nettilling r Queen Maud Gulf Kluane Lake Lake Lake Great Bear Lake Aishihik Grand lac de l'Ours Lake Napaktulik TEXT Lake McNaughton Lake Lake Laberge Foxe Basin Amadjuak TEXT Blackwater Hottah Lake Lake Lake Itchen MacAlpine Kusawa Lake Lake Lake Curtis Lake Contwoyto Lac Hardisty Garry Lake Tessik Taché Lake Point Pelly Lake Lake Mingo Brown Lake Lake Lake Lake Frances Tagish Lake Lake Faber Fo Teslin Lac la Lake Lac de Gras xe Lake Martre C o h a nn F Southampton e Atlin Lake l e MacKay Aylmer l u Schultz Lake ve Lake Beverly Lake Tehek Lake M Lake Island H a u c d k Aberdeen D so e é n n tr S z Lake oi tr i Clinton-Colden Armit t d ai e Wharton 'H t Willow Marian Lake Lake ud Lake son Lake Lake Baker Lake Artillery Mallery Lake Mills Lake Lake Trout -
Nunavut-Manitoba Route Selection Study: Final Report
NISHI-KHON/SNCLAVALIN November 14, 2007 BY EMAIL Kivalliq Inuit Association P.O. Box 340 Rankin Inlet, NU X0C 0G0 016259-30RA Attention: Melodie Sammurtok, Project Manager Dear Ms. Sammurtok: Re: Nunavut-Manitoba Route Selection Study: Final Report We are pleased to submit the final documentation of the Nunavut-Manitoba Route Selection Study as a concluding deliverable of this two-year multi-disciplinary study. An electronic copy of the Final Report is submitted initially via email. One hard-copy report will be subsequently provided to each member of the Project Working Group, along with a CD containing the electronic copies of the Final and Milestone Reports, along with all the associated Appendices. On behalf of the Nishi-Khon/SNC-Lavlin Consultant Team, we would like to thank you, members of the Project Working Group and the Project Steering Committee, for your guidance and valuable contributions to this study. It has been our pleasure to work with KIA, Nunavut, Manitoba and Transport Canada on this challenging project. We look forward to continuing working with you over the next few years on the business case development, more detailed engineering and environmental studies necessary to bring this important project to fruition. Yours truly, SNCLAVALIN INC. Tim Stevens, P. Eng. Project Manager Enclosures DISTRIBUTION LIST Project Steering Committee: Methusalah Kunuk Assistant Deputy Minister, Transportation, Nunavut Department of Economic Development & Transportation Tongola Sandy President, Kivalliq Inuit Association John Spacek Assistant -
Kivalliq Region
729 Polaris Mine Storm ine 701 vik M anisi 728 N n 700 Borde e Min iver ry R Ma 850 OVERVIEW 2014 e Lak vo NUNAVUT Bra 848 MINERAL EXPLORATION, MINING & GEOSCIENCE 849 I. y ley a miq it Row B im a Q r y ja t ter Ba u O S Fos ach a W vayok a oak Be e Park T Taloy all N ll ( P ri H in Mt. P to King I. it elly) c ce Stra g i Garry Bay or se to Ca V ir F Dea n mbridg William Rasmussen ce A B KIVALLIQe Bay REGION Prin ay Island s Oro 100°W 90°W Parry Bay80°W harle uk C r Bay Gjoa Haven Kugaar nd verne 100 Basin ittee Isla Ta Que Storis Passage Comm en M 1 au s I. High d G Wale Cop Lak ulf perm e ine R Kivalliq Region Bay iver 103 E CLE Ha OX CIR UE mm 188 75 37.5 0 75 150 F TIC TIQ er ARC RC Ulu SIN LE A 233 227 BA ERC Queen Kilometres C Maud Gulf q H ilaluga ood R MBS Q 760 iver Bath Projection: Canada Lambert Conformal Conic, NAD 83 Bowman Bay iak Hoo urst idl d Inlet 462 se Bay Ch 2 129 189 Repul Jeri cho M Izo 104 ine k La 248 ilaq ke 232 101 Q Lupi 220 Finnie Bay n Mi P 761 ne River Ukkusiksalik N It F 6 chen 102 ox Lak 221 ck W e e 234 Ba Amer Lake a C q ge h jua r Ba a allik 698 ruq y n M Beverly C Ama 463 n TP PMA d el 520 Kiggavik North n u 5 Wis Nanuq set hbone Thelon Basin o or 699 S D ine ape Meadowbank M e N C y Turqa 523 PTO our sbur vik m THAM arb Sali Aberdeen L eyhound o SOU ral H d ake Gr c o n l C S la ND B Is Thelon 521 q e ISLA ay M WS 671 677 ujaarvik TP ivalli st B 3, 8 Aber Inu K W Ea deen ham 676 s S ing 670 Lake e t r 674 669 Baker arry ou Not e o H t v h i Kiggavik 678 Ba R ons Ba nd R South 675 ker Lake Gibb Isla