Order in Council 780/1998

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Order in Council 780/1998 • PROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA ORDER OF THE LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR IN COUNCIL Order in Council , Approved and Ordered 07 80 JUN 2 • Lieutenant Governor Executive Council in Chambers, Victoria On the recommendation of the undersigned, the Lieutenant Governor, by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council, orders that B.C. Reg. 180/90, the Park and Recreation Area Regulation, is amended by repealing Schedule B and substituting the attached Schedule B (Park and Recreation Area Regulation) . Presiding Member of the Executive Council (This part is for administrative purposes only and is not part of the Order.) MELP tracking # Authority under which Order is made: Act and section: Park Act, Section 35 .2 9 Other (specify): O.C. 867/90 (QP 40371 10 l6/980 • ■rn SCHEDULE B (Park and Recreation Area Regulation) USE OF HUNTING WEAPONS IN PARKS AND RECREATION AREAS Akamina-Kishinena Park Flores Island Park Arrowstone Protected Area Gibson Marine Park Atlin Park Gilnockie Park Atlin Recreation Area Gitnadoix River Recreation Area Babine Mountains Recreation Area Gladstone Park Banana Island Park Goat Range Park Bedard Aspen Park God's Pocket Marine Park Big Creek Park Gold Muchalat Park Birkenhead Lake Park Granby Park Bishop River Park Hakai Recreation Area Bligh Island Marine Park Hamber Park Blue Earth Lake Park Harbour-Dudgeon Lakes Park Blue River Black Spruce Park Harry Lake Aspen Park Blue River Pine Park Height of the Rockies Bonaparte Park Hesquiat Lake Park Boya Lake Park Hesquiat Peninsula Park Brooks Peninsula Park High Lakes Basin Park Bugaboo Park Homathko Estuary Park Bulkley Junction Park Homathko River -Tatlayoko Park Caligata Lake Park Indian Arm Park Callaghan Lake Park International Ridge Park Cape Scott Park Itcha Ilgachuz Park Cariboo Mountains Park Junction Sheep Range Park Cariboo River Park Kakwa Recreation Area Carmanah Walbran Park Keremeos Columns Park Carp Lake Park Khutzeymateen Park Cascade Recreation Area Kianuku Park Catala Island Marine Park Kikomun Creek Park Cathedral Park Kitlope Heritage Conservancy Protected Area Chasm Park Kitwanga Mountain Park Chithwack Lake Park Kluskoil Lake Park Chu Chua Cottonwood Park Kokanee Glacier Park Chum Creek Protected Area Kwadacha Recreation Area Cinnemousun Narrows Park Kwadacha Wilderness Park Claud Elliott Lake Park Lac du Bois Grasslands Protected Area Clayoquot Arm Park Lockhart Creek Park Clayoquot Plateau Park Lower Nimpkish Park Coquihalla Summit Recreation Area Main Lake Park Cornwall Hills Park Marble Range Park Cummins Lakes Park Marble River Park Darke Lake Park Marl Creek Park Dawley Passage Park McConnell Lake Park Dunn Peak Protected Area McDonald Creek Park Eakin Creek Canyon Park Mehatl Creek Park Eakin Creek Floodplain Park Momich Lakes Park Edge Hills Park Monkman Park Elephant Hill Park Moose Valley Park Elk Lakes Park Mount Assiniboine Park Elk Valley Park Mount Edziza Park Einar Lakes Park Mount Edziza Recreation Area Eneas Lakes Park Mount Savona Park Epper Passage Park Mud Lake Delta Park Finn Creek Park Muncho Lake Park Fiordland Recreation Area Naikoon Park Flat Lake Park Nazko Lake Park Nickel Plate Park West Arm Park Nimpkish Lake Park White Pelican Park Nisga'a Memorial Lava Bed Park White Ridge Park North Thompson Islands Park Whiteswan Lake Park North Thompson Oxbow East Park Wire Cache Park North Thompson Oxbow Jensen Island Park Wokkpash Recreation Area Nuchatlitz Park Woss Lake Park Nunsti Park Octopus Islands Marine Park Okanagan Mountain Park Oregon Jack Park Painted Bluffs Park Pilot Bay Park Pinecone Burke Park Porcupine Meadows Park Premier Lake Park Purcell Wilderness Conservancy Park Purcell Wilderness Conservancy Corridor Protected Area Pyramid Creek Falls Park Quatsino Park Roche Lake Park Sandy Island Marine Park Schoen Lake Park Schoolhouse Lake Park Shus%Yap Lake Marine Park Sidney Spit Marine Park Silver Star Park Simson Park Skagit Valley Park Sooke Mountain Park South Texada Island Park Spatsizi Plateau Wilderness Park Stein Valley Park Stikine River Recreation Area St. Mary's Alpine Park Stone Mountain Park Strathcona Park Stuart Lake Park Sulphur Passage Park Swan Lake Kispiox River Park Sydney Inlet Park Syringa Park Tahsis-kwois Park Tatlatui Park Tatshenshini-Alsek Wilderness Park law eel Park Thurston Bay Marine Park Top of the World Park 'Tranquil Creek Park Is' i I-os Park Tsintsunko Lakes Park Tunlova Park Tvveedsmuir Park TYveedsmuir Recreation Area Upper Adams River Park Upper Lillooet Park Valhalla Park Vargas Island Park Walhachin Oxbows Park Wells Gray Park .
Recommended publications
  • Physiography Geology
    BRITISH COLUMBIA DEPARTMENT OF MINES HON. W. K. KIERNAN, Minister P. J. MULCAHY, Deputy Minister NOTES ON PHYSIOGRAPHY AND GEOLOGY OF (Bli BRITISH COLUMBIA b OFFICERS OF THE DEPARTMENT VICTCRIA, B.C. 1961 PHYSIOGRAPHY Physiographic divisions and names are established by the Geographic Board of Canada. Recently H. S. Bostock, of the Geological Survey of Canada, studied the physiography of the northern Cordilleran region; his report and maps are published CI I c Fig. 1. Rglief map of British Columbia. in Memoir 247 of the Geological Survey, Department of Mines and Resources, Ottawa. The divisions shown on the accompanying sketch, Figure 2, and the nomenclature used in the text are those proposed by Bostock. Most of the Province of British Columbia lies within the region of mountains and plateaus, the Cordillera of Western Canada, that forms the western border of the North American Continent. The extreme northeastern comer of the Province, lying east of the Cordillera, is part of the Great Plains region. The Rocky Mountain Area extends along the eastern boundary of the Province for a distance of 400 miles, and continues northwestward for an additional 500 miles entirely within the Province. The high, rugged Rocky Mountains, averaging about 50 miles in width, are flanked on the west by a remarkably long and straight valley, known as the Rocky Mountain Trench, and occupied from south to north by the Kootenay, Columbia, Canoe, Fraser, Parsnip, Finlay, Fox, and Kechika Rivers. Of these, the first four flow into the Pacific Ocean and the second four join the Mackenzie River to flow ultimately into the Arctic Ocean.
    [Show full text]
  • Likely, Wells Barkerville
    Wells/Barkerville to Likely Likely to wells/barkerville LIKELY, WELLS FROM BARKERVILLE... On Hwy.#26 between Wells and FROM likely... The Likely Road turning from Hwy.#97 at and Barkerville is the turn-off to Bowron Lakes Provincial Park that 150 Mile House ends at Likely after the Likely bridge, becom- includes the Matthew Valley 3100 Road to Likely. ing the Keithley Creek Road which turns to gravel at Poquette Site A 0km A right turn at Site A takes you to the brightly Pass. You will see a brightly coloured kiosk. coloured Wells kiosk where you stay on the 3100 Road to Likely. Site 1 0km The historic Lyne’s Cabin is at the first site that BARKERVILLE You will travel beside Pleasant Valley Creek in a lush meadow intersects with Spanish Lake Road. Continue on Keithley BC Canada and then stoney outwashes just before the next site. Road, passing Poquette Lake on your left. The road winds Site B 7.3km You will cross meandering creeks before the down into the Cariboo River Valley, passing two old log 3100 Road travels through Cunningham Pass. Whiskey Flats Rec homes before climbing a series of small hills. A side trip to the Site will appear in a grassy meadow on your right. Cariboo River Falls is available 2 km’s past Kangaroo Creek Site C 13.6km The X Road, a narrow ATV trail over Yanks Road, (15 km marker), on a 2 km lane to your right. Peak to Keithley, intersects here. As you descend into Tinsdale Site 2 1km Turn right from Keithley Road onto the Creek Valley you pass an old sawmill, logging roads, and at the Cariboo Lake Road and cross the Cariboo River again.
    [Show full text]
  • Canada's Cariboo Gold Rush Is Kept Alive in a Town Called Barkerville
    Canada's Cariboo Gold Rush is kept alive in a town called Barkerville SOURCE: The Washington Post By Julia Duin Published July 16, 2019 Back in the 19th century, people were three years and 237 miles later at the Fraser crazy about hunting for gold. They traveled all River settlement of Quesnel. over North America — in “gold rushes” toward the latest find. Ordinary people quickly Communities sprang up along the way. became miners, and their desire for the There are still towns named for the distance precious metal was so strong, it had a name: they are from Lillooet: “70 Mile House,” “100 gold rush fever. Mile House” and “150 Mile House.” The “house” was a roadhouse where travelers The most famous gold rushes were in could get lodging and food. At 150 Mile House, California (1848) and the Klondike region in one can stop at a restored 1896 schoolhouse northwestern Canada near Alaska (1896). But that was cutting edge for its time with a cloak there was also the Cariboo Gold Rush (1858) room, a barrel stove and separate outhouses, along the Fraser River Valley, just north of or outdoor bathrooms, for boys and girls. present-day Vancouver, British Columbia. The biggest stash of gold was in the An estimated 30,000 Americans left wilderness east of Quesnel at a spot called California’s Gold Rush to chase their fortune in Barkerville (named after British prospector the area. As miners and settlers made their Billy Barker), some 4,300 feet up on the way up the Fraser River looking for more gold western edge of the Cariboo Mountains.
    [Show full text]
  • Glacier Change in the Cariboo Mountains, British Columbia, Canada (1952–2005)” by M
    The Cryosphere Discuss., 8, C2043–C2049, 2014 Open Access www.the-cryosphere-discuss.net/8/C2043/2014/ The Cryosphere TCD © Author(s) 2014. This work is distributed under Discussions the Creative Commons Attribute 3.0 License. 8, C2043–C2049, 2014 Interactive Comment Interactive comment on “Glacier change in the Cariboo Mountains, British Columbia, Canada (1952–2005)” by M. J. Beedle et al. C. DeBeer (Referee) [email protected] Received and published: 11 October 2014 General Comments This manuscript presents an analysis of changes in area for a subset of 33 glaciers Full Screen / Esc within the Cariboo Mountains, British Columbia, over the period 1952–2005 and sev- eral shorter sub-periods within (1952–1985 and 1985–2005, as well as the additional Printer-friendly Version sub-periods of 1952–1970 and 1970–1985 for 26 of these glaciers). The analysis is based on a comparison of glacier extents derived manually from digital aerial photos, Interactive Discussion providing higher confidence in the assessment of changes in comparison to changes derived from lower resolution satellite imagery. Photogrammetric techniques are used Discussion Paper to measure the surface elevation changes for a subset of seven of these glaciers over the periods 1952–1985, 1985–2005, and 1952–2005. A rigorous assessment of the er- C2043 ror associated with both area and surface elevation changes is provided. Net changes are then scaled up to the entire population of Cariboo Mountains glaciers based on TCD 2005 glacier inventory characteristics from the study by Bolch et al. (2010). An assess- 8, C2043–C2049, 2014 ment of regional climatic variations over the entire period is provided and insights are drawn on how these variations may relate to the observed patterns of glacier changes.
    [Show full text]
  • The Cariboo and Monashee Ranges of British Columbia: an Alpinist’S Guide
    1 THE CARIBOO AND MONASHEE RANGES OF BRITISH COLUMBIA: AN ALPINIST’S GUIDE by EARLE R. WHIPPLE Even today, British Columbia is still a wilderness of mountains, valleys, glaciers, forest and plateau. The Columbia Mountains (Interior Ranges; which include the Cariboo and Monashee Ranges) lie within British Columbia, west of the Canadian Rockies and the southern Alberta-British Columbia border. This guide describes the access and mountaineering in these two ranges. Aside from parts of the Coast Range and the northern Rockies, the Cariboo and Monashee Ranges are the most isolated in B.C. However, if one listens to the helicopters from the lodges in these ranges, when camped there, one may question this. Large, active glaciers (now in retreat) with spectacular icefalls exist in the mountains of the western part of the Halvorson Group, the northern Wells Gray Group, the Premier Ranges, the Dominion Group and northern Scrip Range; there is climbing on rock, snow and ice, and routes for those climbers wishing easy, relaxing climbing in beautiful scenery. Good rock climbing on gneiss is in the southern Gold Range and Mt. Begbie in the north. There are also locales offering fine hiking on trails or alpine meadows (Halvorson Group, southern Wells Gray Group, southern Scrip Range, and the Shuswap Group), and backpacking traverses have been worked out through the Halvorson and Dominion Groups, the Scrip Range and the Gold Range. Beautiful lake districts exist in the northern Cariboos, and the Monashees. The area covered by this book starts northwest of the town of McBride, on Highway 16, southeast of Prince George, and extends south to near the border with the U.S.A., staying within the great bend of the Fraser River, and then west of Canoe Reach (lake; formerly Canoe River) and just west of the lower Columbia River south of its great bend.
    [Show full text]
  • Glaciers of the Canadian Rockies
    Glaciers of North America— GLACIERS OF CANADA GLACIERS OF THE CANADIAN ROCKIES By C. SIMON L. OMMANNEY SATELLITE IMAGE ATLAS OF GLACIERS OF THE WORLD Edited by RICHARD S. WILLIAMS, Jr., and JANE G. FERRIGNO U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY PROFESSIONAL PAPER 1386–J–1 The Rocky Mountains of Canada include four distinct ranges from the U.S. border to northern British Columbia: Border, Continental, Hart, and Muskwa Ranges. They cover about 170,000 km2, are about 150 km wide, and have an estimated glacierized area of 38,613 km2. Mount Robson, at 3,954 m, is the highest peak. Glaciers range in size from ice fields, with major outlet glaciers, to glacierets. Small mountain-type glaciers in cirques, niches, and ice aprons are scattered throughout the ranges. Ice-cored moraines and rock glaciers are also common CONTENTS Page Abstract ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- J199 Introduction----------------------------------------------------------------------- 199 FIGURE 1. Mountain ranges of the southern Rocky Mountains------------ 201 2. Mountain ranges of the northern Rocky Mountains ------------ 202 3. Oblique aerial photograph of Mount Assiniboine, Banff National Park, Rocky Mountains----------------------------- 203 4. Sketch map showing glaciers of the Canadian Rocky Mountains -------------------------------------------- 204 5. Photograph of the Victoria Glacier, Rocky Mountains, Alberta, in August 1973 -------------------------------------- 209 TABLE 1. Named glaciers of the Rocky Mountains cited in the chapter
    [Show full text]
  • The Cariboo Alpine Mesonet: Sub-Hourly Hydrometeorological Observations of British Columbia's Cariboo Mountains and Surroundin
    Earth Syst. Sci. Data, 10, 1655–1672, 2018 https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-10-1655-2018 © Author(s) 2018. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. The Cariboo Alpine Mesonet: sub-hourly hydrometeorological observations of British Columbia’s Cariboo Mountains and surrounding area since 2006 Marco A. Hernández-Henríquez1, Aseem R. Sharma2, Mark Taylor1, Hadleigh D. Thompson2, and Stephen J. Déry1 1Environmental Science and Engineering Program, University of Northern British Columbia, 3333 University Way, Prince George, British Columbia, V2N 4Z9, Canada 2Natural Resources and Environmental Studies Program, University of Northern British Columbia, 3333 University Way, Prince George, British Columbia, V2N 4Z9, Canada Correspondence: Stephen J. Déry ([email protected]) Received: 27 March 2018 – Discussion started: 12 April 2018 Revised: 14 August 2018 – Accepted: 23 August 2018 – Published: 11 September 2018 Abstract. This article presents the development of a sub-hourly database of hydrometeorological conditions collected in British Columbia’s (BC’s) Cariboo Mountains and surrounding area extending from 2006 to present. The Cariboo Alpine Mesonet (CAMnet) forms a network of 11 active hydrometeorological stations positioned at strategic locations across mid- to high elevations of the Cariboo Mountains. This mountain region spans 44 150 km2, forming the northern extension of the Columbia Mountains. Deep fjord lakes along with old-growth western redcedar and hemlock forests reside in the lower valleys, montane forests of Engelmann spruce, lodge- pole pine and subalpine fir permeate the mid-elevations, while alpine tundra, glaciers and several large ice fields cover the higher elevations. The automatic weather stations typically measure air and soil temperature, relative humidity, atmospheric pressure, wind speed and direction, rainfall and snow depth at 15 min intervals.
    [Show full text]
  • Rangifer Tarandus Caribou) in BRITISH COLUMBIA
    THE EARLY HISTORY OF WOODLAND CARIBOU (Rangifer tarandus caribou) IN BRITISH COLUMBIA by David J. Spalding Wildlife Bulletin No. B-100 March 2000 THE EARLY HISTORY OF WOODLAND CARIBOU (Rangifer tarandus caribou) IN BRITISH COLUMBIA by David J. Spalding Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks Wildlife Branch Victoria BC Wildlife Bulletin No. B-100 March 2000 “Wildlife Bulletins frequently contain preliminary data, so conclusions based on these may be sub- ject to change. Bulletins receive some review and may be cited in publications. Copies may be obtained, depending upon supply, from the Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks, Wildlife Branch, P.O. Box 9374 Stn Prov Gov, Victoria, BC V8W 9M4.” © Province of British Columbia 2000 Canadian Cataloguing in Publication Data Spalding, D. J. The early history of woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) in British Columbia (Wildlife bulletin ; no. B-100) Includes bibliographical references : p. 60 ISBN 0-7726-4167-6 1. Woodland caribou - British Columbia. 2. Woodland caribou - Habitat - British Columbia. I. British Columbia. Wildlife Branch. II. Title. III. Series: Wildlife bulletin (British Columbia. Wildlife Branch) ; no. B-100 QL737.U55S62 2000 333.95’9658’09711 C00-960085-X Citation: Spalding, D.J. 2000. The Early History of Woodland Caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) in British Columbia. B.C. Minist. Environ., Lands and Parks, Wildl. Branch, Victoria, BC. Wildl. Bull. No. 100. 61pp. ii DISCLAIMER The views expressed herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent those of the B.C. Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks. In cases where a Wildlife Bulletin is also a species’ status report, it may contain a recommended status for the species by the author.
    [Show full text]
  • Geography 15 Overview
    Geography 15 Overview “If some countries have too much history, Canadians continue to gravitate toward we have too much geography,” said former urban areas. From 1996 to 2006, the urban Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie population grew 9%, from 23 to nearly 25 King in a speech to the House of Commons million people. Together, census metropolitan in 1936. Canada’s total area measures areas (CMAs) and census agglomerations 9,984,670 square kilometres, of which contain 80% of Canada’s total population, 9,093,507 are land and 891,163 are although they cover only 4% of the land area. freshwater. Canada’s coastline, which Canada now has 33 CMAs, up from 27 CMAs includes the Arctic coast, is the longest in the in 2001 and 25 CMAs in 1996. world, measuring 243,042 kilometres. Canada stretches 5,500 kilometres from Cape Physical geography Spear, Newfoundland and Labrador, to the Yukon–Alaska border. From Middle Island One of the fundamental aspects of physical in Lake Erie to Cape Columbia on Ellesmere geography is land cover—the observed Island, it measures 4,600 kilometres. The physical and biological cover of the land, southwesternmost point of Canada is at the such as vegetation or man-made features. same latitude as northern California. (See the full-colour map of Canada’s land cover on the inside front cover of this book.) If we indeed have too much geography, most The most pervasive types of land cover are Canadians see relatively little of it in their evergreen needleleaf forest, which covers daily lives.
    [Show full text]
  • The Fraser Valley Milk Producers' Association
    THE FRASER VALLEY MILK PRODUCERS' ASSOCIATION: SUCCESSFUL COOPERATIVE by Morag Elizabeth Maclachlan B.Ed, (sec), The University of British Columbia, 1964 A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS in the Department of History We accept this thesis as conforming to the required standard THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA ••' April , 1972; In presenting this thesis in partial fuIfilment,of . the requirements for an advanced degree at the University of British Columbia, I agree that the Library shall make it freely available for reference and study. I further agree that permission for extensive copying of this thesis for scholarly purposes may be granted by the Head of my Department or by his representatives. It is understood that copying or publication of this thesis for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission. Department of The University of British Columbia Vancouver 8, Canada FRASER VALLEY MILK PRODUCERS' ASSOCIATION SUCCESSFUL COOPERATIVE In 1913 thirty dairy farmers formed the Fraser Valley Milk Producers Association, an organization which began operation in 1917 and became one of the most successful cooperatives in North America. The compact nature of the Fraser Valley was a geographic advantage which laid the basis for the success of the Association. The river itself, the railway and the roads which were built slowly and at great cost, provided transportation which unified the Valley. The insatiable Cariboo markets enabled pioneer farmers to become well established. The completion of the Canadian Pacific Railway opened wider markets which dairymen were able to.take advantage of after the creameries became established.
    [Show full text]
  • Sediment-Associated Contaminant Transport and Storage Dynamics in the Quesnel River from the Mount Polley Mine Disaster
    SEDIMENT-ASSOCIATED CONTAMINANT TRANSPORT AND STORAGE DYNAMICS IN THE QUESNEL RIVER FROM THE MOUNT POLLEY MINE DISASTER by Richelle Sussbauer B.Sc., University of Northern British Columbia, 2011 Dip.WET., Okanagan College, 2013 THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE IN NATURAL RESOURCES AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES (ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE) UNIVERSITY OF NORTHERN BRITISH COLUMBIA March 2017 Richelle Sussbauer, 2017 Abstract ii Abstract In August 2014, the tailings storage facility of the Mount Polley copper-gold mine was breached releasing ~25 million m3 of tailings water and solids into Polley Lake and Hazeltine Creek, which scoured local overburden (1.2 million m3), and deposited these materials in Quesnel Lake. This study examined temporal and spatial movements of sediment-associated elements in Quesnel River, downstream of the lake, between August 2014 and August 2015. Suspended river sediment was collected using active and passive samplers (a continuous-flow centrifuge and time -integrated samplers), while discrete bed sediment was collected using a re-suspension technique. Results indicated elevated trace element levels, especially copper, with significant differences between element concentrations at the upstream site, closer to the breach, compared to downstream sites. Contamination indices and comparison to sediment quality guidelines indicated contamination was present in the river and varied seasonally predominantly driven by Quesnel Lake’s autumnal cooling and overturns.
    [Show full text]
  • A. Canadian Rocky Mountains Ecoregional Team
    CANADIAN ROCKY MOUNTAINS ECOREGIONAL ASSESSMENT Volume One: Report Version 2.0 (May 2004) British Columbia Conservation Data Centre CANADIAN ROCKY MOUNTAINS ECOREGIONAL ASSESSMENT • VOLUME 1 • REPORT i TABLE OF CONTENTS A. CANADIAN ROCKY MOUNTAINS ECOREGIONAL TEAM..................................... vii Canadian Rocky Mountains Ecoregional Assessment Core Team............................................... vii Coordination Team ....................................................................................................................... vii Canadian Rocky Mountains Assessment Contact........................................................................viii B. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS................................................................................................... ix C. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY.................................................................................................... xi Description..................................................................................................................................... xi Land Ownership............................................................................................................................. xi Protected Status.............................................................................................................................. xi Biodiversity Status......................................................................................................................... xi Ecoregional Assessment ..............................................................................................................
    [Show full text]