Canada Alaska & the Canadian Arctic
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Akshayuk Pass, Ski Expedition
Akshayuk Pass, Ski Expedition Program Descriptive: Akshayuk Pass, Auyuittuq National Park Majestic towers, carved in bedrock by glaciers, shooting straight for the sun: such scenery is what Auyuittuq National Park has to offer. It is, without a doubt, one of the most awe-inspiring places on Earth. Set in the middle of the Penny Ice Cap, bisected from North to South by the Akshayuk pass, an immense valley opens inland. An expedition surrounded by austere looking, barren plateaus, that will take you to two of the park’s most spectacular lookouts, Thor Peak and Mount Asgard. On your way, you will have an opportunity to see impressive rock formations dating back to the last ice age, ice caps, moraines, boulder fields, and much more. During this ski expedition, your will tread over terrain ranging from arid gravel to frozen river, with sharp peaks and a huge glacier in the backdrop. So many images that will remain with you forever. Following a 3-hour snowmobile ride from Qikiqtarjuaq we arrive at the park’s northern entrance, and then follow 11 days of cross-country skiing and 100 km of breathtaking scenery, to be crossed on skis, boots and crampons over the more difficult sections (especially the river’s ice cascades). Along the way, you will have an opportunity to see impressive rock formations dating back to the last ice age, moraines, boulder fields, with spectacular views of Mount Thor and Mount Asgard. Throughout the expedition, you will be mesmerized by the presence of glaciers, landscapes and mountains each more impressive than the last. -
Auyuittuq, Hiking Expedition
Auyuittuq, Hiking Expedition Program Descriptive & Day-by-day: Auyuittuq National Park Majestic towers, carved in bedrock by glaciers, shooting straight for the sun: such scenery is what Auyuittuq National Park has to offer. It is, without a doubt, one of the most awe-inspiring places on Earth. Set in the middle of the Penny Ice Cap, bisected from North to South by the Akshayuk pass, an immense valley opens inland. After a two-day hike surrounded by severe-looking, barren plateaus, we will set up base camp. From there, you will go on a day hike to one of the most spectacular lookouts of the park, Mount Thor. On your way, you will have an opportunity to see impressive rock formations dating back to the last ice age, moraines, boulder fields, and much more. During this five-day hike, you will tread over terrain ranging from arid gravel to humid, fertile tundra, with sharp peaks and a huge glacier in the backdrop. Memories like these are unlikely to fade away. The hiking trip To hike Auyuittuq Park you will need to be able to walk with a 16 to 20 kg (35-45 lb) back pack for a distance of 8 to 18 km (5 to 12 mi) per day (4 to 8 hours a day). Trail is not technical and do not present an altitude challenge, be ready to have, at moment to cross glacier river (water high to your knees). Days will be spent in the great outdoor while nights will be spent in tent. You should be prepared to live outside for the entire trip and have minimal camping experience Kekerten Island and Pangnirtung After leaving Auyuittuq Park, an Inuit guide will take you on a boat ride to the remarkable Kekerten Island. -
Akshayuk Pass, Hiking Expedition
Akshayuk Pass, Hiking Expedition Program Descriptive: Akshayuk Pass, Auyuittuq National Park Majestic towers, carved in bedrock by glaciers, shooting straight for the sun: such scenery is what Auyuittuq National Park has to offer. It is, without a doubt, one of the most awe-inspiring places on Earth. Set in the middle of the Penny Ice Cap, bisected from North to South by the Akshayuk pass, an immense valley opens inland. A trek surrounded by austere looking, barren plateaus, that will take you to two of the park’s most spectacular lookouts, Thor Peak and Mount Asgard. On your way, you will have an opportunity to see impressive rock formations dating back to the last ice age, moraines, boulder fields, and much more. During this hike, your will tread over terrain ranging from arid gravel to humid, fertile tundra, with sharp peaks and a huge glacier in the backdrop. So many images that will remain with you forever. Following a 3-hour boat ride from Qikiqtarjuaq, making our way through a maze of floating iceberg, we arrive at the park’s northern entrance, then follow, 11 days of hiking, 100 km of breathtaking scenery, to be crossed on foot. Along the way, you will have an opportunity to see impressive rock formations dating back to the last ice age, moraines, boulder fields, with spectacular views of Mount Thor and Mount Asgard. Throughout the trek, you will be mesmerized by the presence of glaciers, landscapes and mountains each more impressive than the last. Our goal, reaching the Southern entrance of the Park, where 30km of boat ride will be separating us from Pangnirtung the closest community. -
Crime and Criminal Justice in Nunavut: an Exploration in Aboriginal Peoples and Criminal Justice Policy
CRIME AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE IN NUNAVUT: AN EXPLORATION IN ABORIGINAL PEOPLES AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE POLICY. Allan Lloyd Patenaude B.A. (Hons.), Simon Fraser University, 1989 M.A. (Criminology), Simon Fraser University, 1990 A DISSERTATION TO BE SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in the School of Criminology O Allan Lloyd Patenaude 1997 SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY August 1997 All rights reserved. This work may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopy or other means, without the permission of the author. APPROVAL Name: Allan Lloyd Patenaude . Degree: Doctor of Philosophy Title of Dissertation: Crime And Criminal Justice In Nunavut: An Exploration In Aboriginal Peoples And Criminal Justice Policy. Examining Committee: Chair: Professor Joan Brockman, LL.M. 1- -- "- - Margaret A. 3ackson, Ph.D., bnior Supervisor School of Crimindogy, Simon Fraser University Are,Ph.D,, Gdsor School of Criminology, Simon Fraser University ,J. Colin Yerbusy, Pti.0. Centre for Distance Ed on Fraser University I - - -cor;$do; ki.0.. -- Simon Fraser University Examiner Date Approved: Auaust 5th. 1997 PARTIAL COPYRIGHT LICENSE I hereby grant to Simon Fraser University the right to lend my thesis, project or extended essay (the title of which is shown below) to users of the Simon Fraser University Library, and to make partial or single copies only for such users or in response to a request from the library of any other university, or other educational institution, on its own behalf or for one of its users. I further agree that permission for multiple copying of this work for scholarly purposes may be granted by me or the Dean of Graduate Studies. -
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. -
2015 Nats MS USGO Round 2
2015 Elementary and Middle School USGO National Championships ROUND TWO 1. This nation covers most of the land controlled by the Kanem Empire in the Middle Ages. In 2003, this country faced mass immigration by refugees fleeing the Janjaweed, a religious militia in its Eastern neighbor’s region of Darfur. Its Southeast is home to the Logone River, which feeds the Chari River, which in turn feeds into a rapidly shrinking namesake body of water. For the point, name this country that lies west of Sudan, south of Libya, and north of the Central African Republic. ANSWER: Republic of Chad (RN) 2. The mayor of this city, Frank Jensen, banned city employees from flying with the airline Ryanair. The 2014 Eurovision Song Contest was hosted by this city in the B&W Hallerne, near the island of Amager. This city is famous for its Tivoli Gardens and is suggested to be the home of the mythical Little Mermaid. This city is mostly situated on the island of Zealand and is connected to Malmo via the Øresund Bridge. For the point, name this largest city and capital of Denmark. ANSWER: Copenhagen (WD) 3. This mountain’s name was switched with nearby Mount Townsend, so that a mountain with this name would remain taller. The native name of this mountain means “Table Top Mountain”, and indigenous peoples would live at its summit during the summer, surviving on Bogong moths. This member of the Great Dividing Range was named by Paul Strzelecki after a mound in Krakow. A Polish general is the namesake of – for the point – what tallest mountain in Australia? ANSWER: Mount Kosciuszko (DS) 4. -
OLD TOWN Heritage Walking Tour of Yellowknife Northwest Territories
OLD TOWN Heritage Walking Tour of Yellowknife Northwest Territories An Introduction to this heritage walking tour: The first city guide for historical walking tours of Yellowknife was published in 1987. This revised guide includes four distinct routes in the Old Town area, covering many points of interest in the original areas of community development around Latham Island, the Rock, and the neighbouring flats. It is easy to link tours together and the entire area can be covered in an easy afternoon’s walk. The City’s roots and pioneer charm rest in the waterfront streets and structures of the Old Town. On the centre page of this guide is a map of the Old Town area. Each consecutively numbered site, street or building in the text is shown on the map. Italicized sub-headings in the text describe the general location or direction of the walking tour route. A symbol indicates the site has a descriptive plaque; a symbol indicates the site is one of the City’s designated Heritage Sites. You will find that the route described in this guide, along with the routes described in the New Town guide, can be taken in pieces or linked together to cover any amount of time one might wish to spend strolling through the heritage of the City. Certain sites included in this guide, and many more in the Old Town guide, are documented in the City of Yellowknife Heritage Committee historical building inventory. It is available at the Yellowknife Public Library, the NWT Archives at the Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre, Yellowknife City Hall, or on the City Hall website (www.yellowknife.ca). -
Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research
Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research 2003–2004 Biennial Report Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research University of Colorado 450 UCB Boulder, Colorado 80309-0450 Tel 303/492-6387 Fax 303/492-6388 www.instaar.colorado.edu RL-1 1560 30th Street Boulder, CO 80303 Mountain Research Station 818 County Road 116 Nederland, Colorado 80466 Tel 303/492-8842 Fax 303/492-8841 (Director: William B. Bowman) www.colorado.edu/mrs/ INSTAAR Council Susan Avery, Vice Chancellor for Research and Dean of the Graduate School Robert Davis, Dean, College of Engineering Kenneth Foote, Chair/Professor, Department of Geography Todd Gleason, Dean, College of Arts and Sciences Mary Kraus, Chair/Professor, Department of Geological Sciences Jeffrey Mitton, Chair/Professor, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology JoAnn Silverstein, Chair/Professor, Department of Civil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering James P. Syvitski, Director/Professor, INSTAAR/Department of Geological Sciences INSTAAR Scientific Advisory Committee Richard Alley, Professor, Department of Geosciences, Pennsylvania State University William Fitzhugh, Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution Hugh French, Professor, Departments of Geography and Earth Sciences, University of Ottawa Peter Groffman, Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Millbrook, NY Steve Hargreaves, CEO, ERIC Companies, Englewood, CO Robert Howarth, Program in Biogeochemistry and Environmental Change, Cornell University Bob Levy, Sun Microsystems, Las Vegas, Nevada Michael S. Loughridge, NESDIS, Boulder, CO W. Berry Lyons, Director, Byrd Polar Research Center, The Ohio State University Richard Peltier, Professor, Department of Geophysics, University of Toronto Michael M. Reddy, U.S. Geological Survey, Denver David Schimel, National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder Susan Solomon, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Boulder Cover Picture Icy Shore.– a painting ment to subtly convey the menace of the 80–90% of an iceburg that lies below the ocean surface Painting by Mark F. -
INTO the ARCTIC: Tour Companion Booklet
INTO THE ARCTIC Cory Trépanier’s Impassioned Vision of Canada’s Far North Over 50 Paintings • 3 Films • 1 Remarkable Experience Produced by David J. Wagner L.L.C. Companion Booklet to the Into The Arctic Prospectus 4 Cory Trépanier’s INTO THE ARCTIC A traveling museum exhibition of Canadian Arctic oil paintings by Cory Trépanier Produced by David J. Wagner L.L.C. Member of the American Alliance of Museums and International Council of Museums 414.221.6878 [email protected] davidjwagnerllc.com Exhibition artwork, video journals, photographs, and more at: www.intothearctic.ca 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction...............................................................................................................5 Glacierside at Embassy of Canada in Washington D.C. ................6 Glacierside: One of Four Pillars of the Collection.............................7 Great Glacier: Centrepiece of the Exhibition .....................................9 Testimonials..............................................................................................................11 Artist Bio................................................................................................................... 12 Artist Statement.....................................................................................................13 On Painting the Arctic.......................................................................................14 Painting With Arctic Peoples.........................................................................15 Artist -
City of Yellowknife Visitor
IL) RA T AM 16 H RA G 10 IN ( 5 3 . M I O TC N H 4 Y EL A L W D R. H 2 IG H Back .T CITY OF A .W RC N WAY NO. 3 H N.W.T HIGH IB Bay 3 AL D S T. 1 YELLOWKNIFE 15 . D R EY Long IL W 4 VISITOR MAP 9 . D . 13 R R 3 Lake E D IN C M ID C A 12 A A H A A 6 R R 9 R G G D N UN CL I UB RD. 8 B RIS TO 2 L C 6 R 11 T. BLACKB ERG D ST. R. 5 . R BRINTNELL D D B AL R N . IS I O ST TO L D Y TI ILI C 4 RR L O. 3 T M E AV Y N O E 3 Yellowknife B E WA IL E . IGH IL CH .T H T A N.W T I 5 IL WEAVER DR. 18 T Bay 3 ORAH A N. E S L ST. Y OT’ MCMILLAN K PIL 1 SI TILI KEMELLI TILI 10 ILI 7 A T . 11YE D 8 .) T O IK R E S T S R V 11 T NE A S R 11 O S U 0 1 . H T 5 N ( I Jackfish R . D E E K 3 D R V L A 13 C . I N A IN L D O 4 K S N I A Lake 1 R FR R Back O . -
Adobe Photoshop
Message from the Chair ................................................................................................................................................ 1 CEO’s Report .................................................................................................................................................................. 2 In Memoriam ................................................................................................................................................................. 3 Vision, Mission and Background .................................................................................................................................... 4 Marketing & Communications ....................................................................................................................................... 5 Introduction ................................................................................................................................................... 5 FAM Tours ..................................................................................................................................................... 5 Trade Shows .................................................................................................................................................. 8 Advertising & Other Events ........................................................................................................................... 9 Recreational Sport Fishing .......................................................................................................................................... -
Yellowknife Heritage Building Project
Yellowknife Heritage Building Project City of Yellowknife Heritage Committee Compiled by Ryan Silke Updated September 2018 by R.S. Yellowknife Heritage Building Project Part A – Yellowknife area McMeekanO Cabin MAP ID: A-1 DESIGNATION: ADDRESS: Fred Henne Territorial Park CURRENT OWNER: GNWT Industry, Tourism and Investment OCCUPANT: None CURRENT USE: None BUILT: 1939 CONSTRUCTION: . Log cabin DESCRIPTIVE HISTORY: This cabin was built by prospectors Jim Turner and Morris Evans in 1939 from logs that were cut and floated down the Yellowknife River, and erected on the east side of Latham Island. This land was unsurveyed in the 1940s-1950s (adjacent to Lot 26, Block 153), but later became Lot 5, Block 202, located near the public boat launch just off Otto Drive (Turner Point). Jock McMeekan acquired the cabin, possibly from George Blyler, and it was from here that he and his wife Mildred (Hall) McMeekan produced The Yellowknife Blade newspaper which began in October 1940. McMeekan lived in Yellowknife and wrote the newspaper sporadically until he left for Uranium City, Saskatchewan in 1953. Bill Louitit was the owner of the cabin from 1965 to the 1980s. Beatrice & Pat Woods were living here in the 1970s. Susan Cross was the owner of the cabin in the early 1990s. Plans were made to redevelop the lot and remove the log cabin, which required significant work to make it livable again. The City of Yellowknife Heritage Committee took the lead to find it a new home, and a call went out to anybody with an interest or a plan for relocating and restoring the old log cabin.