May Nicholas P 201306 Phd Thesis.Pdf
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Flooding the Border: Development, Politics, and Environmental Controversy in the Canadian-U.S
FLOODING THE BORDER: DEVELOPMENT, POLITICS, AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROVERSY IN THE CANADIAN-U.S. SKAGIT VALLEY by Philip Van Huizen A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in The Faculty of Graduate Studies (History) THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA (Vancouver) June 2013 © Philip Van Huizen, 2013 Abstract This dissertation is a case study of the 1926 to 1984 High Ross Dam Controversy, one of the longest cross-border disputes between Canada and the United States. The controversy can be divided into two parts. The first, which lasted until the early 1960s, revolved around Seattle’s attempts to build the High Ross Dam and flood nearly twenty kilometres into British Columbia’s Skagit River Valley. British Columbia favoured Seattle’s plan but competing priorities repeatedly delayed the province’s agreement. The city was forced to build a lower, 540-foot version of the Ross Dam instead, to the immense frustration of Seattle officials. British Columbia eventually agreed to let Seattle raise the Ross Dam by 122.5 feet in 1967. Following the agreement, however, activists from Vancouver and Seattle, joined later by the Upper Skagit, Sauk-Suiattle, and Swinomish Tribal Communities in Washington, organized a massive environmental protest against the plan, causing a second phase of controversy that lasted into the 1980s. Canadian and U.S. diplomats and politicians finally resolved the dispute with the 1984 Skagit River Treaty. British Columbia agreed to sell Seattle power produced in other areas of the province, which, ironically, required raising a different dam on the Pend d’Oreille River in exchange for not raising the Ross Dam. -
An Acoustic Investigation of Vowel Variation in Gitksan by Kyra Ann Fortier
An Acoustic Investigation of Vowel Variation in Gitksan By Kyra Ann Fortier (Borland-Walker) BA, University of British Columbia, 2016 A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfilment of the Requirement of the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS in the Department of Linguistics © Kyra Ann Fortier (Borland-Walker), 2019 University of Victoria All rights reserved. This thesis may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopy or other means, without the permission of the author. ii An Acoustic Investigation of Vowel Variation Across Dialects of Gitksan By Kyra Ann Fortier (Borland-Walker) BA, University of British Columbia, 2016 Supervisory Committee Dr. Sonya Bird, Supervisor Department of Linguistics, University of Victoria Dr. Alexandra D’Arcy, Departmental Member Department of Linguistics, University of Victoria Dr. Henry Davis, Affiliate Member Department of Linguistics iii Abstract The research question for this thesis is: How does vowel quality vary across Gitksan speakers, and what sociolinguistic factors may be influencing this variation? Answering this question requires both that I show what the variation is, and why it may be that way; I have approached these questions by conducting a study in two parts. First, I conducted a demographic survey and ethnographically-informed qualitative interview with nine Gitksan speakers. Second, I performed an acoustic analysis of vowel variation across these same speakers. The acoustic results lead me to conclude that the low and front vowels show the most variation between speakers. My findings allowed me to add to our understanding of individual variation across speakers and communities. Although further investigation is needed to come to a conclusion about the generalizability of these results, the overarching contribution of my work is to add phonetic detail to previous descriptions of variation between speakers within the Interior Tsimshianic dialect continuum. -
The Achievements of Captain George Vancouver on The
THE ACHIEVEMENTS OF CAPTAIN GEORGE VANCOUVER ON THE BRITISH COLUMBIA COAST. by William J. Roper A Thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS in the Department of HISTORY The University of British Columbia October, 1941 THE ACHIEVEMENTS OF CAPTAIN GEORGE VANCOUVER ON THE BRITISH COLUMBIA COAST TABLE Off CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction Chapter I. Apprenticeship. Page 1 Chapter II. The Nootka Sound Controversy. Page 7 Chapter III. Passage to the Northwest Coast. Page 15 Chapter IV. Survey—Cape Mendocino to Admiralty Inlet. Page 21 Chapter V. Gulf of Georgia—Johnstone Straits^-Nootka. Page 30 Chapter VI. Quadra and Vancouver at Nootka. Page 47 Chapter VII. Columbia River, Monterey, Second Northward Survey, Sandwich Islands. Page 57 Chapter VIII. Third Northern Survey. Page 70 Chapter IX. Return to England. Page 84 Chapter X. Summary of Vancouver's Ac hi evement s. Page 88 Appendix I. Letter of Vancouver to Evan Nepean. ' Page 105 Appendix II. Controversy between Vancouver and Menzies. Page 110 Appendix III. Comments on.Hewett's Notes. Page 113 Appendix IV. Hydrographic Surveys of the Northwest Coast. Page 115 Bibliography- Page I* INTRODUCTION INTRODUCTION I wish to take this opportunity to express my thanks to Dr. W. N. Sage, Head of the Department of History of the University of British Columbia for his helpful suggestions and aid in the preparation of this thesis. CHAPTER I. APPRENTICESHIP THE ACHIEVEMENTS OF CAPTAIN GEORGE VANCOUVER ON THE BRITISH COLUMBIA COAST CHAPTER I. APPRENTICESHIP What were the achievements of Captain Vancouver on the British Columbia coast? How do his achievements compare with those of Captain Cook and the Spanish explorers? Why was an expedition sent to the northwest coast at this time? What qualifications did Vancouver have for the position of commander of the expedition? These and other pertinent questions will receive consideration in this thesis. -
Land Use Plan 2019
KITSELAS FIRST NATION LAND USE PLAN 2019 DRAFT The Land Use Plan is a DRAFT living document and must be reviewed as part of all decision-making processes on Kitselas’ Reserve lands. This is to ensure that any proposed future decisions related to the use of land are consistent with the Plan. Any decisions related to new development or expansion or relocation of existing development must adhere to the Land Use Plan. Examples of projects that would require input from the Land Use Plan include, but may not be limited to: Residential development (homes and subdivisions) Commercial development Industrial development Infrastructure development Community facilities Resource extraction activities (i.e. forestry and mining) DRAFT Preamble his Land Use Plan will be interpreted in accordance with the culture, traditions and customs of Kitselas First Nation (KFN). The preamble for the Kitselas Reserve Lands Management Act (posted Ton the Kitselas First Nation website) provided guidance for the development of the Land Use Plan. The Act sets out the principles and legislative and administrative structures that apply to Kitselas land and by which the Nation exercises authority over this land. The preamble to the Kitselas Reserve Lands Management Act is derived from the Men of M’deek, the oral translation of the Kitselas people as described by Walter Wright. It states: “The Kitselas People have occupied and benefited Wise Men delved deeply to find its cause. At from their home lands since time out of memory last, satisfied they had learned that which they and govern their lives and lands through a had sought for, they said, “The action that lies system of laws and law making based on the at the root of this difficulty is wrong. -
Data Summary Report for Chum Salmon Escapement Surveys in the Nass Area in 2015
Data Summary Report for Chum Salmon Escapement Surveys in the Nass Area in 2015 Prepared by: LGL Limited environmental research associates 9768 Second Street Sidney, BC V8L 3Y8 Prepared for: Pacific Salmon Commission 600 - 1155 Robson Street Vancouver, BC V6E 1B5 and Nisga’a Lisims Government Fisheries & Wildlife Department P.O. Box 228 Gitlaxt’aamiks, BC V0J 1A0 Nisga’a Fisheries Report #15-26 31 December 2016 Data Summary Report for Chum Salmon Escapement Surveys in the Nass Area in 2015 Prepared by: LGL Limited environmental research associates 9768 Second Street Sidney, BC V8L 3Y8 Prepared for: Pacific Salmon Commission 600 - 1155 Robson Street Vancouver, BC V6E 1B5 and Nisga’a Lisims Government Fisheries & Wildlife Department P.O. Box 228 Gitlaxt’aamiks, BC V0J 1A0 Nisga’a Fisheries Report #15-26 31 December 2016 EA3624 DATA SUMMARY REPORT FOR CHUM SALMON ESCAPEMENT SURVEYS IN THE NASS AREA IN 2015 Prepared by: I. A. Beveridge, R. F. Alexander, S. C. Kingshott, C. A. J. Noble, and C. Braam LGL Limited environmental research associates 9768 Second Street Sidney, BC V8L 3Y8 Prepared for: Pacific Salmon Commission #600 - 1155 Robson Street Vancouver, BC V6E 1B5 and Nisga’a Lisims Government Fisheries & Wildlife Department P.O. Box 228 Gitlaxt’aamiks, BC V0J 1A0 Nisga’a Fisheries Report #15-26 31 December 2016 i TABLE OF CONTENTS LIST OF TABLES .................................................................................................................................ii LIST OF FIGURES ...............................................................................................................................ii -
The Archaeology of 1858 in the Fraser Canyon
The Archaeology of 1858 in the Fraser Canyon Brian Pegg* Introduction ritish Columbia was created as a political entity because of the events of 1858, when the entry of large numbers of prospectors during the Fraser River gold rush led to a short but vicious war Bwith the Nlaka’pamux inhabitants of the Fraser Canyon. Due to this large influx of outsiders, most of whom were American, the British Parliament acted to establish the mainland colony of British Columbia on 2 August 1858.1 The cultural landscape of the Fraser Canyon underwent extremely significant changes between 1858 and the end of the nineteenth century. Construction of the Cariboo Wagon Road and the Canadian Pacific Railway, the establishment of non-Indigenous communities at Boston Bar and North Bend, and the creation of the reserve system took place in the Fraser Canyon where, prior to 1858, Nlaka’pamux people held largely undisputed military, economic, legal, and political power. Before 1858, the most significant relationship Nlaka’pamux people had with outsiders was with the Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC), which had forts at Kamloops, Langley, Hope, and Yale.2 Figure 1 shows critical locations for the events of 1858 and immediately afterwards. In 1858, most of the miners were American, with many having a military or paramilitary background, and they quickly entered into hostilities with the Nlaka’pamux. The Fraser Canyon War initially conformed to the pattern of many other “Indian Wars” within the expanding United States (including those in California, from whence many of the Fraser Canyon miners hailed), with miners approaching Indigenous inhabitants * The many individuals who have contributed to this work are too numerous to list. -
MANAGING DISCORD in the AMERICAS Great Britain and the United States 1886-1896
MANAGING DISCORD IN THE AMERICAS Great Britain and the United States 1886-1896 GERER LA DISCORDE DANS LES AMERIQUES La Grande-Bretagne et les Etats-Unis 1886-1896 A Thesis Submitted To the Division of Graduate Studies of the Royal Military College of Canada By Charles Robertson Maier, CD, MA In Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy April 2010 ©This Thesis may be used within the Department of National Defence but copyright for open publication remains the property of the author Library and Archives Bibliotheque et 1*1 Canada Archives Canada Published Heritage Direction du Branch Patrimoine de I'edition 395 Wellington Street 395, rue Wellington Ottawa ON K1A 0N4 OttawaONK1A0N4 Canada Canada Your file Votre reference ISBN: 978-0-494-69195-3 Our file Notre reference ISBN: 978-0-494-69195-3 NOTICE: AVIS: The author has granted a non L'auteur a accorde une licence non exclusive exclusive license allowing Library and permettant a la Bibliotheque et Archives Archives Canada to reproduce, Canada de reproduire, publier, archiver, publish, archive, preserve, conserve, sauvegarder, conserver, transmettre au public communicate to the public by par telecommunication ou par I'lnternet, preter, telecommunication or on the Internet, distribuer et vendre des theses partout dans le loan, distribute and sell theses monde, a des fins commerciales ou autres, sur worldwide, for commercial or non support microforme, papier, electronique et/ou commercial purposes, in microform, autres formats. paper, electronic and/or any other formats. The author retains copyright L'auteur conserve la propriete du droit d'auteur ownership and moral rights in this et des droits moraux qui protege cette these. -
The Pacific Historian, Volume 30, Number 1 (1986)
University of the Pacific Scholarly Commons The aP cific iH storian Western Americana 1986 The aP cific iH storian, Volume 30, Number 1 (1986) Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/pac-historian Recommended Citation "The aP cific iH storian, Volume 30, Number 1 (1986)" (1986). The Pacific isH torian. 116. https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/pac-historian/116 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Western Americana at Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The aP cific Historian by an authorized administrator of Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Native Missionaries of the North Pacific Coast Philip McKay and Others E. Palmer Patterson Indian: A History Since 1500 (1972) and Mis sion on the Nass: The Evangelization of the Nishga (1860-1890) (1982). His current re E. Palmer Patterson is Associate Professor search is on the history of the Nishga Indi of History at the University of Waterloo, ans of British Columbia in contact with Ontario, Canada. Among his works on Europeans during the second half of the Canadian native peoples are The Canadian nineteenth century. White missionaries and their native converts. N WRITING THE HISTORY of nineteenth sion is seen as an example of European or Euro century Christian missions the tendency has American/Euro-Canadian cultural expansion and Ibeen to deal primarily with the European and its techniques of dissemination. However, native Euro-American or Euro-Canadian missionarie·s cultures have not always been destroyed, though and their exploits- as adventure, devotion , sac they have often been drastically altered . -
199503-81.Pdf
1981 ANNUAL REVIEW OF ACTIVITIES Institute of Ocean Sciences ----. �\�� / 1981 ANNUAL REVIEW OF ACTIVITIES Institute of Ocean Sciences PATRICIA BAY, SIDNEY, B.C. ..... Government Gouvernement I ....,.. of Canada du Canada For additional copies or further information, please write to: Department of Fisheries and Oceans Institute of Ocean Sciences P.O. Box 6000 Sidney, British Columbia, Canada VsL 4B2 Contents DEPARTMENT OF FISHERIES AND OCEANS 7 Director-General's Foreword 9 Hydrography 11 Field Hydrography 13 Chart Production and Distribution 16 Tidal and Current Surveys 18 Engineering Services 20 Oceanography 23 Ocean Physics 25 Coastal Zone Oceanography 26 Frozen Sea Research 32 Offshore Oceanography 36 Numerical Modelling 42 Remote Sensing 44 Computing Services 45 Ocean Chemistry 47 Ocean Ecology . 53 Ocean Information 56 Ships 59 Management Services 63 DEPARTMENT OF THE ENVIRONMENT 67 Atmospheric Environment Service 69 Canadian Wildlife Service 71 DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY, MINES AND RESOURCES 73 Earth Physics Branch & Geological Survey of Canada 75 Chief Scientist's Foreword 75 Seismological Service 76 Earth Structure by Seismic Methods 78 Geothermal Studies 79 Gravity 81 Geodynamics 82 Geomagnetism 83 Geological-Geophysical Studies 86 Paleontology 87 Sedimentology 87 APPENDICES I. Contracts Awarded during 1981/82 93 II. Publications 95 III. Permanent Staff, 1981 103 11 [ II : : ( [I Director-General's Foreword One of the tasks of Ocean Science and Surveys Pacific is to respond to problems arising in the development of natural resources that require hydrographic and oceanographic knowledge for their solution. In 1981 OSS Pacific became involved in two major projects of this type both of which will require substantial effort for the next 3 - 4 years. -
Geological and Geochemical Report on the Alice Nickel
GEOLOGICAL AND GEOCHEMICAL REPORT ON THE ALICE NICKEL-COPPER-COBALT PROSPECT Alice Arm Skeena Mining Division British Columbia NTS : 103P/SE 5S035.5’N 129"41.5'W OWNER: ANGEL JADE l4INES LTD. AUTHOR: N.C. CARTER, Ph.D. P.Rng. DATE: DECBHBER 31,1997 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page INTRODUCTION Location and Access Mineral Property History Present Status GEOLOGY AND MINERALIZATION Physical Setting 3 Regional Geological Setting 3 Property Geology and Mineralization 4 1997 PROGRAM 1 CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS a COST STATEMENT 9 REFERENCES 10 AUTHOR'S QUALIFICATIONS 11 APPENDIX I - Analytical Results 12 List of Figures Following Page Figure 1 - Location Frontispiece Figure 2 - Location - ALICE Property 1 Figure 3 - ALICE Property - Mineral Claims 2 Figure 4 - Geological Setting 3 Figure 5 - ALICE Property - Geological Setting 4 Figure Sa- ALICE Property - Soil Geochemistry 5 Figure 5b- ALICE Property - Magnetic Response 6 INTRODUCTION Location and Access The ALICE property is situated on tidewater near the entrance to Alice Arm 60 km south-southeast of Stewart in northwestern British Columbia (Figure 1). Mineral claims comprising the property are about midway between the community of Kitsault and the site of Anyox (Figure 2). The geographic centre of the property is at latitude 55'35.5' North and longitude 129o41.5' West in NTS map-area 103P/5E (Figure 2). Access is by helicopter from Stewart or by boat from the end of road at Kitsault on Alice Arm, some 12 km east of the property. Uineral Property The ALICE property consists of four 2-post mineral claims owned by Angel Jade Mines Ltd.(Figure 3). -
Franz Boas and Tsimshian Mythology Ralph Maud Potlatch at Gitsegukla
n8 BC STUDIES ... I had been thinking about the book is aimed, will be able to critically glyphs all morning after finally being assess its lack of scholarship. This can ferried across" Too bad he didn't take only lead to entrenching preconceptions the time to speak with the Edgars, who about, and ignorance of, First Nations have intimate knowledge of the area in British Columbia. The sad thing is and the tliiy'aa'a of Clo-oose. that, although this result is no doubt Serious students will find little of the furthest thing from Johnson's value in this book, and it is unlikely intention, it will be the legacy of his that the general public, at whom the book. Transmission Difficulties: Franz Boas and Tsimshian Mythology Ralph Maud Burnaby: Talonbooks, 2000.174 pp. Illus. $16.95 paper. Potlatch at Gitsegukla: William Beynon's 1Ç45 Field Notebooks Margaret Anderson and Marjorie Halpin, Editors Vancouver: UBC Press, 2000. 283 pp. Illus., maps. $29.95 paper. REGNA DARNELL University of Western Ontario OTH VOLUMES REVIEWED here respects the integrity of Beynon's parti explore the present utility and cipant-observation documentation, B quality of Tsimshian archival simultaneously reassessing and con- and published materials. There the re textualizing it relative to other extant semblance ends. The scholarly methods work on the Gitksan and closely related and standpoints are diametrically op peoples. Beynon was invited to the pot- posed; a rhetoric of continuity and latches primarily in his chiefly capacity, respect for tradition contrasts sharply although he was also an ethnographer with one of revolutionary discontinuity. -
An Historic Event in the Political Economy of the Tsimshian : Information on the Ownership of the Zimacord District* JAMES ANDREW Mcdonald
An Historic Event in the Political Economy of the Tsimshian : Information on the Ownership of the Zimacord District* JAMES ANDREW McDONALD This paper reconstructs and presents a bit of ethnographic information that is based upon a piece of the oral history of the Tsimshian people,, a society native to what is now northwestern British Columbia. The value of the history lies not only in the events described, but also in the illustra tion it provides of relationships between a set of houses in two neighbour ing villages prior to the Canadian Confederation. In the history can be seen several aspects of the old property relationships under which the Tsimshian lived, as well as an outline of their social organization. Anthropologically understood, property is a socially embedded defini tion of relationships between persons within a society. The property piece itself, not necessarily a material object, is a mediation of these relation ships, a focus of attention for how persons and groups are to relate to one another. Thus, property defines the rights and obligations people and groups have to each other, setting the limits to the use of the property while demanding adherence to the dominant mores of the community, and re-establishing these relationships in the process. Any particular form of property is always stamped by the impression of the society in which it exists and by which it is defined. In the story about the Zimacord District lies the mark of Tsimshian society attempt ing to re-assert proper practices towards territorial resource property, and to justify a particular arrangement of ownership, in this case that of the acquisition of property by one group from another.