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         Yukon Geography:     more books (48)
  1. Wolf Lake (Yukon)
  2. The Yukon River (Rivers in World History) by Tim McNeese, 2005-05
  3. Yukon River: An Adventure to the Gold Fields of the Klondike by Peter Lourie, 1992-09
  4. Yukon-Charley Rivers National Preserve
  5. Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta
  6. Yukon Flats
  7. Yukon, Florida
  8. Yukon-Tanana Terrane
  9. Snag, Canada: Yukon Roads, Miscellaneous, Alaska Highway, Beaver Creek, Yukon
  10. Yukon Standard Time Zone
  11. Yukon (Electoral District)
  12. Yukon, Oklahoma
  13. White Pass: Mountain Pass, Skagway, Alaska, Skagway Historic District and White Pass, Yukon River, Atlin District, William Moore
  14. Yukon River

21. Sociology - Category:Geography Of Canada
Prince Edward Island geography; Q. Quebec geography; R. Rivers of Canada; S. Saskatchewan geography; V. Volcanoes of Canada; W. Waterfalls of Canada; Y. Yukon geography
http://aboutsociology.com/sociology/Category:Geography_of_Canada
Categories Canada Geography by country Geography of North America
Category:Geography of Canada
See Geography of Canada for an overall description. Reserve this category for Canadian geographical features that are national or international in character, or of international interest, or involve more than one province or territory e.g. Great Lakes, Niagara Falls, Rocky Mountains. Other geographical features should be filed in the appropriate provincial subcategory. Articles that relate to political division of Canada should be filed at Category:Political geography of Canada
Subcategories
There are 29 subcategories to this category.
  • Alberta geography
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    Articles in category "Geography of Canada"
    There are 33 articles in this category.

    22. Yukon Territory: Geography And Climate — FactMonster.com
    Encyclopedia — Yukon Territory Geography and Climate. The triangleshaped Yukon territory is bordered on the N by the Beaufort Sea of the Arctic Ocean, on the E by the Northwest
    http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/world/A0862053.html
    • Home U.S. People Word Wise ... Homework Center Fact Monster Favorites Reference Desk
      • Atlas Almanacs Dictionary Encyclopedia ... Yukon Territory
        Geography and Climate
        The triangle-shaped Yukon territory is bordered on the N by the Beaufort Sea of the Arctic Ocean, on the E by the Northwest Territories, on the S by British Columbia and Alaska, and on the W by Alaska. The highest point in the Yukon is Mt. Logan, 19,551 ft (5,959 m) high, part of the Coast Ranges in the southwest. Although most of the territory is a watershed for the Yukon River and its tributaries, the northern and southeastern regions drain east into the Mackenzie River system. Immediately south of the desolate arctic coast the country is uninhabited and generally unknown. The other parts of the territory have great natural beauty, with snow-fed lakes backed by perpetually white-capped mountains and forests and streams abounding with wildlife. Kluane National Park (est. 1972) is in the St. Elias Mts. Winters are long and cold, with low humidity. During the short summers the longer day and surprisingly warm sun bring a profusion of wildflowers and enable the hardier grains and vegetables to mature. The few settlements are situated on the riverbanks. The capital and largest town is

    23. Nelson Education - Elementary Social Studies - InfoCanada
    Nelson Education School Elementary Social Studies InfoCanada Teacher Centre Yukon Geography Yukon Geography
    http://www.nelson.com/nelson/school/elementary/socialstudies/infocanada/yukon/te

    About Us
    Contact Us Order Information Site Map ... Careers
    InfoCanada Student Centre Teacher Centre Parent Centre Product Information ... Yukon
    Yukon: Geography
    Web Links
    These Web Sites will provide you with background information.
    Answer Key
    Click on the link below for an answer key to the activity in the Student Centre.
    Flora and Fauna Challenge Quiz
    Web Links
    Canadian Wildlife Service Students can easily access information about many of the birds and animals of Yukon on this Web site. They can start by investigating the wildlife listed on page 8 of InfoCanada Yukon. Information includes information about physical characteristics, habitat, reproduction, adaptation to the Arctic, migration, and economic value. Yukon at a Glance This Web site is packed full of facts about Yukon, from territorial emblems, to history, to government and culture, making it an excellent one-stop site. The reading level is appropriate for grades 4, 5, and 6 students. BACK TO TOP OF PAGE
    Answer Key Flora and Fauna Challenge Quiz Click here to download the answers to the quiz.

    24. Yukon Travel Guide, Canada | Travelgrove.com
    Yukon – Geography. This low populated province abounds in lakes and rivers, mostly glacierfed with ice cold waters, mountains covered with perennial snows and abundant coniferous
    http://www.travelgrove.com/travel-guides/Canada/Yukon-Travel-Guide-YT.html
    flight
    hotel car vacation ... Politics
    Yukon Travel Guide
    Travel Guides North America Canada Yukon Travel Guide
    Yukon, Canada
    Yukon is the home of glaciers, frosty mountains, clear water lakes and rivers and many other natural beauties waiting to be discovered.
    Yukon – Geography
    This low populated province abounds in lakes and rivers, mostly glacier-fed with ice cold waters, mountains covered with perennial snows and abundant coniferous forests. Due to its location near the Arctic Ocean the province has an arctic and sub arctic climate with low precipitations, very cold winters and warm summers. The highest point is in Mount Logan (5959m) also the highest peak in the entire country, and the lowest is on the shores of the Arctic Ocean. The country has several major rivers among which the most important is Yukon River , the river that also gave the name of the province. Other important rivers are Mackenzie River and Peel River. A significant number of lakes are also present here, the major ones being Teslin Lake, Atlin Lake and Tagish Lake. The province has an island in the Arctic Ocean called Herschel Island . The island is covered with tundra vegetation and is not permanently dwelled; the Inuvialuit people still use it from time to time for fishing or hunting.

    25. Follow The Gold Rush To Alaska And The Yukon
    Driving in our specially equipped, satellite linked expedition vehicle our team explored the natural environment and cultures of the far north for five weeks
    http://www.questconnect.org/ak_home.htm
    Follow the Gold Rush to Alaska
    and The Yukon
    Driving in our specially equipped, satellite linked expedition vehicle our team explored the natural environment and cultures of the far north for five weeks beginning on May 6, 2002. View the tremendous diversity of animal and bird life, explore the abandoned ghost towns left behind by the gold miners after the lure of riches panned out, learn about the culture and visit the traditional homelands of the native people who have made this region their home since crossing the Bering land bridge thousands of years ago. Explore the National Parks and the UNESCO World Heritage Sites that preserve the beauty of the region. Follow the links below to start your own expedition. Far North Journal
    Photographs

    Alaska

    Yukon
    ...
    Lesson Plans

    Special Interest
    Environment vs. Oil

    Arctic National Wildlife Refuge

    Check out the Route Maps

    Send us an Email
    ... View our Equipment Checklist Enter your search terms Web www.QuestConnect.org

    26. About Yukon Territory | Yukon Cabins
    Yukon Geography. The very sparsely populated territory abounds with natural scenic beauty, with snowmelt lakes and perennial whitecapped mountains.
    http://yukoncabins.com/about-yukonterritory/
    Log in
    Stats results of about for About Yukon Territory seconds)
    Other Cabins
    About Yukon Territory
    Whitehorse
    Whitehorse is a Canadian city, the territorial capital of the Yukon. Its population is 23,205 (Yukon Bureau of Statistics Dec 2004). Whitehorse is at kilometre 1489 of the Alaska Highway and is the terminus of the White Pass and Yukon Route Railway from Skagway, Alaska. At the head of navigation on the Yukon River, the city was an important supply and stage center during the Klondike Gold Rush. It has been the territorial capital since 1952, when the seat was moved from Dawson City after the construction of the Klondike Highway. The city gets its name from the Whitehorse rapids, which were said to look like the mane of a white horse. The rapids have disappeared under Schwatka Lake behind a hydroelectric dam, which was completed in 1957. Nowadays Whitehorse is a government town, with excellent facilities for visitors and locals to enjoy. It is the home of the main campus of Yukon College. A $45 million (CAN) Multiplex centre is being built for the Canada Winter Games in 2007. Whitehorse also previously hosted the 1972, 1980, 1986, 1992 and 2000 Arctic Winter Games. Yukon Geography The very sparsely populated territory abounds with natural scenic beauty, with snowmelt lakes and perennial whitecapped mountains. Although the climate is arctic and subarctic and very dry, with long cold winters, the long sunshine hours in short summer allow hardy crops and vegetables, along with a profusion of flowers and fruit to blossom.

    27. Yukon - Education Resource - StudySphere
    Yukon Geography Votes0 Find the Yukon Territory Yukon, the land of the Midnight Sun, is Canada's northwestern territory. North of British Columbia, east of the State of Alaska, and
    http://www.studysphere.com/education/Canada-Yukon-2629.html

    28. HowStuffWorks "Geography Of The Yukon Territory"
    The geography of the Yukon Territory adds to the beauty and mystique of Canada. Learn more about the geography of the Yukon Territory at HowStuffWorks.
    http://geography.howstuffworks.com/canada/geography-of-the-yukon-territory.htm
    HSW.sm.loadPageInfo(448023); OAS_AD('TopBanner'); HowStuffWorks
    Search HowStuffWorks and the web
    Geography of the Yukon Territory
    • Print Cite Feedback Cite This! Close Please copy/paste the following text to properly cite this HowStuffWorks article:
      Canada: The Klondike Gold Rush Yukon is a territory that lies in northwest Canada. Yukon Territory, a territory of Canada in the extreme northwest. The Yukon is bordered by the Northwest Territories, British Columbia, Alaska, and the Arctic Ocean. The territory's area is 186,661 square miles (483,450 km 2), about one-third that of Alaska. Landforms in the Yukon are mainly plateaus bordered—and, in places—crossed by mountains. The highest range is the glacier-covered St. Elias Mountains, in the southwest. Here, Mount Logan, the highest peak in Canada, rises 19,524 feet (5,951 m) above sea level. The Yukon and Peel rivers drain virtually all the territory. In the far north, tundra stretches nearly 100 miles (160 km) southward from the Arctic Ocean. Winters in the Yukon are generally long and bitterly cold; summers, short and cool. Yukon's provincial flower is the fireweed.

    29. SEND North - Geography » SEND International Missions
    Alaska and Canada may conjure up images of the If you were asked to imagine what the Far North looks like, what would you picture?
    http://www.send.org/alaska-yukon-geography/

    30. Biocrawler.com - Business Search Portal
    Welcome to our business searchportal. We offer you a database with more than thousand biotechnological related corporations
    http://www.biocrawler.com/biocorp/
    HOME DIRECTORY ABOUT
    Index of biotechnological industries
    home
    search
    alphabetical index
    submit your company Welcome to our business search-portal.
    We offer you a database with more than thousand biotechnological related corporations. You can use the alphabetical index , the full-text search or the keywords to find the business opportunity you need. Bacteria Membrane Primer Biofilters ... Polymeres The search-function provides the following expressions:
    • biology gen : will find all entries containing the words "biology" or "gen". +biology +gen : will find all entries that contain both words. +biology -gen : will search entries containing "biology" but not "gen". "biology gen" : find only entries which contain exactly the expression
      "biology gen".

    31. Science Fair Projects - Category:Yukon
    Aboriginal peoples in the Canadian Arctic; C. Yukon communities; G. Yukon geography; P. People from Yukon; Yukon political parties; P cont. Yukon politicians; T
    http://www.all-science-fair-projects.com/science_fair_projects_encyclopedia/Cate
    All Science Fair Projects
    Science Fair Project Encyclopedia for Schools!
    Search Browse Forum Coach ... Dictionary
    Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
    For information on any area of science that interests you,
    enter a keyword (eg. scientific method, molecule, cloud, carbohydrate etc.).
    Or else, you can start by choosing any of the categories below. Science Fair Project Encyclopedia Contents Page Categories Canadian provinces and territories
    Category:Yukon
    Yukon is a territory of Canada
    Subcategories
    There are 7 subcategories to this category.
  • Aboriginal peoples in the Canadian Arctic
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    Articles in category "Yukon"
    There are 13 articles in this category.
  • Coat of Arms of Yukon
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    32. Call Of The Wild Webquest Building Background Knowledge
    Who, what, when, why, where and/or how Topic options Dog Sledding Wolves Yukon Gold Rush Women in the Yukon Postal Service in the Yukon Charles Darwin Jack London Yukon Geography, Weather
    http://www.tc.umn.edu/~rbeach/teachingmedia/student_units/module2/call_of_the_wi

    33. Chemistry - Dalton Trail
    The Dalton Trail is a trail that runs between the Pacific Ocean at Pyramid Harbor Alaska geography Yukon geography
    http://www.chemistrydaily.com/chemistry/Dalton_Trail
    Periodic Table standard table large table Chemical Elements ... Yukon geography
    Dalton Trail
    The Dalton Trail is a trail that runs between the Pacific Ocean at Pyramid Harbor, west of Haines, Alaska in the United States and Fort Selkirk , in the Yukon Territory of Canada . It is 396 km (246 miles) long. The Dalton Trail should not be confused with the James Dalton Highway , a highway built in the late 1900s that leads to the North Slope of Alaska. Originally, the Chilkat group of Tlingit controlled the trail, which they used for trade with the Athabascan people of the interior. They called the trail "grease trail" after the eulachon oil (extracted from the tiny candlefish ) that was the most important item of trade on the Chilkoot side. Each Tlingit chief had an exclusive Athabascan trading partner. Tlingits took eulachon oil and returned with furs, hides and copper nuggets gathered by the Athabascans. Trading parties often lasted a month or more and often consisted of as many as 100 men, each of whom would carry a 160 kg (100 pound) load. Upon the arrival of Europeans, the Chilkat acted as middlemen between the traders and Athabascans and became quite wealthy.

    34. Yukon Soils And Geography - Energy, Mines, And Resources
    varying from sporadic discontinuous in southern agriculture areas and increasing to extensive discontinuous at the northern extreme of agriculture activity in the Yukon. Geography
    http://www.emr.gov.yk.ca/agriculture/soils_geography.html
    Search: Energy Mines and Resources All Government Sites
    Energy, Mines, and Resources
    Agriculture
    Yukon Soils and Geography
    Soils Yukon soils are generally deficient in nitrogen and phosphorus. Potassium and sulphur abundance is often dependent on local geology and is difficult to predict. Since 1984 more than half of the soils tested by the Yukon Agriculture Branch have been deficient in potassium. The most common micro-nutrient deficiencies are boron and magnesium. Soils throughout the Yukon are low in organic matter, and salinity has been identified as a problem in some localized areas. Permafrost is found throughout the Yukon varying from sporadic discontinuous in southern agriculture areas and increasing to extensive discontinuous at the northern extreme of agriculture activity in the Yukon. Geography The Yukon is part of the Canadian cordilleran region characterized by mountainous terrain and the presence of glaciers and icefields in some areas. Agriculture is limited to the major river valleys including the Yukon, Takhini, Pelly, Stewart and Liard. For the most part, agricultural activity is located on river sediments. In the Takhini and Dezadeash valleys typical agricultural soils are formed on silts and clays deposited in glacial Lake Champagne.

    35. Institute Of Health Economics - Demographic Statistics
    Annotation Website contains population reports, projection, life expectancy and other population related topics.
    http://www.ihe.ca/publications/health-db/geo/506/

    36. Yukon College: TOUR 150: Introduction To Tourism
    The course includes overviews of the social, cultural and economic development of the Yukon and Yukon geography, demography and heritage, with particular focus on First Nation's
    http://www.yukoncollege.yk.ca/courses/info/tour150

    37. Institute Of Health Economics - Social Statistics
    Annotation These statistics are the result of surveys or studies that were only done once. Many are reviews of individual government program areas.
    http://www.ihe.ca/publications/health-db/geo/507/

    38. Basin, Wyoming Tourism - Travel Guide Basin, Wyoming - Trip Planning
    She is best remembered for penning the historical novel Wild Horses and Gold From Wyoming to the Yukon. Geography Roughly 100 miles wide, the Bighorn Basin is a semiarid
    http://www.triptrivia.com/WY/Basin
    N/A Basin Basin
    Basin
    Basin Name
    This town took its name from the Bighorn Basin, a natural flatland surrounded by four mountain ranges, the Owl Creek, Absaroka, Bighorn, and Bridger.
    Historical Significance of Basin
    Blazed across the Bighorn Basin in 1864 by mountain man Jim Bridger, the Bridger Trail connected southern Montana to the Oregon Trail, providing an alternative to the perilous Bozeman Trail.
    Basin was one of the first towns in the northwestern U.S. to consume natural gas for lighting and heating.
    Prominent People in Basin
    Author Elizabeth Page made her home in Basin in the 1930s. She is best remembered for penning the historical novel Wild Horses and Gold: From Wyoming to the Yukon.
    Geography
    Roughly 100 miles wide, the Bighorn Basin is a semi-arid plateau favorable to the production of sugar beets.
    Basin, Wyoming Tourism - Travel Guide Basin, Wyoming - Trip Planning Contact Us Travel Guide Books Advertisers Site Map ... Home
    All rights reserved.

    39. The Ultimate Klondike - American History Information Guide And Reference
    The Klondike is a region of the Yukon Territory in northwest Canada, just east of Yukon geography
    http://www.historymania.com/american_history/Klondike

    40. Resources - Background Information
    Yukon Geography, Climate, and Soil http//www.emr.gov.yk.ca/agriculture/geography.html. Please note many of the resources under Gold Rush include information about the weather
    http://udleditions.cast.org/call_of_the_wild/res_background.html
    Resources
    Background Information
    Gold Rush Dog Sledding Weather Conditions Dog Breeds ... Call of the Wild Video Clips
    Gold Rush
    "PBS American Experience: Gold Fever" http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/gold/
    • Materials for teachers and students to accompany PBS's American Experience on the Gold Rush

    "As Precious As Gold" http://www.postalmuseum.si.edu/gold/
    • This website documents the National Postal Museum's exhibition on the Klondike/Alaskan Gold Rush

    "Klondike Gold Rush: The Perilous Journey North" http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcoll/exhibits/klondike/
    • Part of the University of Washington's Library's Online Exhibit Extensive information on the Klondike Gold Rush

    "The Klondike Gold Rush" http://library.thinkquest.org/5181/
    • Gold Rush Facts Trails and Maps Supply Lists

    "Images from the Yukon" http://www.tc.gov.yk.ca/digitization/public/index.php
    "Children of the Gold Rush" http://www.clairerudolfmurphy.com/content/blogcategory/19/17/
    • Website of Clair Rudolf Murphy, author of Children of the Gold Rush Provides an excerpt from her book as well as an interview with the author
    "Klondike Gold Rush Centennial" http://www.kokogiak.com/klon/

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