Footage of a man filleting a fish on an ocean-going boat.
Footage of ducks on a lake and a sunset through trees.
Location of filming is unknown.
Footage of a lake shore and a dog, Suzie, retrieving an object from the lake. There is footage of a fish flipping around on the ice and another shot a fish swimming under the lake ice. There are also a recording of a white weasel climbing a tree
It is speculated that location of this film is either Anahim Lake or Fenton Lake.
Footage of a large caribou bull in what is believed to be the Rainbow Mountains.
Footage of Bill Baker performing catch and release fly fishing in possibly the Bella Coola River or the Dean River for cutthroat trout.
Footage of Dr. Triffenhagen putting mill eggs as bait on a hook for fishing. Speculated locations include the Bella Coola River or the Dean River.
Footage of steelhead salmon jumping in river channel. The location is unknown.
Footage of a pack train in the high country, which is likely an upper valley of the mountain foothills. Probable locations of this footage include Holt homestead, Rainbow Mountains or Tweedsmuir Provincial Park.
Data sets associated with the Arocena & Sanborn 1999 regional soil mineralogy study:
- S234FINL.XLS [data report for mineral horizons from MoF Analytical Chemistry Laboratory, June 20 1996]
- S235FINL.XLS [data report for organic horizons from MoF Analytical Chemistry Laboratory, June 20 1996]
- SAMPLIST.XLS [conversion table for sample numbers used in MoF lab data reports]
- Fe Al extractions.xlsx [assembled from lab data report by L. Arocena for oxalate & dithionite extractions; pyrophosphate extraction data from MoF lab]
- MINSTUDY.XLS [consolidated lab data for organic & mineral horizons, except for BaCl2 exchangeable cations]
- MINCEC.XLS [BaCl2 exchangeable cations & Morgan’s extraction for organic & mineral horizons]
- Soilcon_96-016_particle size_scan0178.pdf [particle size analysis data from Soilcon Laboratories; sample numbers correspond to those given in SAMPLIST.XLS; note that the first 12 samples identified as “Plot 1 … Plot 12” were from a different study (0-20 cm mineral soil composites from E.P. 1185)]
File contains a computer print-out of the Aleza Lake Research Forest Management Plan #1 for the years 1992 to 2002, which was prepared by Mike Jull.
File contains the following digital documents:
- Sanborn_Folic Cryosols_SCWG_Jan 20 2023_short.pdf [presentation slides for meeting of Soil Classification Working Group, CSSS]
- Northern Rockies 2012 soil descriptions - DRAFT Feb 20 2013.pdf [compiled site & pedon descriptions, analytical data, with selected profile & site photographs]
- Sanborn - Organic Cryosols - CSSS (2013) poster_small.pdf [poster presented at 2013 CSSS conference]
File contains the following data sets:
- S1292Final.xlsx [chemical analysis data for mineral horizons, Ministry of Forests & Range, Analytical Chemistry Laboratory]
- S1293Final.xlsx [chemical analysis data for organic horizons, Ministry of Forests & Range, Analytical Chemistry Laboratory]
- B299530-R2013-02-18_15-47-21_N001.xls [particle size analysis data for mineral horizons, Maxxam Laboratories]
- B299530-R2013-02-18_15-47-21_R014.pdf [particle size analysis data for mineral horizons, Maxxam Laboratories]
- Northern Rockies 2012 sample list - Maxxam.xls [list of samples submitted to Maxxam Laboratories for particle size analysis; indicates which samples needed carbonate removal pretreatment]
- N Rockies 2012 - master data file.xlsx [working copy of combined chemical and particle size data in report format]
For this Northern Rockies pedological study, Dr. Paul Sanborn conducted field work jointly with researchers from the Ministry of Forests and Agriculture Canada from August 21-24, 2012, at two clusters of sites along the Alaska Highway west of Fort Nelson: near the Tetsa River crossing at km 585, and ~4.5 km west of Toad River at the "Poplars" campsite.
The focus of the study was on soils currently or recently containing permafrost as well as associated soils on nearby sites with warmer microclimates, with a total of 6 pedons described and sampled. One of these, an Organic Cryosol (pedon BC12-08), was documented in a short paper:
Sanborn, P., C. Bulmer, M. Geertsema, and S. Smith. 2022. A proposed Folic subgroup for the Organic Cryosols. Canadian Journal of Soil Science 102: 811–816. https://doi.org/10.1139/cjss-2021-0182
Associated soil microclimate monitoring occurred at this site, and is documented in:
Hasler A., Geertsema M., Foord V., Gruber S., Noetzli J. 2015. The influence of surface characteristics, topography and continentality on mountain permafrost in British Columbia. The Cryosphere 9: 1025–1038. https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-9-1025-2015
Some of the data from both papers was presented as a poster at the Canadian Society of Soil Science annual conference in 2013.
The highlights of the 2022 paper were presented at an online meeting of the Soil Classification Working Group of CSSS on January 20, 2023.
The sequence of site numbers is BC12-08, -09, (-10 was not used), -11, -12, -13, -14, and -15. Note that BC12-13 was described and sampled, but not photographed. An additional pedon designated as BC12-13A was located within ~10 m of BC12-13 on the same terrace, and had what appeared to be a buried fire-reddened layer under a possible buried Ah horizon. This pedon was photographed but not described or sampled.
Item is an original heritage brochure produced by South Fort George Community Association and South Fort George Elementary School entitled "South Fort George: A trip to the past". The brochure includes features on South Fort George schools, pioneer travel, sites and scenes in South Fort George, people and places, and life in early South Fort George. Also includes a South Fort George timeline, reproduced historical images, and a map of South Fort George that includes historical highlights.
Item is a reprint of Jonathan Swainger's 2013 article, "Teen Trouble and Community Identity in Post-Second World War Northern British Columbia".
Item is a photocopied document entitled "In My Own Words: Spoken by I.W. (Bud) Bell 1910-1995" that is an autobiographical memories told by I.W. (Bud) Bell. The memories focus on Bell's time in Hazelton, Kitsegukla, and Manson Creek.
Photograph depicts Okanagan Lake completely frozen over. The winter of 1968-1969 was the last year on record in which Okanagan Lake completely froze over.
Photograph depicts glacial striae in Victoria.
Photograph depicts Okanagan Lake completely frozen over. The winter of 1968-1969 was the last year on record in which Okanagan Lake completely froze over.
Photograph depicts Okanagan Lake completely frozen over. The winter of 1968-1969 was the last year on record in which Okanagan Lake completely froze over.
Photograph depicts Okanagan Lake completely frozen over. The winter of 1968-1969 was the last year on record in which Okanagan Lake completely froze over.
Photograph depicts Okanagan Lake completely frozen over. The winter of 1968-1969 was the last year on record in which Okanagan Lake completely froze over.
Photograph depicts Okanagan Lake completely frozen over. The winter of 1968-1969 was the last year on record in which Okanagan Lake completely froze over.
Photograph depicts Okanagan Lake completely frozen over. The winter of 1968-1969 was the last year on record in which Okanagan Lake completely froze over.
Photograph depicts men at Cabin Creek Camp in Flathead Valley. From left to right, persons depicted are John Jungen, John Wilcox, Terry Lewis, and Jack Hall.