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Athabasca County No. 12 AB
Canada

Mammal and bird names in the Indian languages of the Lake Athabasca region


Author(s): Hohn, E. O.

Year: 1973

Abstract:
This article talks about the traditional land area of the Athapaskan speaking Natives (Beaver Indians, Slave Indians, Chipewyans, and Eskimos) and the Algonkian speakers (Cree, and Blackfoot) north, south, east and west of the Lake Athabasca area. Hohn briefly discusses the cultural variation between the Chipewyans and the Crees who currently occupy this area. Although not complete, this article provides a list of the mammal and bird species names and meanings, located in the Lake Athabasca area. This list is provided in the English, Cree, and Chipewyan languages. The author also provides a helpful guide to the pronunciation of these words. Hohn interestingly points out some apparent linguistic connections between some species names. The Cree names were provided by Henry Powder, a long-time resident of Camsell Portage, Saskatchewan (originally from Lac la Biche, Alberta); Solomon Cardinal of Fort Chipewyan, Alberta; and Mrs. A. Anderson of Edmonton (originally from the nearby Calahoo Indian Reserve.) The Chipewyan names were obtained in part from Fr. F. Marcel, former chief of the Chipewyan band at Fort Chipewyan; and George Norm, an elderly Chipewyan or Métis who resides in Little Buffalo River on Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories. This lends further authenticity to the study.

Risking rupture: Integral accidents and in/security in Canada's bitumen sands


Author(s): Greaves, W.

Year: 2013

Abstract:
The expansion of unconventional hydrocarbon development in Western Canada is one of the most contentious issues in contemporary Canadian politics. Although widely studied, little attention has been paid to the framing of Alberta's bitumen sands within distinct and incompatible discourses of energy and environmental security. This essay examines these discourses using the tools of securitization analysis, asking the basic questions of what each presents as needing to be secured, from what, and by what means. Presented with two sets of socially constructed in/ security claims related to the bitumen sands and proposed pipeline expansion, the author suggests the social theory of Paul Virilio provides a useful intervention into securitization analysis that allows the material implications of these discourses to be clarified and assessed. Drawing upon Virilio's critical account of technological progress and his theory of accidents, this essay proposes that conventional accounts of "energy security" in the bitumen sands cannot result in meaningful conditions of security because they remain premised upon continued and expanded hydrocarbon consumption in an era of anthropogenic climate change.

Seasonal biology of Anopheles, Culex and Culiseta in central Alberta (Diptera : Culicidae)


Author(s): Hudson, J. E.

Year: 1977

Abstract:
Doctoral thesis. A study of the biology of mosquito species throughout the year, with emphasis on those features that would enable them to overwinter western Encephalitis virus. No role for any species of mosquito studied was found.

Spider communities in boreal mixed-wood forests of Alberta: Succession, species interactions and habitat utilization


Author(s): Buddle, C. M.

Year: 2001

Abstract:
Spiders (Araneae) are important and ubiquitous predators in terrestrial ecosystems, and they are an ideal taxon for assessing the impact of forest harvesting on the biota of boreal forests. I investigated how spider succession differs following wildfire and clear-cutting in a chronosequence study of aspen-dominated stands in north-central Alberta, Canada. Such comparisons support insights into how harvesting may alter natural succession in fire-driven ecosystems. Results showed that spiders recovered rapidly from both disturbances, and by 30 years after disturbance, there was a faunal recovery and general convergence toward pre-disturbance community structure. There were, however, some important differences between the two disturbances in that wildfire stands harboured a more diverse spider fauna and certain species appeared dependent on some of the conditions associated with wildfire. Wolf spiders (Lycosidae) were dominant in most of the study sites in the chronosequence study. Experiments in a mixed-wood forest in central Alberta revealed that two species, Pardosa moesta Banks and P. mackenziana (Keyserling), had nearly identical biennial life-cycles, and young stages of these species have the potential to interact in the leaf-litter. A competition experiment, however, showed that exploitative competition did not govern populations of P. moesta and P. mackenziana , and suggested that mortality factors such as intraguild predation and cannibalism play important roles in their survival. Knowledge from the competition and life-history experiments served to explain patterns in the occurrence of Pardosa species throughout north-central Alberta. The chronosequence study also suggested that fallen logs, or downed woody material (DWM), was an important habitat for spiders. This was tested by trapping spiders directly on the surface of fallen logs and by manipulating the volume of DWM on the forest floor and tracking changes in spider assemblages. Results showed that a diverse spider fauna uses the surface of DWM, and that some species are dependent on the habitat complexity of fallen logs. Manipulating the volume of DWM on the forest floor, however, had few short-term effects on spider assemblages, except that diversity tended to increase when DWM was augmented on the forest floor.

Sulfur compounds in oils from the western Canada tar belt


Year: 1976

Abstract:
Sulfur compounds in the gas oil fractions from two bitumens (Athabasca oil sand and Cold Lake deposit), a heavy oil (Lloydminster) from Cretaceous reservoirs along the western Canada sedimentary basin, and a Cretaceous oil from a deep reservoir that may be mature (Medicine River) are investigated. The gas oil distillates were separated to concentrates of different hydrocarbon types on a liquid adsorption chromatographic column. The aromatic hydrocarbon types with their associated sulfur compounds were resolved by gas chromatographic simulated distillation and then by gas solid chromatography. Some sulfur compounds were further characterized by mass spectrometry. The predominant sulfur compounds in these fractions are alkyl-substituted benzo- and dibenzothiophenes with short side chains which have few dominant isomers.

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