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Lesser Slave Lake

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Lesser Slave Lake AB
Canada

Frank Sound Interview


Author(s): Sound, F.

Year: 1977

Abstract:
19 p. transcript of an interview with Frank Sound, conducted by Rose Saddleback on July 13, 1977. Tape number IH-326, transcript disc 28. This 62-year-old speaks of the history of Lesser Slave Lake Reserves; and gives details of the history of Swan River Reserve.

Frost Hills local integrated resource plan


Year: 1985

Citation:
[Anonymous] (1985).  Frost Hills local integrated resource plan. ENR technical report T/1-13, 44.

Fur trade letters of Willie Traill 1864 - 1893


Author(s): Traill, W. E., & Munro D. K.

Year: 2006

Abstract:
Presents a selection of letters written by William Traill to his mother, sisters, nieces, and nephew while he was in the service of the Hudson's Bay Company. This collection offers a portrait of domestic life in the fur trade of the Northwest between 1864 and 1893 and the heart-breaking challenges of family life in the service of fur trade. Fort Garry, 1864; Fort Ellice, 1864-1867; Touchwood Hills, 1867-1869; Saskatchewan River Posts, 1869-1874; Lac La Biche, 1874-1881; Lesser Slave Lake, 1881-1885; Fort Vermilion, 1886-1889; Fort St. James, 1889-1893; Index.

Genetic population structure of walleye populations in the Athabasca River basin


Author(s): Burke, L.

Year: 2008

Abstract:
This report provides a summary of a field program undertaken to study the population genetic structure of walleye. Samples were collected from Lake Athabasca, a site north of Fort McMurray, McLeod River, Lesser Slave Lake, Calling Lake, and Fawcett Lake.

Ground penetrating data radar (GPR): A new geophysical methodology used to investigate the internal structure of sedimentary deposits (field experiments on lacustrine deltas)


Author(s): Jol, H. M.

Year: 1993

Abstract:
Although in its infancy, ground penetrating radar (GPR) is rapidly emerging as a geophysical technology with many possible applications. To assess whether GPR could become a useful tool to investigate internal sedimentary structures, GPR field experiments were conducted on several modern, Holocene and Pleistocene lacustrine deltas to better understand the internal stratigraphy. A pulseEKKO$\sp{\rm TM}$ IV radar system was used with 25, 50, 100 and 200 MHz frequency antennae and 400 and 1000 V transmitter power levels. For most surveys one metre steps (station spacing) were used to provide detailed horizontal resolution of the sedimentologic structures. The profiles were processed and plotted (wiggle trace format) using pulseEKKO$\sp{\rm TM}$ IV software. Depth of reflections was determined from using the common midpoint (CMP) method. Experiments with different antennae frequencies and transmitter powers showed significant variations in vertical resolution, depth of penetration and continuity of reflections. Radar stratigraphic (facies) analysis of GPR profiles, evolved as a secondary development in this dissertation, provided identification of three deltaic types: (1) fan-foreset, (2) wave, and (3) braid. These deltaic types are in general agreement with existing concepts. Fan-foreset deltas are dominated by steeply dipping (25$\sp\circ$) reflections, sandwiched by surface and basal radar facies which have slightly inclined or horizontal reflections. Wave deltas have low-angle inclined reflections capped by discontinuous, wavy reflections. Braid deltas have distinct, continuous and semi-continuous, wavy reflections, often overlying a basal, horizontally continuous reflection, below which an abrupt signal loss occurs. As well, two post depositional features found in deltaic environments were investigated: (1) a potential failure plane and (2) a peatland. The insights gained from the radar stratigraphic analysis of deltaic environments may be extended to the interpretation of seismic records and ancient deltaic systems. More importantly, this information will provide a better understanding of the internal structure which will aid earth scientists in the interpretation of deltaic sequences from drill cores. GPR was found to be most effective (resolution and depth of penetration) in dry and/or wet (freshwater), quartzose-rich, clean (no clay) sand and gravel deposits. The technique does not work well in sediments with silt, clay, caliche (CaCO$\sb3$, calcrete), or saline ground water which attenuate the electromagnetic signal.

Gull and tern breeding colonies on the north arm of Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories: 1986-2010


Year: 2013

Abstract:
Great Slave Lake in the Northwest Territories is one of the most important areas for inland breeding gulls and terns (larids) in northern Canada. Numerous rocky islands on the North Arm provide breeding habitat for a number of colonially-nesting larid species. This report summarizes data and information on active larid breeding colonies collected between 1986 and 2010 on the portion of the North Arm west of Yellowknife. Most data were collected through ground surveys, with travel by boat, between mid June to early July. Information recorded at each colony included species, numbers of nests, clutch size, presence of chicks, and habitat characteristics (vegetation cover). A series of maps displaying the distribution and density (shown as nests/km2) of larid colonies on the North Arm was created for each species and year of surveys. Within Great Slave Lake, the section of the North Arm west of Yellowknife was of particular importance to Ring-billed Gull, Common Tern, Caspian Tern, and to a lesser extent Herring Gull and Arctic Tern. Great Slave Lake as a whole may support nationally significant numbers (>1% of the national breeding population) of five larid species: Herring Gull (>2,800 adults, 1.7%), Mew Gull (>900 adults, 0.8% - 1.9%), California Gull (>5,000 adults, 2.4% -4.0%), Common Tern (>1,800 adults, 1%), and Caspian Tern (>470 adults, 1.4% - 2.4%).

In the footprints of our ancestors: Exploring the reconnection to my Cree ancestors (âniskôtapânak) and ancestral land in the Lesser Slave Lake area


Author(s): Sinclair, J. R.

Year: 2013

Abstract:
This work reveals the relationship between Indigenous people and land, and then speaks to the place for ancestors and Indigenous knowledge in this relationship. It engages with Indigenous Research Methodology that honours Indigenous ways of knowing and being, drawing on the lived experiences of Indigenous people from the Lesser Slave Lake area and giving meaning and voice to the lives of the people. This study addresses the marginalization of the people, their dispossession of land, and the disconnection to Indigenous language and culture that occurred as a result of oppression, colonization, and subjugation of their traditional territories, knowledge, history and identities. The work examines the relationship that connects Indigenous Cree identity with the sense of belonging that is essential to Indigenous ways of knowing. This work draws on ancestral relationships of the past, reclaiming and validating Indigenous history and descendant identities in significant ways that will impact future generations. This qualitative study draws on mixed methods of Indigenous autoethnography utilizing knowledge of the researcher's family as the foundation of the work, somewhat like a 'case' study, and weaving in narrative, expository and analytical writing. The work addresses the near invisibility of Indigenous presence in historical literature pertaining to the Lesser Slave Lake area, and seeks to create another, deeper, level of understanding of community knowledge and local experiences. Ancestry is explored in a way that brings edification in a community, contextualizing the lived experiences of Indigenous ancestors into contemporary times, and addressing the legacy of state-imposed political identities that continues to impact Indigenous people in Canada today. The significant engagement with genealogical and archival data in the study is supplemented with narratives of Indigenous voices from the community. The effect of this twinning of data brings the ancestors out of the shadows, and creates a bridge of reconnection for them with the 're searcher' and the contemporary 're searched'. This work speaks to the legacy of pain that Indigenous people carry as a result of colonization, oppression, marginalization, and silencing. Further, it speaks to the challenges of accessing archival and genealogical data, of the unreliability of genealogical evidence, and of the need for validation and mobilization of Indigenous knowledge systems in support of the efforts to make visible that essential Indigenous vitality that has been hidden.

Lake bed survey


Year: 1972

Citation:
[Anonymous] (1972).  Lake bed survey. Mimeo map, 2.

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