Yellowknife (Northwest Territories) - Geography.
Publié le 03/05/2013
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VII HISTORY
Indigenous nations have lived around Yellowknife Bay for thousands of years.
The historic occupants were the Athapaskan-speaking Dogrib people, hunters of caribou.The Dogrib were displaced briefly in the early 19th century by the Yellowknife band of the Chipewyan nation, who moved into the area to participate in the fur trade.The bay, and eventually the city, were named for the Yellowknife band, whose name is believed to derive from their yellow knife blades hammered out of native copper.
Scottish-born Canadian fur trader and explorer Sir Alexander Mackenzie came into the area in 1789, traveling down the river that now bears his name.
His firm, theNorth West Company, operated a fur-trading post at Fort Providence near the western shore of Great Slave Lake until the 1820s.
The area attracted outside interestagain in the late 1890s when prospectors discovered gold there.
However, the deposits were not extensive enough to spark serious mining activities.
In the 1930s the advent of aircraft that could fly into remote areas, and renewed interest in northern minerals, brought prospectors back to the Mackenzie Valley.
Whena large supply of gold-bearing deposits was found on Yellowknife Bay in 1933, miners headed for it.
The Yellowknife community developed in 1935 around three goldmines—the Con, the Negus, and the Giant.
Mining operations virtually stopped during World War II but picked up again after the war.
Yellowknife was named theterritorial capital in 1967, and its new role as administrative center provided an economic counterbalance to the mining industry.
In 1970 Yellowknife was incorporatedas a city.
In 1991 diamond deposits were discovered near the city, opening new opportunities for economic growth.
Another recent development is the settlement of land claimsof indigenous peoples in the Mackenzie Valley.
Resource development in the area, which was stalled pending the settlement, is expected to pick up and thereby spuradditional mining activity.
Contributed By:Kenneth S.
CoatesMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
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- Yellowknife (Northwest Territories) - geography.
- Northwest Territories - Geography.
- Northwest Territories - Facts and Figures.
- Northwest Territories - Canadian History.
- Uninhabited Territories - geography.