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John Sissons, politician and the first judge of the Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories; Donald Morton Stewart, former mayor and speaker of the Northwest Territories Legislature; Les Stroud, filmmaker and survival expert; host of the television program Survivorman
Located along the Yukon River in the sub-arctic region of Northwest Canada, Tr’ondëk-Klondike lies within the homeland of the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in First Nation. It contains archaeological and historic sources that reflect Indigenous people’s adaptation to unprecedented changes caused by the Klondike Gold Rush at the end of the 19th century.
The Northwest Territories [b] is a federal territory of Canada.At a land area of approximately 1,127,711.92 km 2 (435,412.01 sq mi) and a 2021 census population of 41,070, it is the second-largest and the most populous of the three territories in Northern Canada. [3]
Name [3] Former name/date of change [3] Translation [3] Governance Municipality [4] Administrative region Census division Population 2016 [2] % change from 2011 Location Aklavik
The Pacific Cordillera, also known as the Western Cordillera or simply The Cordillera, is a top-level physiographic region of Canada, referring mainly to the extensive cordillera system in Western and Northwestern Canada that constitutes the northern part of the North American Cordillera.
This category is for people who were significantly residents of the Northwest Territories, as defined at the time, from 1870 until the present. In earlier periods all of Alberta and Manitoba and Nunavut were in the Northwest Territories, so people who lived in those areas during those times who made significant contributions or it constitutes a ...
Region Death date Death place Region Notes Eva Aariak [1] [2] 10 January 1955: Arctic Bay: NU: politician, second Premier of Nunavut: Acoutsina [3] 1697: Labrador: NL: Labrador: NL: interpreter Willie Adams [4] 22 June 1934: Fort Chimo: QC: politician who was a member of the Senate of Canada: Johnny Ned Adams [5] [6] 1960: Fort Chimo: QC
Northwestern Ontario is the province's most sparsely populated region: 54% of the region's entire population lives in the Thunder Bay census metropolitan area alone. Aside from Thunder Bay, Kenora is the only other municipality in the entire region with a population greater than 10,000.