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The Yukon Territory in Canada's northwest covers 483 450 km2. The
perimeters of this mountainous territory form a rough triangle
bordered on the south by British Columbia, on the west by the U.S.
state of Alaska and on the east by the Northwest Territories. The
northern tip of the triangle meets
the chilly waters of the Beaufort
Sea. Mount Logan, Canada's highest peak at 6 050 metres, is located in
southwestern Yukon.
The Yukon can be divided into two broad geographical regions: taiga
and tundra. Taiga is the boreal forest belt that circles the world in
the subarctic zone, including most of the Yukon. Tundra is the vast,
rocky plain in the Arctic regions, where the extreme climate has
stunted vegetation.
The Yukon has a subarctic climate. The high altitude of much of the
territory and the semi-arid climate provide relatively warm summers
with temperatures frequently reaching 25°C or more during the long
summer days. In winter the temperature ranges between plus 4 and minus
50°C in the south and slightly colder farther north.
Above the Arctic Circle (latitude 66° north), the Yukon is known as
"the land of the midnight sun" because for three months in
summer, sunlight is almost continuous. In winter, however, darkness
sets in, and the light of day is not seen for a quarter of the year.
The History
The name Yukon was first used in 1846 by the Hudson's Bay Company
trader, John Bell. He called it "Yucon," derived from the
Loucheux word "Yuchoo," meaning the greatest river. The
Yukon River is the fifth-longest in North America.
The Yukon was the first area in Canada to be settled by people.
Anthropologists believe the ancestors of today's Aboriginal peoples
may have inhabited the Yukon 10 000 to 25 000 years ago when they
migrated from Asia across a Bering Sea land bridge.
The first modern European visitors were Russian explorers who
travelled along the coast in the 18th century and traded with the
area's Aboriginal peoples. Sir John Franklin anchored off the Yukon's
Arctic coastline in 1825, and the Hudson's Bay Company moved into the
interior in the 1840s.
U.S. traders arrived after the 1867 Russian sale of Alaska to the
United States. With the discovery of gold near Dawson City in 1896,
the Klondike became one of the most populous regions in northwestern
Canada. The sudden increase in population during the Klondike gold
rush prompted the federal government to give the Yukon more control
over its affairs. In 1898, the Yukon Territory was officially
established to ensure Canadian jurisdiction; the Yukon Act provided
for a commissioner and an elected legislative assembly.
Some 40 years later, during the Second World War, the United States
built the Alaska Highway, creating a new overland transportation
route. In 1979, the Canadian government opened the Dempster Highway,
Canada's first all-weather road to cross the Arctic Circle.
As a territory, the Yukon does not have full provincial status,
although it achieved a style of government similar to that of the
provinces in 1979. The Canadian government retains administrative
control over water, land and forestry and the development of all
non-renewable resources (i.e. minerals, oil and gas).
The 1970s saw the emergence of the Yukon land claims negotiations. In
1993, the Council for Yukon Indians, the Government of Canada and the
Yukon Territorial Government signed an Umbrella Final Agreement that
sets out the terms for final land claim settlements in the Territory.
Final land claim agreements were also reached with the Vuntut Gwich'in
First Nation, the Champagne and Aishihik First Nation, the Teslin
Tlingit Council and the First Nation of Nacho Nyak Dun. These
agreements contribute to certainty of land title, and benefits include
cash, land and participation on wildlife and other management boards.
In addition to their land claim settlements, the four First Nations
also negotiated self-government agreements that give them more control
over land use on settlement lands and greater authority in areas such
as language, health care, social services and education.
The People
The Yukon's vast interior forests were occupied by the Athapaskans,
whose cultural and linguistic traditions go back more than 1 000
years. Today, there are six distinct groups of Athapaskan Aboriginal
peoples: Kutchin, Han, Tutchone, Inland Tlingit, Kaska and Tagish.
At present, approximately 30 700 people live in the Yukon; 21 percent
of the population is Aboriginal. Over 70 percent of the population
lives in Whitehorse, Yukon's capital city.
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