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The Northwest Territories (N.W.T.) were originally made up in 1870 from Rupert’s Land and the North-
Western Territory. The capital, Yellowknife (population 20,000), is called the “diamond capital of North
America.” More than half the population is Aboriginal (Dene, Inuit and Métis). The Mackenzie River, at
4,200 kilometres, is the second-longest river system in North America after the Mississippi and drains an
area of 1.8 million square kilometres.
Northwest Territories
The Northern Territories
The Northwest Territories, Nunavut and Yukon contain one-third of Canada’s land mass but have a
population of only 100,000. There are gold, lead, copper, diamond and zinc mines. Oil and gas deposits
are being developed. The North is often referred to as the “Land of the Midnight Sun” because at the
height of summer, daylight can last up to 24 hours. In winter, the sun disappears and darkness sets in for
three months. The Northern territories have long cold winters and short cool summers. Much of the North
is made up of tundra, the vast rocky Arctic plain. Because of the cold Arctic climate, there are no trees
on the tundra and the soil is permanently frozen. Some continue to earn a living by hunting, fishing and
trapping. Inuit art is sold throughout Canada and around the world.
Thousands of miners came to the Yukon during the Gold Rush of the 1890s, as celebrated in the poetry of
Robert W. Service. Mining remains a significant part of the economy. The White Pass and Yukon Railway
opened from Skagway in neighbouring Alaska to the territorial capital, Whitehorse, in 1900 and provides
a spectacular tourist excursion across precipitous passes and bridges. Yukon holds the record for the
coldest temperature ever recorded in Canada (-63°C).
Yukon
Your Canadian Citizenship
Study Guide
50
Mount Logan, located in
the Yukon, is the highest
mountain in Canada. It
is named in honour of
Sir William Logan, a
world-famous geologist,
born in Montreal in 1798
to Scottish immigrant
parents. Logan founded
and directed the
Geological Survey of
Canada from 1842 to
1869 and is considered
one of Canada’s greatest
scientists