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Northern Lights Viewing Northwest Territories
The lights have been around since the earth formed its atmosphere and the times of dinosaurs and early man. But they are only viewable beneath the Auroral Oval, a continuous oval-zone of energy-charged particles that encircle the magnetic North Pole....read more
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National Parks Northwest Territories
National Parks Overview Tuktuk National Park
Nahanni National Park Wood Buffalo National Park
Aulavik National Park A Brief History NWT
Feature National Park Northwest Territories
Nahanni National Park Reserve protects a portion of the Mackenzie Mountains Natural Region offering the adventurous visitor a wilderness experience. A key feature of the park is the Naha Dehé. Four great canyons line this spectacular whitewater river...read more
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The Great Canadian Adventure Company
The Great Canadian Adventure Company provides the ability to completely plan an unforgettable wilderness adventure vacation to your specifications anywhere throughout Canada. From sea kayaking, flyfishing and horseback pack trips in the summer, to dogsledding, snowmobiling and downhill skiing in the winter, we can make your adventure dream a reality. Call our office today, toll free in North
America at: 1 888 285 1676 or contact us @info@adventures.com . To browse our entire catalog visit adventures.com.
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HISTORY IN BRIEF
 The present-day territory was created in 1870, when the Hudson's Bay Company transferred Rupert's Land and North-Western Territory to the government of Canada. This immense region comprised all of modern Canada except British Columbia, the coast of the Great Lakes, the Saint Lawrence River valley and the southern third of Quebec, the Maritimes, Newfoundland, and the Labrador coast. It also excluded the Arctic Islands except the southern half of Baffin Island; these remained under direct British rule until 1880.
1771  *  1789  *  1810  *  1821  *  1861  *  1867  *  1881  *  1885  *  1898
1912  *  1913  *  1921  *  1925  *  1929  *  1930  *  1931  *  1934
1943  *  1946  *  1967  *  1979  *  1984  *  1994  *  1998
1999  *  2002  *  2004   *   2007   *   2008   *   2009   *   2011
 In one form or another, the name "Northwest Territories" has been around for centuries. In the early fur trade era of the 1600s, the Hudson's Bay Company was given an exclusive British charter in Rupert's Land - the vast chunk of not-yet-born Canada whose waters drain into Hudson Bay. Rival traders struggled for a foothold north and west of Lake Superior, in a measureless hinterland that came to be called "The North-Western Territory."
1771
 Samuel Hearne reached the mouth of the Coppermine River in the company of the Chipewyan Chief Matonabbee.  
1789
 Alexander Mackenzie travelled down Deh Cho, the great river, to reach the Arctic Ocean. He noticed oil seepages near the present-day town of Norman Wells.    
1810
 A Hudson's Bay Company post was established at Tulit'a (Fort Norman).  
1821
 The Yellowknives Dene Chief Akaitcho rescued starving survi-
vors of an expedition to the Arctic coast led by Lt. John Franklin of the Royal Navy. Franklin returned in 1825-27, and survived a more successful journey to the coast, wintering at Fort Franklin on Great Bear Lake. In 1845, however, Franklin's three ships and 129 men disappeared into the frozen Arctic forever.  
1861
 Fr. Emile Petitot began his famous murals on the interior walls of the Mission Church at Fort Good Hope.  
1867
 After Confederation, Rupert's Land and The North-Western Territory were both ceded to Canada, becoming "The North-West Territories". Today's Nunavut, Yukon and parts of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec and Labrador were all included in the deal.  
1881
 The Arctic Islands were added to the NWT, but Manitoba's boundaries were extended north.  
1885
 Many French-Cree Métis left Manitoba after the Riel uprising to create new lives in the NWT.  
1898
 The gold-rich Yukon broke off from the NWT to become a separate territory, and Quebec expanded northward. Other provinces followed suit over the years, swallowing up parts of the NWT as they did so.  
1912
 The North West Mounted Police establish a detachment at Herschel Island, with the purpose of "showing the Canadian Flag" in the Western Arctic.  
1913
 Vilhjalmur Stefansson and Diamond Jenness began ethnological studies of the Western Arctic Inuit.  
1921
 Imperial Oil attempted to send the first-ever planes to fly NWT skies to Norman Wells. After a few crash landings, the mission was abandoned.  
1925
 When the boundaries of Canada were extended to the North Pole, the Northwest Territories ballooned to 3.3 million sq km - about a third of the nation's land-mass.  
1929
 The Thelon Game Sanctuary was created, largely on the recommendation of John Hornby, the eccentric British wanderer who died there in 1927.  
1930
 Radium was discovered at Great Bear Lake. Since it was then worth $75,000 an ounce, a mining rush ensued. The community of Port Radium formed around the El Dorado mine.
  
1931
 After terrorizing people of the Mackenzie Valley for weeks, the Mad Trapper of Rat River was shot dead by the Mounties and buried at Aklavik.  
1934
 A gold strike on the North Arm of Great Slave Lake brought about the beginnings of a community called Yellowknife.  
1943
 The U.S. Army built a 350 mile pipeline through the Mackenzie Mountains, connecting its right-of-way from Norman Wells via Whitehorse to the new Alaska Highway. The pipeline was dismantled in 1947, but many relics were left behind, along what is now the Canol Heritage Trail.  
1946
 The Northern Transportation Company took charge of Mackenzie River shipping as the HBC bowed out.  
1967
 Yellowknife was named the capital of the Northwest Territories, and many administrative departments were transferred from Ottawa and Fort Smith.  
1979
 The new Dempster Highway, running from Dawson City Yukon to Inuvik, was completed.  
1984
 The Inuvialuit settled northern Canada's first Aboriginal land claim.  
1994
 The government of Canada and the Sahtu Tribal Council (representing the Hare, Sahtu Dene, Mountain Dene, and Métis of the region) signed the Sahtu Land Claim Agreement. It recognized Aboriginal ownership of major land parcels and provides royalties for use of other lands in the region. Claims by the Gwich'in and other Dene groups have been settled in succeeding years.  
1998
 North America's first diamond mine went into operation on the NWT Barrens at Lac de Gras.  
1999
 The creation of Nunavut cut the size of the Northwest Territories by roughly two thirds, to a mere million square kilometres.  
2002
 Parks Canada announced plans to create a new National Park on Great Slave Lake's East Arm.  
2004
 The last of the gold mines in Yellowknife closed in 2004. Today, Yellowknife is primarily a government town and a service centre for the diamond mines.  
2007
 The rock duo White Stripes played in Yellowknife for their tour of Canada. The entire tour was recorded for a documentary called Under Great White Northern Lights.  
2008
 In 2008, Yellowknife hosted the Arctic Winter Games  
2009
 June 2009 the Canadian Government, with the Dehcho First Nations, announced legislation that will increase the area of Nahanni National Park to cover around 30,000 km2 (11,583 sq mi), including 91% of the Greater Nahanni ecosystem in the Dehcho region and most of the South Nahanni River watershed The expansion has increased the park to six times its size to approximately 30,000 square kilometres from the original 4,766 square kilometres.  
2011
 Day 6 of Royal Visit in Canada: Royals in Yellowknife ...The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, William and Kate visit Yellowknife on Tuesday, July 5, 2011.   

  Nahanni National Park
  Aulavik National Park
  Wood Buffalo National Park
  Tuktu-Nogait-National Park

  Northern Lights
What is the Aurora?
The sun gives off high-energy charged particles (also called ions) that travel out into space at speeds of 300 to 1200 kilometres per second. A cloud of such particles is called a plasma. The stream of plasma coming from the sun is known as the solar wind. As the solar wind interacts with the edge of the earth's magnetic field
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  National Parks
Wood Buffalo National Park, at 44,807 km2, Wood Buffalo National Park is Canada's largest national park and one of the largest in the world. It was established in 1922 to protect the last remaining herds of bison in northern Canada. Today, it protects an outstanding and representative example of Canada's Northern Boreal Plains.
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