Canadian Beaufort Sea 2000: The Environmental and Social Setting

Authors

  • G. Burton Ayles
  • Norman B. Snow

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14430/arctic731

Keywords:

Beaufort Sea, Inuvialuit, geography, environment, ethnography, communities

Abstract

The Beaufort Sea Conference 2000 brought together a diverse group of scientists and residents of the Canadian Beaufort Sea region to review the current state of the region's renewable resources and to discuss the future management of those resources. In this paper, we briefly describe the physical environment, the social context, and the resource management processes of the Canadian Beaufort Sea region. The Canadian Beaufort Sea land area extends from the Alaska-Canada border east to Amundsen Gulf and includes the northwest of Victoria Island and Banks Island. The area is defined by its geology, landforms, sources of freshwater, ice and snow cover, and climate. The social context of the Canadian Beaufort Sea region has been set by prehistoric Inuit and Gwich'in, European influence, more recent land-claim agreements, and current management regimes for the renewable resources of the Beaufort Sea.

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Published

2002-01-01