000 01810nam  2200325za 4500
0019.837046
003CaOODSP
00520221107151038
007cr |||||||||||
008170519s1963    oncb   #ob   f000 0 eng d
040 |aCaOODSP|beng
043 |an-cn-nt
0861 |aR42-3/1963-10E-PDF
1001 |aJenness, R. A.
24510|aGreat Slave Lake fishing industry |h[electronic resource] / |cby R. A. Jenness.
260 |aOttawa : |bDepartment of Northern Affairs and National Resources, Northern Co-ordination and Research Centre, |c1963.
300 |aiii, 41 p. : |bmaps
4901 |aNCRC ; |v63-10
500 |a"December, 1963."
500 |aDigitized edition from print [produced by Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada].
504 |aIncludes bibliographical references.
520 |a"Great Slave Lake produces some of the best fish caught in western freshwater lakes. At the present time there is a commercial quota of 9,000,000 pounds on its whitefish and lake trout, but some officials of the Federal Department of Fisheries believe that this amount could be raised to 12,000,000 pounds if market and other conditions so warranted and ancillary fishing operations took out the coarser gradefish. Given a market for these coarse fish, i.e. ciscoes, inconnus, pike, suckers, burbots and other species, the lake might easily yield an equal quantity of them also."--p. 2.
69207|2gccst|aFisheries
69207|2gccst|aLakes
69207|2gccst|aNorthern development
7102 |aNorthern Co-ordination and Research Centre (Canada)
7101 |aCanada. |bIndian and Northern Affairs Canada.
830#0|aNCRC (Series)|v63-10.|w(CaOODSP)9.837026
85640|qPDF|s3.28 MB|uhttps://publications.gc.ca/collections/collection_2017/aanc-inac/R42-3-1963-10-eng.pdf