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DIATOM ASSEMBLAGES IN RELATION TO WATER-DEPTH GRADIENTS IN EIGHT BOREAL SHIELD LAKES FROM NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO, CANADAKingsbury, Melanie V. 23 July 2010 (has links)
The uncertainty surrounding the impact of future changes in climate and water resources
has created renewed interest on how lakes have responded to drought in the past. There
is a need to determine potential future available water by understanding past changes in
water levels; the underlying ecological characteristics of using diatoms as a proxy for
lake-level reconstructions is the basis of this thesis. By integrating knowledge from past
water-level fluctuation studies and theories, along with developing a better understanding
of diatom ecology in lake systems, more effective techniques are being developed to
improve water-depth reconstructions. Diatom assemblages were examined from eight
lakes in northwestern Ontario collected in surface sediments along a depth gradient at
~1-m water-depth intervals. Three major zones, based on the composition of diatom
assemblages in each lake were consistently identified in all lakes: i) a near-shore
assemblage of Achnanthes (sensu lato) species and other benthic taxa (Nitzschia,
Cymbella); ii) a mid-depth small Fragilaria (sensu lato)/ small Aulacoseira zone with
various Navicula taxa, and iii) a deep-water planktonic zone. The depths at which
transitions between these zones are located varied among lakes, and the depth of the
transition between the planktonic and benthic zones was consistent with water chemistry
variables (e.g. DOC, TP) that are related to light attenuation. Deeper pelagic to benthic
transitions occurred in lakes with the lowest DOC and TP (i.e. generally more light
attenuation in lakes with higher concentrations of TP or DOC). Other findings included a
decrease in species evenness and numbers with depth, along with an increase in scaled
chrysophyte relative to diatoms. / Thesis (Master, Biology) -- Queen's University, 2010-07-23 12:36:01.347
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Aircraft and Satellite Remote Sensing for Biophysical Analysis at Pen Island, Northwestern OntarioKozlovic, Nancy Jean 02 1900 (has links)
The capabilities of a number of remote-sensing techniques for
biophysical mapping in the subarctic have been examined at Pen Island in
northwestern Ontario. After a two week field reconnaissance, colour
infrared aerial photography was studied and a detailed biophysical map
of the area was produced. Using this knowledge LANDSAT satellite data
of the site were investigated. In a visual analysis of the data, the
majority of the units identified in the airphoto interpretation were
detected, and these were distinguished primarily by their spectral
characteristics. Digital analysis of the satellite data using the
Bendix MAD system allowed many of the classes of the earlier studies to
be delineated and also permitted the classification to be readily
extended beyond the original site. In both LANDSAT analyses specific
biophysical units could be mapped from the satellite data but could not
be identified without the airphoto interpretation. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
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Aircraft and Satellite Remote Sensing for Biophysical Analysis at Pen Island, Northwestern OntarioKozlovic, Nancy Jean 02 1900 (has links)
The capabilities of a number of remote-sensing techniques for biophysical mapping in the subarctic have been examined at Pen Island in northwestern Ontario. After a two week field reconnaissance, colour infrared aerial photography was studied and a detailed biophysical map of the area was produced. Using this knowledge LANDSAT satellite data of the site were investigated. In a visual analysis of the data, the majority of the units identified in the airphoto interpretation were detected, and these were distinguished primarily by their spectral characteristics. Digital analysis of the satellite data using the Bendix MAD system allowed many of the classes of the earlier studies to be delineated and also permitted the classification to be readily extended beyond the original site. In both LANDSAT analyses specific biophysical units could be mapped from the satellite data but could not be identified without the airphoto interpretation. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
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Petrology and Geochemistry of the Heron Lake Stock, Superior Province, Wabigoon Subprovince, Northwestern OntarioKusmirski, Richard T. 04 1900 (has links)
The Heron Lake Stock is a lenticular shaped, pretectonic granitoid complex intruding the Jutten metavolcanics of the Savant Lake Greenstone Belt, Wabigoon Subprovince, Superior Province. Mapping, petrography, and chemical analyses have revealed that the stock is essentially trondhjemitic, with minor quartz diorite, granodiorite and quartz monzonite. The trondhjemites have undergone a high degree of sericitization and saussuritization. The grandiorite unit is characterized by secondary K-feldspar and the quartz monzonites are characterized by perthite formation as a result of K-autometasomation is the late stage potash-rich fluids. Late faulting has imposed a secondary foliation along the stock's southern boundary. K/Rb ratios suggest partial melting of lower crust/ upper mantle material producing a trondhjemitic magma. Chemical variation diagrams suggest a process of magmatic differentiation and fractional crystallization. / Thesis / Bachelor of Science (BSc)
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Petrochemistry of the mafic-rich rocks, Lac des Mille Lacs area, northwestern Ontario / Petrochemistry of the mafic-rich rocks, Lac des Mille Lacs areaWatkinson, David Hugh 05 1900 (has links)
An investigation of the petrology and chemistry of two groups of mafic-rich intrusions from the Lac des Mille Lacs area was carried out. The Quetico group consists of hornblende-rich ultramafic to mafic rocks; the Shebandowan group consists of serpentinized ultramafic rocks and metagabbro. A spectrographic method was employed to quantitatively determine Al2O3, CaO, Co, Cr, Cu, Mn, Ni, Ti, V and Zr in the rocks. This, and other chemical data, indicate that these two spatially related groups, although mineralogically distinct, have similar chemical features, and have apparently crystallized from compositionally similar magmas under different water vapour pressures. Their similarities to ultramafic rocks from other areas provide some implications regarding ultramafic rock types of orogenic areas. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
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A Proletarian Prometheus: Socialism, Ethnicity, and Revolution at the Lakehead, 1900-1935Beaulieu, Michel S. 06 March 2009 (has links)
“The Proletarian Prometheus: Socialism, Ethnicity, and Revolution at the Lakehead, 1900-1935” is an analysis of the various socialist organizations operating at the Canadian Lakehead (comprised of the twin cities of Port Arthur and Fort William, Ontario, now the present-day City of Thunder Bay, and their vicinity) during the first 35 years of the twentieth century. It contends that the circumstances and actions of Lakehead labour, especially those related to ideology, ethnicity, and personality, worked simultaneously to empower and to fetter workers in their struggles against the shackles of capitalism. The twentieth-century Lakehead never lacked for a population of enthusiastic, energetic and talented left-wingers. Yet, throughout this period the movement never truly solidified and took hold. Socialist organizations, organizers and organs came and went, leaving behind them an enduring legacy, yet paradoxically the sum of their efforts was cumulatively less than the immense sacrifices and energies they had poured into them. Between 1900 and 1935, the region's working-class politics was shaped by the interaction of ideas drawn from the much larger North Atlantic socialist world with the particularities of Lakehead society and culture. International frameworks of analysis and activism were of necessity reshaped and revised in a local context in which ethnic divisions complicated and even undermined the class identities upon which so many radical dreams and ambitions rested. / Thesis (Ph.D, History) -- Queen's University, 2007-12-14 20:26:40.652
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Memento mori: an archival strategy for documenting mortality on the Canadian frontier at Red Lake, Ontario, before 1950Richthammer, John Erwin Lavallée 21 January 2008 (has links)
Memento Mori, Latin for “remember thy death,” implores us to be mindful that death is both inevitable and inescapable. What of the records created during the process of dying and about death? Based upon wide-ranging archival research into primary documents, this thesis explores the rich sources of both official, public records, and personal, private ones, relating to mortality on the small-town Canadian frontier before 1950. The community of Red Lake, Ontario, which was established on the frontier as the result of the Red Lake gold rush of 1926, is the subject of a case study.
Rather than merely cataloguing sources, this thesis illustrates that by adapting aspects from such archival appraisal methodologies as macroappraisal and documentation strategy, one is able to make available to researchers a wider range of sources relevant to the themes of dying and death. Specifically, by employing a documentation strategy methodology to identify and illuminate the records of human activities surrounding the functions of dying and death, archivists can offer to researchers the opportunity to locate relevant records wherever they may physically be. Since this is an Archival Studies thesis, it does not provide an historical analysis of dying and death, but is an archival study of the types of records related to the theme of mortality on the Canadian frontier: how those records were created, their character, and their capture and preservation in a small community.
This thesis is organized into three chapters and a conclusion. Chapter One explores some relevant trends in the secondary literature of three fields: archival appraisal and description, small town or local development on the frontier, and dying and death as human activities. Chapter Two sets the context in which the thesis analyzes mortality on the frontier by outlining the relevant history of the Red Lake District of Northwestern Ontario and its pioneers. The focus is especially on the gold-mining boom years from the mid-1920s until shortly after the Second World War. The heart of the thesis, Chapter Three, is a case study of the various records creators, human activities, and resultant records related to mortality. It is organized according to three phases or functional categories surrounding dying, death, and memorialization. The conclusion summarizes the usefulness of the case study, in light of the literature review in Chapter One. It also suggests areas of further research, including aspects not covered herein, of the records of dying and death on the Canadian frontier.
The documentation strategy, adapted from the original methods employed by archivists Helen Samuels and Richard Cox, was found to work best when deployed as a research and descriptive tool for exploring and documenting the records of mortality, more so than its original purpose as an acquisition tool. The strategy has wide-ranging usefulness discovering and then describing a “virtual” documentation universe relating to record-generating human functions and activities. / February 2008
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Memento mori: an archival strategy for documenting mortality on the Canadian frontier at Red Lake, Ontario, before 1950Richthammer, John Erwin Lavallee 21 January 2008 (has links)
Memento Mori, Latin for “remember thy death,” implores us to be mindful that death is both inevitable and inescapable. What of the records created during the process of dying and about death? Based upon wide-ranging archival research into primary documents, this thesis explores the rich sources of both official, public records, and personal, private ones, relating to mortality on the small-town Canadian frontier before 1950. The community of Red Lake, Ontario, which was established on the frontier as the result of the Red Lake gold rush of 1926, is the subject of a case study.
Rather than merely cataloguing sources, this thesis illustrates that by adapting aspects from such archival appraisal methodologies as macroappraisal and documentation strategy, one is able to make available to researchers a wider range of sources relevant to the themes of dying and death. Specifically, by employing a documentation strategy methodology to identify and illuminate the records of human activities surrounding the functions of dying and death, archivists can offer to researchers the opportunity to locate relevant records wherever they may physically be. Since this is an Archival Studies thesis, it does not provide an historical analysis of dying and death, but is an archival study of the types of records related to the theme of mortality on the Canadian frontier: how those records were created, their character, and their capture and preservation in a small community.
This thesis is organized into three chapters and a conclusion. Chapter One explores some relevant trends in the secondary literature of three fields: archival appraisal and description, small town or local development on the frontier, and dying and death as human activities. Chapter Two sets the context in which the thesis analyzes mortality on the frontier by outlining the relevant history of the Red Lake District of Northwestern Ontario and its pioneers. The focus is especially on the gold-mining boom years from the mid-1920s until shortly after the Second World War. The heart of the thesis, Chapter Three, is a case study of the various records creators, human activities, and resultant records related to mortality. It is organized according to three phases or functional categories surrounding dying, death, and memorialization. The conclusion summarizes the usefulness of the case study, in light of the literature review in Chapter One. It also suggests areas of further research, including aspects not covered herein, of the records of dying and death on the Canadian frontier.
The documentation strategy, adapted from the original methods employed by archivists Helen Samuels and Richard Cox, was found to work best when deployed as a research and descriptive tool for exploring and documenting the records of mortality, more so than its original purpose as an acquisition tool. The strategy has wide-ranging usefulness discovering and then describing a “virtual” documentation universe relating to record-generating human functions and activities.
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Memento mori: an archival strategy for documenting mortality on the Canadian frontier at Red Lake, Ontario, before 1950Richthammer, John Erwin Lavallee 21 January 2008 (has links)
Memento Mori, Latin for “remember thy death,” implores us to be mindful that death is both inevitable and inescapable. What of the records created during the process of dying and about death? Based upon wide-ranging archival research into primary documents, this thesis explores the rich sources of both official, public records, and personal, private ones, relating to mortality on the small-town Canadian frontier before 1950. The community of Red Lake, Ontario, which was established on the frontier as the result of the Red Lake gold rush of 1926, is the subject of a case study.
Rather than merely cataloguing sources, this thesis illustrates that by adapting aspects from such archival appraisal methodologies as macroappraisal and documentation strategy, one is able to make available to researchers a wider range of sources relevant to the themes of dying and death. Specifically, by employing a documentation strategy methodology to identify and illuminate the records of human activities surrounding the functions of dying and death, archivists can offer to researchers the opportunity to locate relevant records wherever they may physically be. Since this is an Archival Studies thesis, it does not provide an historical analysis of dying and death, but is an archival study of the types of records related to the theme of mortality on the Canadian frontier: how those records were created, their character, and their capture and preservation in a small community.
This thesis is organized into three chapters and a conclusion. Chapter One explores some relevant trends in the secondary literature of three fields: archival appraisal and description, small town or local development on the frontier, and dying and death as human activities. Chapter Two sets the context in which the thesis analyzes mortality on the frontier by outlining the relevant history of the Red Lake District of Northwestern Ontario and its pioneers. The focus is especially on the gold-mining boom years from the mid-1920s until shortly after the Second World War. The heart of the thesis, Chapter Three, is a case study of the various records creators, human activities, and resultant records related to mortality. It is organized according to three phases or functional categories surrounding dying, death, and memorialization. The conclusion summarizes the usefulness of the case study, in light of the literature review in Chapter One. It also suggests areas of further research, including aspects not covered herein, of the records of dying and death on the Canadian frontier.
The documentation strategy, adapted from the original methods employed by archivists Helen Samuels and Richard Cox, was found to work best when deployed as a research and descriptive tool for exploring and documenting the records of mortality, more so than its original purpose as an acquisition tool. The strategy has wide-ranging usefulness discovering and then describing a “virtual” documentation universe relating to record-generating human functions and activities.
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