Abstract

The Far North: International Frontier

Leboubdais, D. M. | January 12, 1946 issue

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This article focuses on prospects of industrial development in Canadian North and Alaska after the second world war. Now that the Canadian North is known to be the most important source of uranium, raw material of the atomic bomb, the whole territory takes on added importance, and its development becomes a matter of high political interest. Its real worth for the whole northern half of the world may lie in the fact that the Mackenzie-Yukon region of Canada and Alaska is a land bridge to Asia. The Alaska Highway brings motor traffic to within 500 miles of Bering Strait. The northern two-thirds of Canada east of the Rockies, known as the Canadian Shield, is one of the world's richest mineral storehouses.

See Also:

ECONOMIC development; NATURAL resources; RAW materials; MINERALS; TRANSPORTATION; ALASKA; UNITED States
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