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This layer represents 225 Parks Canada Managed Areas, including 46 National Parks, over 171 National Historic Sites, 1 National Urban Park, 5 National Marine Conservation Areas, 1 Canadian Landmark and 1 Proposed Park . All lands that we would like to monitor species at. This is different from Historical Designated Areas for most NHS. Please use with caution as many areas still need to be confirmed, many areas have been generalized by a buffer and some we need to confirm our Management roles on these sites.It was specifically created to request species data from Nature Serve by the Species Conservation and Management Branch at Parks Canada using many Parks layers. For that reason we ask that you do not share with other organizations or use to create 3rd party maps.
This layer represents 225 Parks Canada Managed Areas, including 46 National Parks, over 171 National Historic Sites, 1 National Urban Park, 5 National Marine Conservation Areas, 1 Canadian Landmark and 1 Proposed Park . All lands that we would like to monitor species at. This is different from Historical Designated Areas for most NHS. Please use with caution as many areas still need to be confirmed, many areas have been generalized by a buffer and some we need to confirm our Management roles on these sites.It was specifically created to request species data from Nature Serve by the Species Conservation and Management Branch at Parks Canada using many Parks layers. For that reason we ask that you do not share with other organizations or use to create 3rd party maps.
BC Treaty Commission facilitates the process. Further information: http://www.bctreaty.ca
Traditional territories of Yukon first nations and settlement areas of Inuvialuit and Tetlit Gwich'in within the Yukon Territory. A Traditional Territory is an area of the Yukon that the people of a First Nation have traditionally used. A First Nation's Settlement Lands fall inside the boundaries of its Traditional Territory. A First Nation does not own its Traditional Territory, but the First Nation and its benificiaries have a number of rights within their Traditional Territory, both on and off of Settlement Land. This data was built using the 1:250,000 National Topographic Data Base (NTDB) data as the base and the 1:500,000 hardcopy traditional territory maps as signed by individual First Nation chiefs on November 8, 1988 for the line work.