scholarly journals GEM-2 Boothia Peninsula-Somerset Island project, Nunavut: mineral assay results and potential carving stone localities from the 2017 and 2018 field seasons

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Regis ◽  
M Sanborn-Barrie ◽  
T Moum
Keyword(s):  
2015 ◽  
Vol 129 (1) ◽  
pp. 24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul C. Sokoloff

New collections of vascular plants, bryophytes, lichen, and algae are reported for Cunningham Inlet on the north coast of Somerset Island, Nunavut. This list of 48 species of vascular plants, 13 bryophytes, 10 lichens, and five algae includes 136 specimens collected in 2013 and 39 previously unreported specimens from the National Herbarium of Canada at the Canadian Museum of Nature (CAN), Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada’s Vascular Plant Herbarium (DAO), and University of Alberta (ALTA). Ten vascular plants from previous collecting in 1958 are re-reported here to give a comprehensive account of the vascular plant flora of the region. Two vascular plants are recorded for the first time for Somerset Island: Smooth Draba (Draba glabella Pursh) and Edlund’s Fescue (Festuca edlundiae S. G. Aiken, Consaul & Lefkovitch).


2003 ◽  
Vol 81 (8) ◽  
pp. 1298-1305 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mads Peter Heide-Jørgensen ◽  
Rune Dietz ◽  
Kristin L Laidre ◽  
Pierre Richard ◽  
Jack Orr ◽  
...  

Sixteen female narwhals (Monodon monoceros) were tracked by satellite in 2000 and 2001 from their summering ground near Somerset Island in the Canadian High Arctic to their wintering ground in central Baffin Bay. The wintering ground location was spatially discrete from another narwhal wintering ground in southern Baffin Bay. Area extent of the summering ground was approximately 9464 km2 and area extent of the wintering ground was 25 846 km2. Two of the narwhals were tracked for more than 12 consecutive months. These whales used three focal areas between their spring and autumn migration: a coastal area in the open-water season in August in the Canadian High Arctic, a wintering area from November through April in the consolidated pack ice of Baffin Bay, and an early summer area in front of the receding fast ice edge in Lancaster Sound. The whales showed remarkable site fidelity to summering grounds and had specific migratory routes that followed sea ice formation and recession.


1976 ◽  
Author(s):  
J W Kerr ◽  
G E Reinson ◽  
W D Stewart

1963 ◽  
Author(s):  
R G Blackadar ◽  
R L Christie ◽  
F C Taylor
Keyword(s):  

1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 47-47
Author(s):  
Nicholas J. Butterfield

Multicellular organisms must have had a substantial pre-Ediacaran history, but the fossil evidence is sparse and often equivocal. The taxonomic resolution necessary to constrain phylogenetic hypotheses is limited largely to Lagerstätte-grade fossils that retain evidence of diagnostic cell division patterns. Uniseriate and multiseriate filaments in the 1267-723 Ma Hunting Formation, Somerset Island, derive from transverse and longitudinal intercalary cell division programs indistinguishable from those of the modern red alga Bangia, and establish a significantly pre-Ediacaran datum point for the Rhodophyta. Likewise, on the basis of a distinctive “segregative cell division”, three taxa of siphonocladalean green algae (Chlorophyta) are identified in the ca. 750 Ma Svanbergfjellet Formation, Spitsbergen. Process-bearing vesicles in the Svanbergfjellet sequence further compare with the germinating zoospores of the modern chromophyte alga Vaucheria, while convincing Vaucheria-like thalli are reported from ca. 900 Ma deposits in Siberia. The broad co-occurrence of multicellular Rhodophyta, Chlorophyta, and Chromophyta by at least 750 Ma ago accords well with molecular evidence that suggests the three principal algal clades diverged from a common ancestor during a brief but marked radiation relatively late in eukaryote evolution.Complex multicellularity featuring cellular and tissue(?) differentiation is also encountered in the pre-Ediacaran fossil record. A large ornate form in the Svanbergfjellet succession preserves at least six readily distinguishable cell types and, despite its taxonomic uncertainty, can be characterized as at least as complex as the most complex modern algae or fungi. No cellularity is preserved in the late Proterozoic macrofossil Tawuia; however, SEM and light microscopy of its isolated wall reveal a complex histology suggestive of a relatively advanced grade of multicellularity. Another Svanbergfjellet macrofossil has a distinct wall structure and bears a terminal pair of large reniform structures; if these prove to be truly bilaterally symmetrical, this fossil represents a grade of organization otherwise not recognized until the Ediacaran. Further analysis of these and other pre-Ediacaran ‘problematica’ may clarify their taxonomic relationships and promises to resolve at least some of the ‘Cambrian explosion’ into a meaningful sequence of evolutionary change.


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