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GEOGRAPHIC INTELLIGENCE REPORT
APPRAISAL OF SPECIAL-SUBJECT MAPS OF
CANADA
CIA/RR-GR-28
October 1953
DOCUMENT NO.
NO CHANGE IN CLASS, ^
=J DECLASSIFIED
GLASS. CHANGED TOj
NEXT REVIEW DATE:
AUTH: HR ?0;9
DATE;
REVIEWER: 00-. 51 4 ,*?'
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND REPORTS
CONFIDENTIAL
'WRET
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This maierial contains information affecting
;he National Defense of the United States
thin the meaning of tae espionage laws,
Title 1. 8, USC, Secs, 793 and 794, the trans-
3xxlssion or revelation of which in any manner
Lo an unauthorized person is prohibited by law.
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LONFIDENTIAL
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CIA/RR-GR-28
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
GOENTIRL
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Page
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
I. Political Maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
II. Population Maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
III. Health and Health Facility Maps. . . . . . . . . . . 8
IV. Agriculture and Land Use Maps. . . . . . . . . . . . 9
V. Maps of Animal Life . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
VI. Mineral Resources Maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
VII. Maps of Industries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
VIII. Power Maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
IX. Maps of Commerce and Trade . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
X. Transportation Maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
XI. Terrain Maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
XII. Climatic Maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
XIII. Soils Maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
XIV. Vegetation Maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
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Appraisal of Special-Subject Maps of Canada
Introduction
A vast amount of basic intelligence on Canada is provided by
special-subject maps. The subjects that have been mapped are many
and varied, and better maps have been compiled for some subjects than
for others. In the preparation of this report the special-subject
maps on Canada at scales smaller than 1:500,000 that are available
in Washington were reviewed, and the best from the standpoints of
content and presentation of data were selected for discussion.* If
greater detail is required, individual sheets of various topographic
map series (not included in this report) may be consulted. Citations
for all the maps selected for this study are listed in a bibliography
at the end in the same order in which they are discussed in the text.
Pertinent information given includes title, scale, authority, date,
availability, and security classification.
The data shown on special-subject maps can be of considerable
assistance in working on and analyzing problems dealing with Canada.
Maps are important to a clear understanding of the location, dis-
tribution, and relationship of the resources and factors that combine
to make Canada the economically important country that it is.
Until the early 1940's, special-subject maps were prepared
chiefly for the area of Canada south of 75?N, omitting the arctic
islands which make up northern Canada. Furthermore, until Newfoundland
Research completed January 1953.
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and Labrador became a part of Canada in 1949, they also were seldom
included. Owing to the importance of these areas, the number of
special-subject maps covering them has increased in the past few years.
The international boundary and the administrative divisions
into which Canada is divided are best presented on a 1951 map that
shows the entire country on a single sheet. For 5 of the 10 provinces
maps are also available that show the internal administrative divisions.
The boundary between the United States and Canada and the
Alaska-Canada boundary, as well as the area claimed by Canada ex-
tending to the geographic North Pole, are shown on a map published in
1951, at 1:6,336,000, entitled Canada. This map, which includes the
entire country on one sheet, also gives the first-order administrative
units into which Canada is divided. The boundaries and names of the
10 provinces, the territories, and the 3 districts of the country are
given, and their areas are emphasized by contrasting colors. The map
is the first to show and name several recently discovered arctic
islands. The base provides a fairly detailed drainage pattern, many
place names, and the alignment of railways, the Alaska Highway, and
the Mackenzie Highway.
The administrative divisions of southern Manitoba are well shown
on a map entitled Map of Manitoba, Southern Portion, at the scale of
1:506,880, which gives the boundaries and names of municipalities
in red and those of the local government districts in purple. The
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black-and-white base indicates hydrography, place names, roads,
Indian reserves, forest reserves, and townships.
Map of th? Southern Part of the Province of Saskatchewan at
1:633,600 gives both the boundaries and the official numbers of the
municipalities of southern Saskatchewan superimposed on a base
showing place names, townships, and railroads.
On a detailed, multicolored crap at 1:506,880, entitled The
Southern Part of the Province of Ontario, the boundaries and names of
the counties and districts of the Ontario peninsula are given. Base
data include drainage, townships, two categories of railroads (steam
and electric), canals, roads, provincial forest and park boundaries,
and Indian reserves.
For the Province of New Brunswick, the boundaries and names of
the counties are shown on a map entitled New Brunswick at 1:633,600.
Also indicated. are the boundaries and names of the parishes and town-
ships that comprise the counties. The detailed base includes drainage,
place names, railroads, canals, and game refuges.
The boundaries and names of the districts within Newfoundland
are shown on the Ten Mile Map of Newfoundland at 1:633,600. Although
published in 1941, this is one of the best single-sheet maps avail-
able for the island. The coastline and drainage are shown in detail,
many place names are given, three categories of roads are dif-
ferentiated, railroads are indicated, post offices are located, and
towns and settlements are classified according to population.
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The results of the referendum held in Newfoundland on 22 July
1948 to decide the issue of confederation with Canada are given in
percentages by districts on a map entitled Newfoundland, at
1:1,350,000. The base is an outline map that contains no place
names, drainage, railroads, or roads.
II. Population Maps
No one-sheet map of the distribution of population in all of
Canada is available, but several maps cover southern Canada, the
area of densest population concentration. Other maps provide de-
tailed information on population distribution in northern Canada
and parts of southern-Canada. Most of the population maps have been
compiled from 1941 census data, but those of northern Canada are
based on more recent information. At present, no maps are available
that have been prepared from data collected in the 1951 census.
The distribution of population in southern Canada is shown by
dots on a very general map entitled Distribution of Population,
Canada, 1941. Each dot represents 1,000 people. The population of
the major cities is indicated by circles of proportionate sizes and
is also given numerically at the bottom of the map. The percentage of
the total population of Canada in each of the provinces and territories
is presented in graph form.
The best coverage for population of towns in southern Canada
(excluding Newfoundland) is a 15-sheet set at various scales issued
by the Post Office Department. Data are from the 1941 census.
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Towns are divided into six population categories, ranging from under
1,000 to over 50,000. The size of type used for the town name indi-
cates the population category. A symbol indicates the type of post-
office facilities available at each town. In addition to the popu-
lation information, the map shows boundaries and names of federal
constituencies and the alignment of railroads.
Population of settlements in the Northwest Territories is given
numerically on a map entitled Distribution of Population, 1950 at
the small scale of 1:12,000,000 (Restricted). The generalized base
on which the population data are shown has also been used as a base
for presenting information on health facilities of northern Canada
(described later).
The distribution of the Eskimo population in northern Canada is
shown on a 1951 map, Canadian Arctic: Eskimo Population, 1950 Estimate.
The map, compiled from data supplied by the Department of Resources
and Development, is included in An Introduction to the Geography
of the Canadian Arctic, published by the Geographical Branch of the
Department of Mines and Technical Surveys, Ottawa, 1951. Areas in-
habited by Eskimos are indicated, and the number of Eskimos in the
various areas are given numerically.
Eskimo Registration Districts of the Northwest Territories
are indicated on a map entitled Northwest Territories and Yukon --
Eskimo Registration Districts, at 1:5,068,000. The district boundaries
are overprinted on a detailed multicolored base published in 1939 by
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the Surveys and Mapping Bureau. The base shows trading posts, post
offices, Royal Canadian Mounted Police posts, meteorological re-
porting stations, wireless stations, seaplane anchorages, hospitals,
schools, and aerodromes.
Distribution of population in the prairie provinces -- Alberta,
Saskatchewan, and Manitoba -- is shown by dots on a map at 1:8,500,000
entitled Distribution of Population, Prairie :Provinces, 1946. Each
dot represents 100 people. Cities, towns, and villages with popu-
lations of more than 1,000 are shown by circles of proportionate
sizes. On the base, provincial boundaries and a generalized drainage
pattern, but no place names are included.
The location of foreign groups in the prairie provinces and in
eastern Canada is indicated on a crudely drawn and very general map
with no title. The map, a photostat from A Study of Cool Continental
Environments and their Effects on British and French Settlement,
by Griffith Taylor, London, 1947, is catalogued in the CIA Map Library
under the supplied title "Foreign Culture Groups in the Prairie Pro-
vinces." Each of the foreign culture groups is named. An inset in-
dicates the French population in eastern Canada by shading. On the
outline base, no place names or drainage are :included.
The aistribution of people of foreign origin in the Province
of Manitoba, as well as the increase and decrease in farm population,
is shown on a set of six maps with the supplied title "Distribution
of Population, Manitoba, 1936." Data for the maps were supplied by
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the Census Branch of the Canadian Bureau of Statistics and are
plotted by municipalities.
A photostat map entitled Distribution of Population, Newfoundland,
1945 shows population by dots, each of which represents 200 people.
Settlements with a population of more than 3,000 are shown by circles
of proportionate sizes. Although the dots in some areas are so con-
centrated that it is impossible to determine the actual number of
people, the map does indicate areas of population concentration.
The Ten Mile Map of Newfoundland, referred to under Political
Maps, is the best map available for the population of towns and
settlements in Newfoundland. The towns and settlements are classified
according to five population categories, ranging from under 100 to
over 1,000.
The percentage of increase and decrease in the population of
Newfoundland is given by districts on Newfoundland -- Shift in Popu-
lation, 1921 to 1945, at 1:1,350,000. During the period covered,
all but 3 of the 24 districts showed an increase. The outline base,
which includes no place names or drainage pattern, is a photostat
from Newfoundland: A Study in Political Geography, a Clark University
Ph.D. thesis dated 1949.
Few special-subject maps on Labrador are available. The best
map for recent population data is North Atlantic Ocean, Grand Banks
to Davis Strait, Jultural Aspects of Ten Selected Villages (Confi-
dential). The population figures were added to a base, H.O. Chart
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5619, by the leader of a recent expedition to the area. For some
villages a notation has been made as to the Summer and winter
population.
III. Health and Health Facility Maps
The few maps that are available showing health and health facili-
ties in Canada are principally for the northern part of the country.
Information on health facilities in northern Canada is pro-
vided by Hospitals and Hospital Service Areas, 1950, at 1:12,000,000
(Restricted). Three types of hospitals are shown, with the number
of beds per hospital. The locations of dentists, medical officers,
doctors, and nursing stations are included. The following types of
hospital service are also shown: hospital service area and popu-
lation, company hospital center and population, and community Red
Cross hospital center and population. The data are plotted in red
on a black-and-white base.
For northern Canada, communities with medical and dental per-
sonnel employed by the Indian Health Service are indicated on a map
at 1:12,000,000 entitled Facilities Provided by Department of National
Health and Welfare -- 1950 (Restricted). Nursing stations are also
located. The information is plotted on the same base as that used
for Distribution of Population, 1950 (Restricted).
Manuscript data on medical facilities of Labrador have been added
to H.O. Chart No. 5619 by the leader of a recent expedition to the
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area. (With the additions, the map is Restricted.) The facilities
shown -- hospitals and nursing stations -- are operated by the Gren-
fell Mission, whose headquarters are at St. Anthony's Harbor, New-
foundland.
The American Geographical Society has issued seven maps showing
the distribution of disease throughout the world, which are to be
included in the Atlas of Distribution of Diseases. Of the diseases
mapped, only polio is found in Canada. An inset at 1:30,000,000
on the map entitled Distribution of Poliomyelitis, 1900 to 1950 shows
the distribution of polio in Canada per 100,000 inhabitants.
IV. Agriculture and Land Use Maps
Map coverage of agriculture in Canada is more complete than
that for most other special subjects. Several good one-sheet maps
show the agricultural regions of southern Canada. For provinces
and smaller areas, available coverage consists primarily of photo-
stats of maps from articles in various periodicals and other
publications.
Agricultural areas of Canada are presented in considerable de-
tail on Canada: Types of Farming Areas, at 1:6,336,000. Areas of
production of speciality crops, such as wheat, other grains, dairy
products, livestock, and fruits and vegetables, are shown by colors,
and lighter tones indicate areas where these are grown in combination
with other crops. In addition to information on specific crops
produced, types of farming are indicated according to six categories
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by black overprinting. An accompanying text gives, by province, de-
tails of crops raised in small areas. Agricultural data for the
Province of Newfoundland are not included on the map.
A more recent but less detailed map of the agricultural areas
of Canada, including Newfoundland and Labrador, is Canada Exclusive
of Northern Regions,Indicating Main Natural Resources, at li6,336,000.
Four types of agricultural areas -- mixed fanning, grain growing,
grazing, and fruit and special crops -- are differentiated. Mineral
resources and forest areas are also shown. The base map gives the
international and provincial boundaries, a generalized drainage pat-
tern, principal railway lines, and place names.
The general distribution of the various types of farms, crops,
and livestock in Canada as of 1940 and 1941 is presented on a set of
22 maps. These maps, with the supplied title "Farming in Canada,"
are from Types of Farming in Canada, by S. C. Hudson, Ottawa, 1949.
The agricultural data are shown by dots on a black-and-white base,
which gives only the outline of southern Canada, the major lakes,
and province boundaries. No place names are included.
Areas of known arable land in the Yukon, the western part of the
District of Mackenzie, and northern British Columbia and Alberta are
located on a map at 1:5,068,800 entitled Agriculture, published in
Canada's New Northwest, North Pacific Planning Project, Ottawa, 1947.
The base shows the coastline and drainage pattern in detail, and rail-
roads and the Alaska Highway are indicated.
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Land suitable for settlement and range and grazing lands in
British Columbia and the Peace River country of Alberta are shown at
1:4,750,000 on British Columbia and Portions of Yukon, Alaska, Alberta,
and Northwest Territories. The area covered is divided into four
regions, which in turn are subdivided into zones. For these divisions,
settlement acreage (economically cultivable land suitable for settle-
ment) and grazing acreage (including range lands in sparse or scattered
forests) are given in a table on the map.
Information as of 1943 on acreage and production of various
agricultural crops in the prairie provinces is supplied by Wheat
Yield Map and Grain Acreage and Production (no scale). Although the
only information mapped is acreage yield of wheat in bushels, tables
on the map provide considerable information on production, acreage,
and value of wheat and other crops by province and crop district.
Sixteen agricultural areas in southern Saskatchewan are outlined
on Types of Farming Areas in Saskatchewan (no scale), and the kinds
of crops and livestock raised are indicated for each area.
Information on wheat yield in southern Saskatchewan is provided
by two maps -- Map of Southern Saskatchewan Showing the Average Yields
of Wheat per Acre by Municipalities, 1918-1935, and Map of Southern
Sakatchewan Showing Average Variability of Wheat Yield per Acre by
Municipalities, 1918-1935. Both are photostats of maps in Technical
Bulletin 40 of the Canadian Department of Agriculture, 1942.
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For southern Ontario, data on agriculture' are shown on a set of
seven maps at 1:2,250,000, grouped under the supplied title "Ontario
Peninsula -- Agriculture and Land Use," which are photostats of maps
appearing in Economic Geography, Vol. 14, No. 2, April 1938. Maps
on the following subjects are included: land in farms, farmland in
marsh and other wasteland, farmland that is improved, farmland in
crops, farmland in improved pasture, farmland in woods, and farmland
in unimproved pasture. This information is presented in percentage
of total land or farmland on a base that shows the outline of the area
but no drainage or place names.
Information on farming, particularly dairy farming, in southern
Ontario is provided by a set of maps at 1:2,250,000 photostated from
Economic Geography, Vol. 16, No. 1, January 1940. This set, cata-
logued under the supplied title "Ontario Peninsula -- Dairy Areas and
Production," shows agricultural areas of southern Ontario, principal
dairy areas, gallons of milk produced, and cows in milk or calf. Like
the previous set, these maps have bases that are lacking in detail.
Additional information on land use in southern Ontario is provided
by a map in Report of the Ontario Royal Commission on Forestry, 1947,
entitled Proportion of Waste Land in Southern Ontario. This informa-
tion is presented in percentages on an outline base showing the major
lakes but only a few place names.
The most complete data available in map form on agriculture for
the Province of New Brunswick are provided by a set of 10 maps at
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1:3,250,000 with the supplied title "Agricultural Development in
New Brunswick." The topics covered are total land in farmland,
farmland in woods, improved farmland, farmland in field crops, farm-
land in. hay, farmland in oats, farmland in potatoes, farmland in
pasture, dairy cows per 100 acres of farmland, and farm population.
The maps are photostats from Economic Geography, Vol. 15, No. 1,
January 1939. The information is presented on an outline base that
includes neither drainage nor place names.
For the Province of Nova Scotia, a set of 8 maps on 4 sheets,
with the supplied title "Nova Scotia -- Agriculture and Land Use,"
shows at 1:2,250,000 many aspects of agriculture in the province.
Like the set on New Brunswick, the maps are photostats from Economic
Geography, Vol. 15, No. 1, January 1939. The base is an outline of
the province with no drainage or place names shown. The topics
included are: number of dairy cows, farm population, farmland that
is improved, farmland in pasture, farmland in field crops, and farm-
land in orchards.
V. Maps of Animal Life
The best maps showing the location and distribution of wild
life in Canada are one-sheet maps covering the entire country. The
maps are highly generalized, however, and little information is in-
cluded on the bases.
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An old, crudely drawn 15-sheet set of maps at various scales,
Distribution of Game and Fur Bearing Matmnals, shows the distribution
of 15 types of animals in Canada. For many of the animals their
former range as well as their range as of 1933 is given, and for
some the distribution of subspecies is also shown. The maps, which
are photostats from the Proceedings of the Fifth Pacific Science
Congress, 1933, Vol. 5, are generalized, and no place names are in-
cluded on the bases.
Fur production in the Mackenzie District of the Northwest Ter-
ritories is shown on a photostat copy of a map in The New Northwest,
edited by C. A. Dawson, Toronto, 1947. The type of animal trapped
is indicated by a letter symbol, the size of which indicates the
number trapped per year. Because it is highly generalized, the map
is of limited use.
The distribution of the principal types of fish found along the
coasts and in the lakes of Canada is presented on Canada Exclusive
of Northern Regions, Indicating Main Natural Resources, at 1:6,336,000.
This map is also referred to in the sections on agricultural maps and
vegetation maps.
VI. Mineral Resources Maps
Many good maps showing minerals and mining areas of Canada are
available. Of particular significance is a one-sheet map published
in 1952 that gives the locations of minerals and mining areas in the
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entire country. The coal deposits and coal fields of Canada are
located on both a one-sheet and a two-sheet map. Maps of mineral
occurrences and deposits are available for several of the provinces,
but oil and gas fields are best presented on maps of the principal
producing areas.
Of the available maps on the location of mines and mining areas
in Canada, the most reliable and up-to-date is a 1952 multicolored one-
sheet map entitled Canada: Principal Mining Areas and Producing Mines
Map 900A, at 1:7,603,200. This is one of the few special-subject
maps on which data for Newfoundland and Labrador are incorporated.
In addition the map includes northern Canada, which is omitted
from most one-sheet maps.
Metallic and nonmetallic mineral properties are located by
symbol, and each symbol is keyed by number to an "Index to Principal
Productive Mines." This index is organized by provinces and lists
the operating companies and the minerals produced. Names of mining
camps are printed in red on the map. Additional information given
includes coal properties, oilfields, gasfields, and oil pipelines.
The dollar value of Canadian mineral production by year from 1939
to 1950 is shown in graph form, as well as the value of each of 8
metallic and 10 nonmetallic minerals. The dollar value of mineral
production is given by provinces and territories for metals, fuels,
nonmetallic minerals, and clays and structural materials.
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Seven insets covering all of Canada provide additional mineral
information. On the insets, neither scales nor place names are given.
The mineral data presented include (1) the location of nonferrous metal
smelters and refineries; (2) gold deposits; (3) iron blast furnaces and
ferroalloy plants; (4) silver, lead, and zinc deposits; (5) asbestos,
salt, gypsum, fluorspar, and sodium sulphate deposits; (6) copper,
nickel, and iron deposits; and (7) important potential producing areas.
More detailed and specialized data on minerals of Canada are
provided by maps of the provinces and smaller areas.
The two-sheet Mineral Map of British Columbia, Map 1008A at
1:1,267,000 provides the most detailed and complete mineral coverage
available for any province or territory of Canada. Occurrences of
gold, other metallic minerals, and nonmetallic minerals are indicated
by colored symbols and the abbreviated names of the minerals. Mining
properties are located by colored symbols indicating the type of pro-
perty -- gold bearing, other metallic mining, or nonmetallic mining.
Production is also indicated. In an accompanying table the name of
the property, classification, metal content of the ore, and the years
of greatest production are listed and indexed according to the 49
quadrangles outlined on the map. The base map gives the drainage
pattern in considerable detail, place names, and the physical regions
of Canada.
The best mineral map available for Saskatchewan is Mineral Map
of Saskatchewan, Map 896A, at the scale 9f 1:1,267,200. Boundaries
of the eight mining districts and the location of the mine-recording
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office of each district are included on the map. Metallic and non-
metallic mineral occurrences are located by colored symbols. Metallic
mineral properties are keyed by number to an index compiled from
information available as of July 1946, which gives the names of the
mines and the minerals mined.
Mineral Map of Manitoba, Map 851A, at 1:1,267,200, printed in
three colors, shows the boundaries of the two mining districts of
the province and of the mining divisions into which the districts
are divided. For each district, the mine-recording office is
located. The nonmetallic and metallic mineral occurrences are
identified, and the metallic mineral properties are indicated by
symbols and by numbers that refer to an index giving the name of
the property and indicating the minerals mined. The names of pro-
ductive mines are underscored in the index. The map was compiled
by the Canadian Geological Survey in cooperation with the Mines Branch
of the Manitoba Department of Mines and Natural Resources from pub-
lished and unpublished maps and reports of the two agencies.
On Map of the Province of Nova Scotia at 1:500,000, mineral
deposits and commercially important rock deposits in Nova Scotia
are located. Although printed in 1935, this is the most recent map
available on minerals of Nova Scotia. In addition to the mineral
data, the map shows roads, railroads, and county boundaries.
The best available map of mineral resources of Newfoundland is
Mines and Mineral Resources of Newfoundland, in a publication of the
same nameyby A. K. Snelgrove dated 1938. The black-and-white map,
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which is at the scale of 1:1,300,000, shows producing mines and
quarries, former producing mines and quarries, deposits under develop-
ment or investigation, and prospects. Adjacent to each symbol is an
abbreviation for the name of the mineral.
Coal deposits in Canada are best shown on. Map Showing Coal
Deposits and Coal Resources of Canada at 1:12,500,000. 'On this map,
the location and extent of the deposit, as well as the type of coal,
are indicated by color, and the amount of production is shown by
graduated circles representing 20,000 to 4,000,000 tons. Total pro-
duction by province is also indicated.
Coal fields in western and eastern Canada. are more specifically
located on two photostat maps -- Coalfields of the Cordilleran Region
and Coalfields of Eastern Canada -- from Geology and Economic Minerals
of Canada, Economic Geology Series No. 1, published by the Geological
Survey of Canada, Ottawa, 19L+7.
The chief coal areas (excluding lignite), iron-ore deposits,
and steel centers of eastern Canada are located on Principal Coal,
Iron Ore, and Iron and Steel Areas in Relation to the St. Lawrence
Seaway. In addition, the map shows the principal deposits of the
United States, Puerto Rico, and Venezuela. A table on the map gives
for 1950 approximate shipments from iron-ore deposits, ore consumption
capacities by steel areas, and consumption of coal and coke by areas
in Ontario and Quebec.
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The location and name5, of the principal iron ranges of southern.
Ontario and also of parts of Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan have
been added in ink on a photostat base, at 1:2,300,000.
Although.several of the maps mentioned show the general location
of the iron-ore deposit on the Quebec-Labrador boundary,. the best
detail on the area is provided by Central Portion of the Iron Ore
Area at 1:255,000. On this map the Labrador and Quebec deposits
that were drilled about 19+9 are located and named, and Knob Lake air-
port and the roads of the area are shown.
The only available map of uranium occurrences and related data
is Uranium Industry at 1:15,000,000 (Restricted), on which reported
occurrences of uranium, refineries or laboratories, and areas of
most active search are located. Notations on the map give the dis-
covery date and a brief statement of the stage of development of
specific uranium occurrences.
The best available maps of oil and gas developments in Canada
are maps of principal oil and gas producing areas.
The most up-to-date map of the oil and gas situation in Alberta,
Sakatchewan, and Manitoba is the crudely drawn Oil and Gas in Western
Canada at 1:4,200,000. Oil and gas fields and pipelines are shown,
including the alignment of the section of the Trans-Mountain Pipeline
in Alberta and eastern British Columbia. When completed this pipe-
line will extend from Edmonton to Vancouver. The area of the Athabasca
tar (bituminous) sands is also shown on the map.
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Oil and gas fields and other related data for Alberta, the oil
center of Canada, are well presented on Alberta, Showing Oil and Gas
Fields and Potential Gas Areas, which was prepared to accompany a
report entitled Natural Gas Reserves of the Prairie Provinces, by
G. S. Hume and A. Ignatieff. The oil data are printed in green and
the gas in red. The Athabasca bituminous sands are also located.
The black-and-white base on which the data are printed gives the
drainage pattern in detail, significant place names, and townships.
Oil Map of North America (Exclusive of the United States) is one
of the three map sheets published as a supplement to the International
Operations issue of World Oil, dated 15 July 1952. The sheet on North
America includes maps of three oil-producing areas of Canada.
Eastern Fields, at 1:1,900,000, is the most up-to-date map on which
oil and gas fields of the Ontario peninsula are located. The map
at 1:1,000,000 of Norman Wells, District of Mackenzie, shows the
area of oilfields and refineries, as well as the location of dry holes.
Although this area was a source of oil during World War II, it is not
actively producing at present. Western Fields, at 1:2,000,000, is a
map of the oil and gas producing region of the Province of Alberta,
but it is not as detailed or as convenient to use as Alberta, Showing
Oil Fields and Potential Gas Areas.
Oil pipelines, gas pipelines, and proposed gas pipelines are
shown on a map of southern Canada at 1:19,000,000 entitled Pipelines
of Canada. Included on the map is the Trans-Mountain Pipeline, which
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is currently under construction. Oil and gas fields are also located.
The base is generalized but includes more place names for the Province
of Alberta than for other areas.
A photostat of a map, Edmonton-Superior Pipeline, in Developments
and Prospects in Canadian Oil, by John F. Fairlie, published in 1950,
indicates in a generalized way the route of the pipeline from
Edmonton, Alberta, to Superior, Wisconsin. Pumping stations along the
pipeline and refining centers in the area are located. The route of
the pipeline is divided into three sections, for each of which the
following information is given: length, diameter of pipe, initial
capacity in barrels per day, and date of completion.
Refineries of Canada are located on a photostat map at 1:8,000,000
entitled Principal Refineries of Canada. The name of each refinery and
of the city and province in which it is located have been typed on
labels and added to the base map. A list of the operating companies
and the crude-oil capacity of the refineries is included. Although
the producing oil and gas fields in Canada have been located in pencil
on the base, they are difficult to identify.
VII. Maps of Industries
The distribution and location of industries in Canada are shown.
chiefly on maps covering the southern part of the country. Compared
with the number of maps available on other subjects, there are rel-
atively few industrial maps of provinces and smaller areas.
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Map Showing Pulp and Paper Industries in Canada and Newfoundland,
at 1:6,350,000, is the best coverage available for the location of
pulp-and-paper mills in Canada. The mills, which are concentrated
primarily in eastern Canada and along the coast of British Columbia,
are indicated on the map by red symbols, and the names of cities or
towns in which they are located are underscored in red. In a text
printed on the map the following information on pulp-and-paper mills
is presented by province: name of company, location of head office,
city or town in which mill is located, coordinates, and type of
production. Other information given on the map includes drainage,
principal railroads, and provincial boundaries.
Information on the location and production of sawmills in Canada
as of 1940 is provided by two maps -- one for the eastern part of the
country and one for the western part. Map Showing Saw Mills of Eastern
Canada, at 1:2,300,000, is printed in two colors, whereas its counter-
part, Map Showing Saw Mills of Western Canada, at 1:1,950,000,,is in
black and white. Both maps give the location of sawmills, classified
on the basis of millions of board-feet produced per year. Production
is divided into six categories, ranging from less than 1,000,000
board-feet per year to 20,000,000 board-feet and over. Sawmills not
classified according to annual production are indicated by a special
symbol. Among the other data included are railroads (with ownership
indicated), provincial boundaries, and significant place names. For
each map, a supplement is available (at the CIA, Map Library) that
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lists the sawmills alphabetically by province and gives production
figures.
Sawmills and pulp-and-paper mills in southern Ontario are located
on a photostat map from the Report of the Ontario Royal Commission
issued about 19)+7. Sawmills are classified according to production,
whereas pulp-and-paper mills are shown by symbol, with no indication
of production. Although some place names are included, they are
difficult to read.
VIII. Power Maps
The general distribution of the waterpower sites for Canada as a
whole is shown on a single-sheet map at large scale. For individual
provinces or groups of provinces in the southern part of Canada,
power-generating stations are located on six maps at smaller scales
published by the Dominion Water and Power Bureau. Northwestern
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Canada is covered by a map produced by the Water and Power Bureau,
and Newfoundland by a map produced by the Newfoundland Department of
Natural Resources.
Developed and undeveloped waterpower sites in Canada are shown
on a recently published single-sheet map at 1:6,336,000 entitled Water
Powers of the Dominion of Canada. The power sites, which may include
more than one generating station, are indicated, by circles proportionate
to the horsepower capacity. The seven categories of capacity included
range from 1,000 or under to over 2,000,000 hp. This is one of the
few maps on which data for Newfoundland are incorporated. The base
shows the principal rivers, lakes, place names, and province and dis-
trict boundaries, as well as the boundaries of the five geological
regions of Canada.
Six blue-and-white maps at scales ranging from 1:400,000 to
1:1,630,000, prepared by the Dominion Water and Power Bureau, provide
the most complete presentation available on the location of generating
stations for all of the provinces of Canada except Newfoundland.
These maps show both hydroelectric and fuel generating stations, but
horsepower capacity is not indicated. For each sheet a map supple-
ment is available (at the CIA Map Library), which gives the following
pertinent information on each station: name of the generating station,
river on which it is located, horsepower capacity, and name of organi-
zation that owns the station. The maps also show receiving stations,
substations, and electric transmission systems, with the company
operating each indicated.
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Developed and undeveloped waterpower sites for the area in-
cluding the Yukon, the western part of the District of Mackenzie, and
the northern parts of British Columbia and Alberta are located on a
map entitled Water Power, at 1:5,068,800. This area is not included
on power maps previously mentioned. The horsepower capacity of the
sites is indicated by circles representing seven categories of capa-
city, ranging from less than 1,000 horsepower to over 1,000,000
horsepower. These symbols are keyed by numbers and letters to tables
in Canada's New Northwest, North Pacific Planning Project, Ottawa,
19)+7. For developed waterpower sites, the owner, the stream, and the
installed horsepower capacity are given; for undeveloped power sites,
the name of the river and the estimated horsepower capacity are
supplied.
The most detailed and up-to-date map presenting power information
for the island of Newfoundland is the black-and-white Map of Newfound-
land Showing Surveyed Water Powers at 1:960,000. Two types of power
sites -- developed and available -- are shown by black circles
accompanied by figures for horsepower capacity or available horsepower
capacity. This map is the principal compilation source for other
maps showing power sites in Newfoundland, none of which, however, is
as detailed as the original. The base gives coastline and drainage
pattern in detail, principal roads, and some place names.
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IX. Maps of Commerce and Trade
No maps of Canada are available that show trade and commerce
between the provinces or between Canada and other countries. The
only subject within this field that is covered by available maps is
trading posts in the Canadian North.
Trading posts of northern Canada are shown at 1:12,000,000 on
Settlements and Trading Posts, 1950 (Restricted). The trading posts
are located on a generalized base. Other data included on the map
are Royal Canadian Mounted Police posts, meteorological reporting
stations, schools, and various types of missions.
The trading posts of the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) are located
on Map of the Dominion of Canada Showing the Establishments of the
Hudson's Bay Company, at 1:6,336,000.
Fur trading posts, raw fur
departments, posts with HBC radio telegraph, and posts with meteoro-
logical stations and HBC radio telegraph are located. This information
is presented on a base that shows Canada south of 75'N and includes
Newfoundland. On the base the drainage pattern is fairly detailed,
place names are included, and the railroad network and provincial
boundaries are shown. The names of places where Hudson's Bay Company
installations are located are printed in red.
X. Transportation Maps
No good one-sheet map of Canada as a whole showing transportation
routes is available. Transportation data for the entire country,
however, is provided by maps of parts of Canada. Some of these maps
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show roads, railroads, and air routes, whereas others include only
one type of transportation.
The transportation network of southern Canada is best presented
on a three-sheet map at 1:4,055,040 entitled Canada. Ownership of
railroads is indicated, and route numbers are given for roads. On the
base, administrative divisions, drainage, and place names are shown.
The best single-sheet map of transportation routes of northern
Canada is Transportation and Communication, 1950, at 1:12,000,000
(Restricted). Sumner water routes, winter tractor roads, commercial
air routes, airports, and landing fields are located. For the southern
part of the area, highways and railroads are also included.
Transportation information for northern British Columbia and
Alberta, the Yukon Territory, and the western part of the District of
Mackenzie, is given on a map at 1:5,068,000 entitled Transportation,
which includes highways, winter roads, railroads, main water routes,
and air routes.
A more recent map giving similar transportation data (omitting
air routes) for the same area is Transportation Facilities North-
western Canada -- 1950 at 1:3,200,000. Among the other cultural data
shown are Royal Canadian Mounted Police detachments, post offices,
schools, hospitals, nursing stations, and trading posts.
The Canadian National Railway and the Grand Trunk Railway System
are shown on a photostat map of southern Canada from We Serve the
Nation., by the Canadian National Railways, Montreal, 1950. Number of
tracks is indicated, and towns along the routes are named.
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The alignment of the Pacific Great Eastern Railway is presented
on Route of the Pacific Great Eastern Railway (no scale). Towns are
named along the route from Squamish to Quesnel, the only section that
is in operation. For the sections from Squamish to Vancouver and from
Quesnel to Prince George, which have not yet been constructed, the
proposed alignment is generalized.
Maps of the provinces published by Imperial Oil Limited are the
best road maps of Canada. The alignment, surface, and route numbers
of provincial highways and secondary roads are given. The alignment
and ownership of railroads are also shown, as well as airports, other
landing fields, principal seaplane bases, other seaplane anchorages,
and the approximate population of cities and towns. Terrain is in-
dicated by hachures-. Road maps are also published by the provincial
governments, but the cartography is not as good as that of the maps
prepared by Imperial Oil Limited.
A multiple map in 8 sheets, entitled Route of the Trans-Canada
Highway, covers the general route of the highway for 8 of the 10
provinces. Quebec and Nova Scotia are not included. Major towns
along the route @,re located and named on the highly generalized bases.
Air routes along with the names of the operating companies are
shown on a map entitled Airline Map of Canada (no scale). Vancouver
Island and the Maritime Provinces are shown on insets. The map is a
photostat from the Official Airline Guide, Vol.. 16, No. 10, July 1950.
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XI. Terrain Maps
Four categories of terrain features of Canada, excluding New-
foundland and Labrador, are shown by color on Canada, Terrain at
1:7,000,000 -- (1) mountains, (2) minor mountains and dissected
plateaus or uplands, (3) hill land, and (4) plains. Also indicated
are marshes, swamps, muskegs, glaciers, passes, and coastal features
such as cliffs and bluffs, sand, and mud. The base is generalized.
Another map of terrain is entitled Canada, at 1:6,750,000,
prepared at the Institute of Geographical Exploration, Harvard
University. Terrain is represented by pictorial symbols, and
notations on the map provide supplementary information as to the
character of the terrain. Place names and the most important railways
are included.
The terrain of northern British Columbia and the western Yukon
is shown on a map at 1:2,534,400 entitled Physiographic Subdivisions
of the Canadian Cordillera North of the Fifty-fifth Parallel. Six
categories of terrain are indicated by color, and mountains, plateaus,
and plains are named. On an inset at 1:12,600,000 the same categories
of terrain are given for the entire province of British Columbia and
the Yukon Territory.
XII. Climatic Maps
Two atlases, one of North America and the other of the Northern
Hemisphere, include climatic data for Canada. In addition, climatic
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factors are shown on several good one-sheet maps of Canada, as well as
on maps of a few of the provinces.
The Climatic Atlas of North America contains 26 black-and-white
climatic maps at 1:20,000,000. The Canadian parts of these maps were
prepared by A. J. Connor, of the Meteorological Service of Canada,
and his staff. Maps on the following subjects are included: sea-
level temperatures, actual temperature, mean annual range of tempera-
ture, mean annual maximum temperature, mean annual minimum temperature,
mean annual sea-level pressures, mean annual rainfall, mean rainfall
for 6 months of the year (every other month), mean annual snowfall,
average relative humidity for January and July, daytime cloudiness for
January and July, and mean number of days a year with thunderstorms.
These data are plotted on a generalized base that shows drainage and
province boundaries. No place names are included.
Three of the seven sections into which the Ice Atlas of the
Northern Hemisphere is divided contain maps showing various types of
ice conditions that occur in the seas surrounding Canada, as well as
in the Canadian rivers. The maps in the first section, which covers
the Northern Hemisphere, show 5 types of sea ice based on navigability,
3 categories of the limits of ice, and the location of icebergs and
floating ice for each month of the year. Also included in this section
are 5 maps that show 3 categories of the limits of ice based on data
from 1898 to 1938 for each month from April to August.
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The second section of the atlas contains three maps of the
Northern Hemisphere that show river ice in relation to navigation.
The aspects covered are the average date of closing of rivers to
navigation due to ice, the average opening date of rivers for
navigation, and the average annual number of days rivers are closed
by ice.
The maps of the third section, which covers the Grand Banks
region, show four types of ice based on navigability for each month
of the year. In addition the extreme limit of ice and the average
number of icebergs and growlers (small icebergs) are indicated. For
selected locations in the Grand Banks region, summary tables of ice
data are included. For each location the following information (if
available) is supplied in tabular form: date of first appearance of
ice, average date of closing and opening of navigation, date of final
disappearance of ice, annual number of days closed to navigation,
average annual number of days with ice, and average maximum thickness
of ice.
The bases for the maps in the atlas resemble H.O. charts and
are printed in black and white or black and gray, with ice information
indicated by other colors.
The best map available showing the location of weather stations
for Canada is Stations Reporting Synoptic Observations (no scale).
Since the data on the map are as of 1947, they are not up to date.
These stations, which report by wire or radio up to 4 times daily,
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are located by circles plotted on a black-and-white base that shows
a detailed drainage pattern and includes many place names. The
stations for Newfoundland and Labrador are indicated, but not those
in the extreme northern arctic islands.
The weather stations of northern Canada, many of which. are
operated jointly by the United States and Canada, are best shown on
a map entitled Northwest Territories -- Transportation and Communica-
tions at 1:10,000,000.
Precipitation stations in Canada are located by dots on Stations
Recording Precipitation, May 19+7 (no scale). The base,which is the
same as that used for stations reporting synoptic observations, has
also been used for maps showing stations that record maximum and
minimum temperatures, and stations that record wind and sunshine.
Northern Canada is not included.
The mean annual temperature for Canada is given on a map at
1:13,500,000, entitled Canada Mean Annual Temperature in Degrees
Fahrenheit Four Feet Above Ground, which is more recent than the map
included in the Climatic Atlas of North America. Isotherms are plotted
in blue on a black-and-white base that covers all of Canada. The
map is reprinted from an article by John L. Jenness, "Permafrost in
Canada," which was orginally published in Arctic (the journal of the
Arctic Institute of North America), Vol. 2, No. 1, May 1949.
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The best information in map form on permafrost in Canada is
found on Permafrost in Canada, Its Distribution and Approximate
Southern Limit, at 1:13,500,000. The data for the map were com-
piled by John L. Jenness for the article in Arctic. In addition to
indicating the tentative southern limit of continuous permafrost, the
map shows areas of continuous permafrost, areas where patches of
permafrost have been reported, and areas where permafrost has been
reported absent.
Five photostat maps from Technical Bulletin 40 and Technical
Bulletin 52 published by the Canadian Department of Agriculture present
climatic data for southern Saskatchewan. The maps show by isopleths
the average precipitation in inches for the period April to October,
the average length of the growing season in days, the average length
of period in days between the last killing frost of spring and first
killing frost of fall, and the mean temperature in summer (June, July,
and August). Average annual precipitation is indicated by shading.
The bases used for these maps have little detail and few place names.
Two photostat maps from Economic Geography, Vol. 15, No. 4,
October 1939, provide climatic information on New Brunswick. The mean
annual rainfall, as well as rainfall in the summer half of the year,
is shown by isohyets on an outline map that contains a minimum of base
data. On a similar base, July mean temperature in degrees Fahrenheit
is shown by isotherms, and number of days in the frost-free period are
shown by isopleths.
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Temperature and rainfall data for the province of Nova Scotia
are presented on two maps printed on one sheet, which were photostated
from Economic Geography, Vol. 15, No. 1, January 1939. The average
July temperature for Nova Scotia is shown by isotherms plotted on an
outline base on which the number of days in the frost-free season is
also indicated. Mean annual precipitation and rainfall during the
summer half of the year are shown by isopleths on a similar base.
The most recent and best maps on the climate of Newfoundland are
those included in an article entitled "The Climate of the Island of
Newfoundland," by F. Kenneth Hare, published in the Geographical
Bulletin, No. 2, 1952. The climatic data are superimposed on a base
that includes hypsometric tints and place names. The following
aspects of climate are included:
Mean air temperature, January
Mean monthly maximum temperature, January
Mean monthly minimum temperature, January
Mean air temperature, July
Date of beginning of persistent thaw
Date of beginning of persistent frost
Duration of season of persistent thaw
Mean annual precipitation (inches)
Mean annual snowfall (inches)
Start of vegetative season
Duration of vegetative season
Mean annual potential evapotranspiration (inches)
Moisture index
Moisture surplus (inches)
The frequency of fog over the marine approaches to Newfoundland for
June, July, August, and September is shown on an outline map of
Newfoundland and surrounding area.
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XIII. Soils Maps
Complete map coverage of the soils of Canada is not available,
but soils maps have been prepared for British Columbia, Alberta, and
southern Saskatchewan.
On British Columbia, Tentative Soil Zone Map at 1:3,350,000,
grassland, forest, alpine, and alluvial soils regions are identified.
The soil zones and subzones within the first three regions are
further subdivided, making a total of 15 categories of soils shown
on the nmap. A large part of the total area of the province, especially
in the north, has been left blank because the soils have not been
explored.
Soil zones of Alberta, as established by the Provincial Soils
Survey, are shown by colors on a Department of Lands and Mines base
map, which includes drainage, the transportation network, and place
names. Each of the six zones identified is discussed briefly on the
basis of climate, vegetation, fertility, and land use.
Four soil zones in southern Saskatchewan are shown on Map of the
Province of Saskatchewan Showing the Main Soil-Climatic Zones. This
photostat map from Technical Bulletin 40 of the Canadian Department
of Agriculture has only enough base data for orientation purposes.
XIV. Vegetation Maps
The distribution of forest regions is shown on two maps, both of
Canada south of 75?N. One of these gives a detailed forest
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classification, the other is more generalized. Maps showing vegetation
are available for only a few of the provinces of Canada.
The best and most detailed map available showing the distribution
of forests in Canada is Forest Classification of Canada and the Coast
of Labrador, a multicolored map at 1:6,336,000. Eleven forest regions
are differentiated by color, and the approximate boundary between the
eastern and western divisions of the boreal forest is shown. The
map was made to accompany A Forest Classification for Canada, Canada
Forest Service Bulletin 89, by W. E. D. Halliday, 1937.
The distribution of forests in Canada is also shown on a more
recent (1950) map entitled Canada Exclusive of Northern Regions,
Indicating Main Natural Resources at 1:6,336,000. This map is not
as detailed as the forest classification map. It shows only five
types of forest, but data for Newfoundland are included. In addition
to vegetation, mineral resources and agricultural areas are indicated.
The areal extent of seven species of trees is shown on a blue-
and-white map of Canada entitled Ranges of Various Tree Species in
Canada. The data, supplied by W. E. D. Halliday of the Canadian
Privy Council Office, are plotted on a base at 1:6,336,000 published
by the Surveys and Mapping Branch.
Five regional types of forests for the area including the Yukon,
the western District of Mackenzie, northern British Columbia, and
northern Alberta are shown on Forest Types, at 1:5,068,000, from
Canada's New Northwest, North Pacific Planning Project, Ottawa, 1947.
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The percentage of wooded land in the Ontario peninsula is mapped
on Proportion of Wooded Land in Southern Ontario (no scale). This
map, which is from Report of the Ontario Royal Commission on Forestry,
1947, indicates wooded land according to five categories of percent-
ages. The outline base gives the major lakes and a few place names.
The distribution of moss-barren land in Newfoundland is shown
on a map entitled Newfoundland, General Location of Barren Land, from
An Introduction to the Geography of Newfoundland, by B. V. Gutsell,
Geographical Bureau, Ottawa, 1949.
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Bibliography
Canada; 1:6,336,000; Surveys and Mapping Branch, Canada Depart-
ment of Mines and Technical Surveys; 1951; graticule; CIA Map
Library Call No. 80690. Unclassified.
Map of Manitoba, Southern Portion; 1:506,880; Surveys Branch,
Manitoba Department of Mines and Natural Resources; 19112;
marginal graticule indicators; CIA Map Library Call No. 80703.
Unclassified.
Map of the Southern Part of the Province of Saskatchewan;
1:633,600; Saskatchewan Department of Public Works; 1948; mar-
ginal graticule indicators; CIA Map Library Call No. 80286.
Unclassified.
The Southern Part of the Province of Ontario; 1:506,880; Surveys
an Engineering Division, Ontario Department of Lands and
Forests; 1950; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 80294. Un-
classified.
New Brunswick; 1:633,600; Topographical Survey of Canada, De-
partment of the Interior; 1935; graticule; CIA Map Library Call
No. 31439. Unclassified.
Ten Mile Map of Newfoundland; 1:633,600; Crown Lands and Surveys
Branch, Newfoundland Department of Natural Resources; 1941;
marginal graticule indicators; CIA Map Library Call No. 45735.
Unclassified.
Map is also referred to under Population Maps.
Newfoundland; :1,350,0007; no authority; 1949; graticule stubs
CIA Map Library Call No. 68765. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat copy of a map in Newfoundland: A Study
in Political Geography , Ph.D. Thesis by Veva Kathern Dean,
Clark University, 1949.
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2. Population Maps
Distribution of Population, Canada, 1941; no scale; no authority;
no date; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 24391. Un-
classified.
janada7; various scales; Canada Post Office Department; 1944-
8; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 80661. Unclassified.
Distribution of Population, 1950; 1:12,000,000; Canada Department
of National Health and Welfare; 1950; graticule values indicated
in margin; CIA Map Library Call No. 80422. Restricted.
Canadian Arctic: Eskimo Population 1950 Estimate; 1:16,000,000;
Geographical Branch, Canada Department of Mines and Technical
Surveys; 1951; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 79451. Un-
classified.
Map is from An Introduction to the Geography of the Canadian
Arctic, Geographical Branch, Canada Department of Mines and
Technical Surveys, Ottawa, 1951.
Northwest Territories and Yukon -- Eskimo Registration Districts;
1:5,068,800; Arctic Division, Canada Department of Resources and
Development; 1950; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 80299.
Unclassified.
Distribution of Population, Prairie Provinces, 19)-i-6.; 1:8,500,000;
no authority; Z1947/; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No.
69177. Unclassified.
L/Toreign Culture Groups in the Prairie Provinces7; no scale; no
authority; #9L77; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 69313.
Unclassified.
Map is from A Study of Cool Continental Environments and
their Effects on British and French Settlement by Griffith
Taylor,'London, 19147.
fistribution of Population, Manitoba, 19367; no scale; no
authority; 1938; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 70387.
Unclassified.
Map is from Report No. 1 of the Manitoba Economic Survey
Board, Winnipeg, January 1938.
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Distribution of Population, Newfoundland, 1945; no scale; no
authority; 1950 ; no graticule; CIA Ma:p Library Call No. 45694.
Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from the Canada Year Book, 1950, Ottawa,
1950.
Ten Mile Map of Newfoundland; 1:633,600; Crown Lands and Surveys
Branch, Newfoundland Department of Natural Resources; 1941; mar-
ginal graticule indicators; CIA Map Library Call No. 45735. Un-
classified.
Map is also referred to under Political Maps.
Newfoundland -- Shift in Population, 19,21-1945; ff:1,350,0007;
no authority; 1949 ; graticule stubs; CIA Map Library Call No.
68762. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from Newfoundland: A Study in Political
Geography, Ph.D. Thesis by Veva Kathern Dean, Clark
University, 1949.
North Atlantic Ocean; Grand Banks to Davis Strait ZC7ul.tural
Aspects of Ten Selected Villages - 1951-/'; 2,503,572; no
authority; 1941; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 71732-R.
Confidential.
3. Health and Health Facilities Maps
Hospitals and Hospital Service Areas, 1950; :12,000,0007;
Canada Department of National Health and Welfare; 1950; graticule
values indicated in margin; CIA Map Library Call No. 80424.
Restricted.
Facilities Provided b the Department of National Health and
Welfare -- 1950; 1:12,000,000 ; Canada Department of National
Health and Welfare; 1950; graticule values indicated in margin;
CIA Map Library Call No. 80423. Restricted.
North Atlantic Ocean Grand Banks to Davis Strait Including
Coasts of Newfoundland, Labrador, and Southwestern Part of Green-
land Showing Medical Facilities -- 1951_ ;,1:2,503,572; no
authority; 1941; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 76150-R.
Restricted.
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Distribution of Poliomyelitis, 1900-1950; 1:30,000,000; American
Geographical Society; 1950; graticule stubs; CIA Map Library
Call No. 71578. Unclassified.
Map was included in the Geographical Review, Vol. 40, No. 4,
1950.
Agriculture and Land Use Maps
Canada: Type of Farming Areas, 1941; 1:6,336,000; Agricultural
Economics Division, Canada Department of Agriculture; 1948; no
graticule; CIA Map Library Call No: 77935. Unclassified.
Map is from Types of Farming in Canada, by S. C. Hudson,
Ottawa, 1949.
Canada Exclusive of Northern Regions, Indicating Main Natural
Resources; 1:6,336,000; Surveys and Mapping Branch, Canada De-
partment of Mines and Technical Surveys; 1950; graticule; CIA
Map Library Call No. 77179. Unclassified.
This map is also referred to under maps showing the dis-
tribution of fish and of vegetation.
_/Tarming, in Canada7; 22 maps with no scales; no authority; 1948;
no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 77934. Unclassified.
Maps are from Types of Farming in Canada, by S. C. Hudson,
Ottawa, 1949.
Agriculture; 1:5,068,800; Mines and Geology Branch, Canada De-
partment, of Mines and Resources; 1947; graticule; CIA Map Library
Call No. 64510. Unclassified.
Map is from Canada's New Northwest, North Pacific Planning
Project, Ottawa, 1947.
British Columbia and Portions of Yukon, Alaska, Alberta, and
Northwest Territories; L1:)4,750,000/; Surveys Branch, British
Columbia Department of Lands; 1947; no graticule; CIA Map Library
Call No. 76592. Unclassified.
Map is from Pacific Great Eastern Railway, British Columbia
Department of Railways, Victoria, 1949."
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Wheat Yield Map and Grain Acreage and Production Ma ; no scale;
Sanford vans and Company, Ltd.; 1943; no graticule; CIA Map
Library Call No. 69227. Unclassified.
Types of Farming Areas in Saskatchewan; no scale; no authority;
J1942/; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 69410. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from Technical Bulletin 4-0 of the
Canada Department of Agriculture, 1942.
Map of Southern Saskatchewan Showing the Average Yields of Wheat
per Acre by Municipalities, 191,b-193 ; no scale; no authority;
J1942/; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call 'No. 69412. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from Technical Bulletin 40 of the
Canada Department of Agriculture, 1942.
Map of Southern Saskatchewan, Showing Average Variability of
Wheat Yield per Acre by Municipalities, 1913-1935; no scale;
no authority; 1942; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 69411.
Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from Technical Bulletin 40 of the Canada
Department of Agriculture, 1942.
fontario Peninsula -- Agriculture and Land Use7; 1:2,250,000; no
authority; ff9387; graticule stubs; CIA Map Library Call No.
69673. Unclassified.
Maps are photostats from "Agricultural Gradients in Southern
Ontario," by J. R. Whitaker, Economic Geography, Vol. 14,
No. 2, April 1938.
fontario Peninsula, Dairy Areas and Production7; 1:2,250,000; no
authority; 9407; graticule stubs; CIA Map Library Call No. 69607.
Unclassified.
Maps are photostats from "Distribution of Dairy Farming in
Peninsular Ontario," by J. R. Whitaker, Economic Geography,
Vol. 16, No. 1, January 1940.
Proportion of Waste Land in Southern Ontario; no scale; Ontario
Royal Commission on Forestry; L1947/; no graticule; CIA Map
Library Call No. 69271. Unclassified.
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Agricultural. Development of New Brunswick]; 1:3,250,000; no
authority; 1939; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 69432.
Unclassified.
Maps are photostats from "Agricultural Development of New
Brunswick," by D. F. Putnam, Economic Geography, Vol.15,
No. 4, October 1939.
iova Scotia - Agriculture and Land Use7; 1:2,250,000; no
authority; 1939; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 69349.
Unclassified.
Maps are photostats from "Farm Distribution in Nova Scotia,"
by D. F. Putnam, Economic Geography, Vol. 15, No. 1,
January 1939.
5. Maps of Animal Life
Distribution of Game and Fur Bearing- Mammals; various scales;
no authority; 1933 ; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 63389.
Unclassified.
Maps are photostats from Proceedings of the Fifth Pacific
Science Congress, 1933, Vol. 5, Toronto , 193
Fur Production in Mackenzie District, N.W.T.; :6,500,0007;
no authority; 191-!.7/; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 68962.
Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from The New Northwest, C. A. Dawson
(Ed.), Toronto, 1947-
Canada Exclusive of Northern Regions, Indicatin Main Natural
Resources; 1:6,33b,000; Surveys and Mapping Branch, Canada De-
partment of Mines and Technical Surveys; 1950; graticule; CIA
Map Library Call No. 77179. Unclassified.
This map is also referred to under maps of agriculture and
vegetation.
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6. Mineral Resources Maps
Canada: Principal Mining Areas and Producing Mines. Man gOOA;
1:7,,603,200; Mines Branch and Geological Survey of Canada, De-
partment of Mines and Technical Surveys; (second edition),
1952; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 77595. Unclassified.
Mineral Map of British Columbia, Map 1008A; 1:1,267,000;
Geological Survey of Canada, Department of Mines and Technical
Surveys; 1951; graticule; Army Map Service Call No. 12A 1-9-1315-
1,267. Unclassified.
Mineral Map of Saskatchewan, Map 896A; 1:1,267,200; Mines and
Geology Branch, Canada Department of Mines and Resources; 1947;
graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 80701. Unclassified.
Mineral Map of Manitoba, Map 851A; 1:1,267,200; Mines and Geology
Branch, Manitoba Department of Mines and Resources; 1.946;
graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 31043. Unclassified.
Map of the Province of Nova Scotia; 1:500,000; Nova Scotia De-
partment of Mines; 1935; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No.
80290. Unclassified.
Mines and Mineral Resources of Newfoundland; :1,300,0007;
Newfoundland Geological Survey; 1937; no graticule; CIA Map
Library Call No. 73478. Unclassified.
Map is from Mines and Mineral Resources of Newfoundland,
by A. K. Snelgrove, St. John's, 1938.
Map Showing Coal Deposits and Coal Resources of Canada;
1:12,500,000; Mines and Geology Branch, Canada Department of
Mines and Resources; 1946; graticule; Army'Map Service Call No.
1-9-1302-12,000. Unclassified.
Coalfields of the Cordilleran Region; 1:8,500,000; Geological
Survey of Canada, Department of Mines and Resources; 1947;
graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 68708. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from Geology and Economic Minerals of
Canada, by the Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa, (third
edition), 1947.
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Coalfields of Eastern Canada; :2,550,0007; no authority; T9477;
gra cu.e; CIA Map Library Call No. 68703. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from Geology and Economic Minerals of Canada,
Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa, (third edition), 1947.
Principal Coal, Iron Ore, and Iron and Steel Areas in Relation to
the St. Lawrence Seaway; 1:15,000,000; Geological Survey of Canada
and Mines ranch, Department of Mines and Technical Surveys; 952?7;
no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 799+9. Unclassified.
Province of Ontario and Parts of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan
owing rinc p iron anges; ,300,0 ; no authority; 1945; no
graticu e; CIA Map rary all No. 63935. Unclassified.
Central Portion of the Iron Ore Area; 1:255,000; no authority; LT9~+97;
graticule; CIA Map Li rary all No. 61923. Unclassified.
Uranium Industry; :15,000,0007; no authority; 997; graticule;
CIA Map Library Call No. 61856. Restricted.
Oil and Gas in Western Canada; 1:4,200,000; Nickle Map Service, in
Wow rld oil, Vol. 135, No. 7, December 1952; no graticule; available
at U.S. Geological Survey Library. Unclassified.
Alberta Showing Oil and Gas Fields and Potential Gas Areas; 1:1,267,200;
eo ogica Survey of Canada, Department of Mines and Technical
Surveys; 1951; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 74732. Un-
classified.
World Oil's 1952 Oil Map of North America (Exclusive of the United
tates three maps at various scales; in World Oil, International
Operations Issue, 15 July 1952; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No.
pA000 W63 1952. Unclassified.
Pipe Lines of Canada; 1:19,000,000; Nickle Map Service, in World
Oil, Vol. 135, No. 7, December 1952; no graticule; available at U.S.
Geological Survey Library. Unclassified.
Edmonton-Superior Pipeline; Li:6,750,0007; no authority; 9507; no
graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 70818. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from Developments and Prospects in Canadian
Oil, by John F. Fairlie, 1950.
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Map is a photostat of the enclosure to WDGS Report 997-49,
Army Attache, Ottawa, 14 October 1949. Unclassified.
Electric Transmission Systems in British Columbia; 1:550,000;
Dominion Water and Power Bureau, Canada Department of Mines and
Resources; 1942; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 64261.
Unclassified.
ffrincipal Refineries of Canad 7; :8,000,0007; no authority;
1949; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 64635. Unclassified.
Map Showing Pulp and Paper Industries in Canada and Newfoundland;
1:6,350,000; Lands, Parks and Forests Branch, Canada Department
of Mines and Resources; 1945; graticule; CIA Map Library Call
No. 64201. Unclassified.
Map Showing Sawmills of Eastern Canada; 1:2,300,000; Lands,
Parks and Forests Branch, Canada Department of Mines and
Resources; 1941; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 64203.
Unclassified.
Map Showing Sawmills of Western Canada; 1:1,950,000; Lands,
Parks and Forests Branch, Canada Department of Mines and Re-
sources; 1941; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 64202.
Unclassified.
Location of Sawmills and Pulp and Paper Mills; 1:3,250,000;
Ontario Royal Commission on Forestry; / 97:7T; no graticule; CIA
Map Library Call No. 69276. Unclassified.
8. Power Maps
Water Powers of the Dominion of Canada; 1:6,336,000; Engineering
and Water Resources Branch, Canada Department of Resources and
Development; 1951; graticule stubs; CIA Map Library Call No.
80650. Unclassified.
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Central Electric Stations and Transmission Systems in Alberta,
Saskatchewan, and Manitoba; 1:1,400,000; Dominion Water and Power
Bureau, Canada Department of Mines and Resources; 1948; no
graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 64260. Unclassified.
Central Electric Stations and Transmission Systems in Western
Ontario; 1-1,150,000; Dominion Water and Power Bureau, Canada
Department of Mines and Resources; 1949; no graticule; CIA
Map.Library Call No. 64264. Unclassified.
Electric Transmission Systems'in Part of Ontario and in Quebec;
1:1,100,000; Dominion Water and Power Bureau, Canada Department
of Mines and Resources; 1945; no graticule; CIA Map Library
Call No. 64262. Unclassified..
Electric Transmission Systems in Province of Quebec; 1:630,000;
minion Water and Power Bureau, Canada Department of Mines and
Resources; 1943; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 64265.
Unclassified.
Electric Transmission Systems in New Brunswick, Nova Scotia
and Prince Edward Island; 1:625,000; Dominion Water and Power
Bureau, Canada Department of Mines and Resources; 1944; no
graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 64263. Unclassified.
Water Power; 1:5,068,800; Dominion Water and Power Bureau,
Canada Department of Mines and Resources; 9477; graticule;
CIA Map Library Call No. 64512. Unclassified.
Map is from Canada's New Northwest, Northwest Planning Pro-
ject, Ottawa, 1977-.
Map of Newfoundland Showing Surveyed Water Powers; 1:960,000;
Newfoundland Department of Natural Resources; 1938; graticule;
CIA Map Library Call No. 73480. Unclassified.
9. Maps of Commerce and Trade
Settlements and Trading Posts, 1950; :12,000,0007; Canada De-
partment of National Health and Welfare; 1950; graticule values
indicated in margin; CIA Map Library Call No. 80421. Restricted.
Map of the Dominion of Canada Showing the Establishments of the
Hudson's Bay Company; 1:6,336,000; Fur Trade Department, Hudson's
Bay Company; 19 7; graticule; Army Map Service Call No. A
1-26-1337-6,336. Unclassified.
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10. Transportation Maps
Canada; 1:4,055,040; Surveys and Mapping Bureau, Canada Depart-
ment of Mines and Resources; 1947; graticule; CIA Map Library
Call No. 49745. Unclassified.
Transportation and Communication, 1950; :12,000,0007; Canada
Department of National Health and Welfare; 9507; graticule
values indicated in margin; CIA Map Library Call No. 80420.
Restricted.
Transportation; 1:5,068,800; Mines and Geology Branch, Canada
Department of Mines and Resources; 1194j7; graticule; CIA Map
Library Call No. 64513. Unclassified.
Transportation Facilities Northwestern Canada -- 1950;
1:3,200,000; Surveys and Mapping Branch, Canada Department of
Mines and Technical Surveys; 1950; graticule; CIA Map Library
Call No. 67900. Unclassified.
Canadian National Railways, Grand Trunk Railwa System, Central
Vermont System; no scale; no authority; 1950 ; no graticule;
CIA Map Library Call No. 71515. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from We Serve the Nation, Canadian.
National Railways, Montreal, 1950.
Route of the Pacific Great Eastern Railw; no scale; no
authority'; Z1951/; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 73631.
Unclassified.
Alberta and British Columbia Road Ma ; 11:2,000,00; Imperial
Oil, Ltd.; 1949; atlas grid; CIA Map Library Call No. 67723.
Unclassified.
Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Western Ontario; 11:l,800,0007;
Imperial Oil, Ltd.; 1949; atlas grid; CIA Map Library Call No.
67721. Unclassified.
Ontario Road Map; 11:1,750,000 and 1:950,0027; Imperial oil,
Ltd ; 1950; atlas grid; CIA Map Library Call No. 67596.
Unclassified.
Quebec Road Map; 5:900,000 and 1:1,600,00; Imperial Oil, Ltd.;
1949; atlas grid; CIA Map Library Call No. 61702. Unclassified.
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Maritime Provinces; :1,350,0007; Imperial Oil, Ltd.; 1952;
atlas grid; CIA Map Library Call No. 81127. Unclassified.
Map of Newfoundland and Labrador; :1,350,0007; Imperial
Oil, Ltd.; 1949; atlas grid and graticule stubs; CIA Map
Library Call No. 61635. Unclassified.
Route of Trans-Canada Highway; various scales; Geographical
Branch, Canada Department of Mines and Technical Surveys;
9507; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 73123. Un-
classified.
Airline Map of Canada; no scale; American Aviation Publications,
Inc.; 1950 ; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 68512.
Unclassified.
Map is.a photostat from official Airline Guide, Vol. 6,
No. 10, July 1950, Chicago, Ill.
11. Terrain Maps
Canada, Terrain; :7,000,0007; Military Intelligence Division,
U. S. War Department; no date; graticule; CIA 9186-C.
Unclassified.
Canada; :6,750,0007; Erwin Raisz, Institute of Geographical
Exploration, Harvard University; 1949; graticule; CIA Map
Library Call No. 80659. Unclassified.
Physiographic Subdivisions of the Canadian Cordillera North of
the Fifty-fifth Parallel, Map 922A; 1:2,534,000; Mines an
Geology Branch, Canada Departmen of Mines and Resources; 1947;
graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 38657. Unclassified.
12. Climatic Maps
Climatic Atlas of North America; Charles F. Brooks, A. J. Connor,
and others; 1936; maps at 1:20,000,000; graticule; Library of
Congress Call No. Gl106, C8B7, 1936. Unclassified.
Ice Atlas of the Northern Hemisphere; U.S. Navy Hydrographic
Office; 1946; maps at various scales; graticule; CIA Library
Call No. 31 623.5 U59. Unclassified.
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Stations Reporting Synoptic Observations; no scale; Meteorological
Division, Can a Department of Transport; 1947; graticule; CIA
Map Library Call No. 80654. Unclassified.
Northwest Territories -- Transportation and Communications;
1:10,000,000; Northern Administration and Lands Branch, Canada
Department of Resources and Development; 1952; graticule stubs;
CIA Map Library Call No. 81900. Unclassified.
Stations Recording Precipitation, May 1941; no scale; Meteoro-
logical Division, Canada Department of Transport; 1947; graticule;
CIA Map Library Call No. 80653. Unclassified.
Stations Recording Maximum and Minimum Temperatures; no scale;
Meteorological Division, Canada Department of Transport; 1947;
graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 80662. Unclassified.
Stations Recording Wind and Sunshine; no scale; Meteorological
Division, Canada Department of Transport; 1947; graticule; CIA
Map Library Call No. 80652. Unclassified.
Canada Mean Annual Temperature in Degrees Fahrenheit Four Feet
Above Ground; 1:13,500,000; Canada Department of National Defence;
194; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 70353. Unclassified.
Map is reprinted from "Permafrost in Canada," by John L.
Jenness, Arctic, Journal of the Arctic Institute of North
America, Vol. 2, No. 1, May 1949.
Permafrost in Canada, Its Distribution and Approximate Southern
Limit; 1:13,500,000; Canada Department of National Defence;
1948; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 69179. Unclassified.
Map is from "Permafrost in Canada," by John L. Jenness,
Arctic, Journal of the Arctic Institute of North America,
Vol. 2, No. 1, May 1949.
Average Precipitation (Inches) April to October Inclusive; no
scale; no authority; Z1945/; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call
No. 69403. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from Technical Bulletin 52 of the Canada
Department of Agriculture, June 1945.
Map of Saskatchewan Showing Average Length in Days of Growing
Season; no scale; no authority; 1942 ; no graticule; CIA Map
Library Call No. 69408. Unclassified.
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Map is a photostat from Technical Bulletin 40 of the Canada
Department of Agriculture, 1942.
Average Length of Period in Days Between Last Killing Frost of
Spring 29` Fahr.) and First Killing Frost of Fall; no scale;
no authority; L19/; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No.
69406. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from Technical Bulletin 52 of the
Canada Department of Agriculture, 1945.
Mean Temperature in Summer (Fahr.) -- June July and August; no
scale; no authority; J1945/; no graticule; CIA Map Library Call
No. 69405. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from Technical Bulletin 52 of the Canada
Department of Agriculture, 1945.
Map of Southern Saskatchewan Showing Crop Districts and Long-
time Average Annual Precipitation; no scale; no authority; 19427;
no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 69407. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from Technical Bulletin 40 of the Canada
Department of Agriculture, 1942.
New Brunswick: Rain, 1:3,250,000; no authority; 9397; no
graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 69461. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from "Agricultural Development of New
Brunswick," by D. F. Putnam, Economic Geography, Vol. 15,
No. 4, October 1939. Unclassified.
New Brunswick: Temperature; 1:3,250,000; no authority; 59327;
no graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 69461. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from "Agricultural Development of New
Brunswick," by D. F. Putnam, Economic Geography, Vol. 15,
No. 4, October 1939. Unclassified.
Nova Scotia Temperature; 1:2,250,000; no authority; 9397; no
gra c e; CIA Map Library Call No. 69348. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from "Farm Distribution in Nova Scotia,"
by D. F. Putnam, Economic Geography, Vol. 15, No. 1, January
1939. Unclassified.
Nova Scotia Rainfall; 1:2,250,000; no authority; 9397; no grati-
cul.e, CIA Map Library Call No. 69348. Unclassified.
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Map is a photostat from "Farm Distribution in Nova Scotia,"
by D. F. Putnam, Economic Geography', Vol. 15, No. 1,
January 1939. Unclassified.
flimatic maps of Newfoundland7; LT:4,5CO,0027; Geographical
Branch, Canada Department of Mines and Technical Surveys; 1951;
graticule stubs; in "The Climate of the Island of Newfoundland,"
by F. Kenneth Hare, Geographical Bulletin, No. 2, 1952.
Unclassified.
13. Soils Maps
British Columbia, Tentative Soil Zone Map; 1:3,350,000; no
authority; 1949; graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 7.1428.
Unclassified.
Soil Zones of Alberta; no scale; Alberta Soil Surveys; 1945; no
graticule; CIA Map Library Call No. 80298. Unclassified.
Map of the Province of Saskatchewan Shoving the Main Soil.
Climatic Zones; no scale; no authority; Z1942/; no graticule;
CIA Map Library Call No. 69409. Unclassified.
Map is from Technical Bulletin 40 of the Canada Department
of Agriculture, March 1942.
14. Vegetation Maps
Forest Classification of Canada and the Coast of Labrador;
1:6,336,000; Lands, Parks, and Forest Branch, Canada Department
of Mines and Resources; 1937; graticule; CIA Map Library Call
No. 63515. Unclassified.
Map is from A Forest Classification for Canada, by W. E. D.
Halliday, Canada Forest Service Bulletin 89, Ottawa, 1937.
Canada Exclusive of Northern Regions, Indicating Main Natural
Resources; 1:6,336,600; Surveys and Mapping Branch, Canada
Department of Mines and Technical Surveys; 1950; graticule; CIA
Map Library Call No. 77179. Unclassified.
This map is also referred to under maps showing distribution
of agriculture and fish.
The Ranges of Various Tree Species in Canada; 1:6,336,000;
Surveys and Engineering Branch, Canada Department of Mines and
Resources; 1943; graticule; Army Mast Service Call No.
A 1-12-1312-6,336/2. Unclassified.
Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIV`79-01009A000400050002-1
Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A000400050002-1
SECRET
Forest Types; 1:5,068,800; Mines and Geology Branch, Canada
epar men of Mines and Resources; 1947; graticule; CIA
Map Library Call No. 64511. Unclassified.
Map is from Canada's New Northwest, North Pacific Planning
Project, Ottawa, 1947.
Newfoundland, General Location of Barren Land; LT:2,300,0007;
Geographical Bureau, Canada Department of Mines and Resources;
1948; graticule stubs; CIA Map Library Call No. 74776.
Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from An Introduction to the Geography
of Newfoundland,by B. V. Gutsell, Ottawa, 1949.
Proportion of Wooded Land in Southern Ontario; no scale;
Ontario Royal Commission on Forestry; 19 7 ; no graticule; CIA
Map Library Call No. 69270. Unclassified.
Map is a photostat from Report of the Ontario Royal Com-
mission on Forestry, 1947.
SECRET
Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A000400050002-1
Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A000400050002-1
CONFIDENTIAL
&WMFR; Now
Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A000400050002-1