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to encourage an awareness of Canada's maritime heritage; To those ends, the Society publishes in association with the North American Society for Oceanic History a quarterly journal The Northern Mariner/Le marin du nord and a quarterly newsletter Argonauta; holds an annual conference; and makes several awards: [2]
Humans have been present in the Canadian Maritime provinces for 10,600 years. In spite of being the first part of Canada to be settled by Europeans, research into the prehistory of the Maritimes did not become extensive until 1969. By the early 1980s, several full-time archaeologists focused on the region. [1]
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Pages in category "Maritime history of Canada" ... Canada (1891) Canadian Arctic Expedition, 1913–1916 ...
In December 2011, the Society changed its name to Naval Marine Archive: The Canadian Collection by supplementary letters patent. [1] The society specializes in maritime heritage and history - steam and sail, naval, merchant and yachting, mostly Canada/US and Europe, mostly 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries.
Significant events, units, places and people associated with Canadian naval history. Subcategories This category has the following 7 subcategories, out of 7 total.
The Vancouver Maritime Museum is a maritime museum devoted to presenting the maritime history of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and the Canadian Arctic. Opened in 1959 [ 1 ] as a Vancouver centennial project, it is located within Vanier Park just west of False Creek on the Vancouver waterfront. [ 2 ]
The Maritime Art Association (1935–1945) was a Canadian regional alliance of art clubs and societies, public schools, universities, social organizations, service and civic groups, artists, art students and art appreciators. As the first organization of its type in Canada, the Association offered Maritimers a more democratic and populist arena ...
Canadian maritime law" means the law that was administered by the Exchequer Court of Canada on its Admiralty side by virtue of the Admiralty Act, chapter A-1 of the Revised Statutes of Canada, 1970, or any other statute, or that would have been so administered if that Court had had, on its Admiralty side, unlimited jurisdiction in relation to ...