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The Alaska-Siberia Telegraph | Geophysical Institute The plan for the Alaska-Siberia Telegraph was originated by Perry McDonough Collins, while undertaking a commercial venture in the Amur Valley of Siberia Collins envisioned an intercontinental telegraph link from California, north through British Columbia, across Russian America to Siberia, via the Bering Strait, and across Siberia to Europe
Messages in a Raven Rattle | Geophysical Institute Recently I had the chance to spend an afternoon in the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia, home of a splendid collection of Pacific Northwest Native art It's a place worth a pilgrimage The spectacular building, designed by Canada's famous architect Arthur Erickson, echoes themes borrowed from a Haida longhouse; it's constructed so that one gallery is tall enough to
The Shuttle Red Aurora | Geophysical Institute By glowing red on Sunday night, April 12, 1981, the heavens over the United States displayed their pleasure with the successful flight of the shuttle Columbia Perhaps because Columbia was up that night, more Americans than usual looked up at the sky and saw the red aurora that covered much of the nation, even as far south as Texas
Exporting Water | Geophysical Institute Suppose that there were a means to collect a part of the rainfall from a portion of southeast Alaska or British Columbia the size of the Queen Charlotte Islands, about 4,000 square miles Considering the huge rainfall in these areas, it might be feasible to collect four feet of the annual rainfall without it even being missed
Avalanches, Landslides, Good For Some | Geophysical Institute University of British Columbia researcher Roger Ramcharita followed radio-tagged grizzly bears' spring wanderings in the Columbia Mountains While avalanche tracks made up only 10 percent of Ramcharita's study area, bears spent 40 percent of their time there eating avalanche-lily roots and other early-blooming plants
Evidence Piling Up for Coastal Migration Route A few summers ago, archaeologist Joanne McSporran saw a sharp black rock in a pile of gravel pulled from the seafloor off British Columbia
The El Nino of the North and Salmon | Geophysical Institute The salmon disparity occurred again in 1972, then most recently in 1994, when Alaska fisherman broke a record for salmon harvest while Washington and Oregon managers were forced to close the chinook fishery on the Columbia because so few fish were returning
February 1979 Eclipse | Geophysical Institute The same is true of the Fairbanks area, where sunrise will be about 7 28 a m Residents of British Columbia and southeastern Alaska should begin observing at sunrise At Ketchikan the maximum coverage of the sun will be at 6:30 a m Pacific Standard time, and about ten minutes later at Whitehorse
Boulders, Braids, and J Harlan Bretz | Geophysical Institute One such break in earthly monotony appears in Cataclysms on the Columbia, a book sent by a geologist who knows my fondness for reading about catastrophe, and who also understands that my readings in popular geology should extend beyond books by the estimable John McPhee Written by two geologists and a professor of English, Cataclysms on the Columbia describes the great outburst floods that