Introduction
Yukon
Territory, administrative region of northwestern
Canada. Its capital and largest city is Whitehorse.
To the outsider the Yukon Territory remains inextricably
associated with the rush for gold in the Klondike
region at the end of the 19th century. The territory
still depends largely on mining. Its mountainous
terrain and severe climate have discouraged settlement
and the development of other important economic
activities. Furthermore, most of the minerals
are produced by mining operations that require
a high degree of technology but relatively few
workers.
The Yukon presents a major challenge to modern
technology because of the existence of permanently
frozen earth, known as permafrost, which lies
just below the ground surface. Permafrost blankets
the Arctic zones and extends into many southern
parts of the Yukon. Any warmth, whether from
household heating or spells of mild weather,
is likely to melt the top layers of the permafrost.
As a result, roadbeds and building foundations
have to be insulated from the permafrost to prevent
them from sinking.
Physical Geography
The Yukon lies north of the 60th parallel of
north latitude and partly within the Arctic Circle.
Its area is 482,440 sq km (186,270 sq mi), including
8,052 sq km (3,109 sq mi) of inland water. The
area of the Yukon Territory accounts for slightly
less than 5 percent of Canada’s total area.
Natural Regions
The entire territory belongs to the physiographic
province of Canada called the Cordilleran Region,
or Cordillera. In the Yukon the Eastern System
of the Cordillera contains a fringe of the Mackenzie
Mountains as well as the Selwyn Mountains and
the Richardson Mountains. The Interior System
of the Cordillera is represented in the Yukon
chiefly by the large Yukon Plateau. Through this
plateau run the Yukon’s major rivers, including
the Yukon, Klondike, Pelly, Stewart, Peel, and
Porcupine rivers. The rivers have cut valleys
in the plateau that are in some cases 300 to
600 m (1,000 to 2,000 ft) deep. The Yukon’s
longest lakes, Kluane and Aishihik, are at the
southern end of the plateau. Away from the river
valleys, the plateau is generally rugged and
rolling with an average elevation of about 1,200
m (about 4,000 ft) above sea level. To the southwest
of the plateau lie the rugged peaks of the Saint
Elias Mountains, which belong to the Coast Ranges
of western North America and thus are classified
with the Western System of the Cordillera. This
mountain system contains the highest mountains
in the Yukon, including 5,959-m (19,551-ft) Mount
Logan, the highest peak in Canada. The Saint
Elias Mountains also contain the mountain that
was named for United States president John F.
Kennedy after his assassination in 1963. In 1972
Kluane National Park and Reserve, the first national
park in the Yukon, was established. Covering
22,000 sq km (8,500 sq mi) in the Saint Elias
Mountains, it contains dramatic ice fields and
much wildlife as well as Canada’s highest
mountains.
Source: MSN
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