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         Northwest Territories Regional History:     more books (22)
  1. True North: The Yukon and Northwest Territories (Illustrated History of Canada) by William R. Morrison, 1998-07-16
  2. Exploring Our Educational Past: Schooling in the Northwest Territories and Alberta by Nick Kach, Kas Mazurek, 1992-08-15
  3. The Boundaries between Us: Natives and Newcomers along the Frontiers of the Old Northwest Territory, 1750-1850
  4. Tour of the American Lakes, and Among the Indians of the North-West Territory, in 1830 (Volume 01); Disclosing the Character and Prospects of by Calvin Colton, 2010-01-01
  5. Alone in Silence: European Women in the Canadian North Before 1940 (Mcgill-Queen's Native and Northern Series, 27.) by Barbara E. Kelcey, 2001-11
  6. North of Athabasca: Slave Lake and Mackenzie River Documents of the North West Company, 1800-1821 (Rupert's Land Record Society Series)
  7. Hunters at the Margin: Native People and Wildlife Conservation in the Northwest Territories (Nature/History/Society) by John Sandlos, 2007-05-31
  8. Tour of the American Lakes, and Among the Indians of the North-West Territory, in 1830 (2) by Calvin Colton, 2009-12-16
  9. Tour Of The American Lakes And Among The Indians Of The Northwest Territory Disclosing The Character And Prospects Of The Indian Race 1833 by Calvin Colton, 2005-05-17
  10. Unravelling the Franklin Mystery: Inuit Testimony (Mcgill-Queen's Native and Northern Series) by David C. Woodman, 1991-10
  11. Memory, Community, And Activism: Mexican Migration And Labor in the Pacific Northwest by Jerry Garcia, Gilberto Garcia, 2005-12-30
  12. The Northwest Coast: Or, Three Years' Residence in Washington Territory (Washington Paperbacks, Wp-62) by James Gilchrist Swan, 1992-08
  13. Pike's Portage by Morten Ashfeldt, 2010-01-30
  14. As Long As This Land Shall Last: A History of Treaty 8 and Treaty 11, 1870-1939 by Rene Fumoleau, 2004-04

41. NHBS Science Bookstore: Regional Natural History: Americas
Handbooks Alberta and the northwest territories view Andrew National Audubon SocietyRegional Nature Guide America's Outdoors Pacific northwest view Bob
http://www.nhbs.co.uk/we-sell-books-worldwide/z65mq.html
April 2003
Winter Offers
Seasonal Selection

A sparkling collection of alluring books, videos and DVDs, mostly new this winter and specially chosen to appeal to natural history enthusiasts of all ages.
Priced to tempt, with savings of up to 25% off.
World Guides

100 key titles ranging from field guides, ID guides, photoguides to eco-travel, at up to 25% off! South East Asian Natural History
130 titles at up to 25% off Breaking Offers
The latest NHBS special offer titles, ranging widely across all our subject areas. Many of these titles are new. Offers run for a limited period only, so don't delay taking advantage of them!
Plus
Highlights
NHBS Alert is our free monthly email catalogue, with information on c.400 new titles Subscribe for the full version or choose from 19 subjects Distribution Highlights Current key titles include: Grebes of the World Seahorses ID: CDROM Britain's Butterflies Monitoring Tigers and their Prey ... Ocean Explorer Maps Publishers distributed by NHBS - click here to browse title catalogues for BirdLife International, JNCC, OFI, Prion, Wetlands

42. Northwest Territories
Home regional northwest territories. Includes resources and links to the threethemes of natural resources, history and culture, social equity and
http://www.categories.ca/Regional/Northwest_Territories/

43. Culture Canada: Archives And Libraries - Northwest Territories
history. National Archives of Canada regional Operations Source National Archives.northwest territories Archives Source Prince of Wales Northern Heritage
http://culturecanada.gc.ca/chdt/interface/interface2.nsf/engdocBasic/21.7.5.html
Search Where You Are Home Provincial and Territorial Information Northwest Territories Archives and Libraries ...
Visual Arts

View similar pages for:
Alberta British Columbia Canada Manitoba New Brunswick Newfoundland Nova Scotia Nunavut Ontario Prince Edward Island Quebec Saskatchewan Yukon
Canadian Library Web sites and Catalogues: Yukon and Northwest Territories

Source: National Library of Canada Canadian Northwest Archival Network
Source: Canadian Northwest Archival Network National Archives of Canada - Regional Operations
Source: National Archives Northwest Territories Archives
Source: Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre Northwest Territories Public Library Services
Source: Northwest Territories Department of Education, Culture and Employment Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre - NWT Archives Database
Source: Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre Top Last Modified: 2003-03-18 Important Notices Contact Us Help Search ... Suggest a Link

44. History Of ITK: Land Claims
Results from the northwest territories were published in a three volume set of forthe negotiation process shifted from ITC to the regional organizations.
http://www.itk.ca/english/itk/history/land_claims.htm
Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami
History the beginning of ITK founding conference first annual conference ITK and land claims ... ITK today ITK and Land Claims
In September 1972, ITC called together legal experts and social scientists to determine the type of information required to support the legal arguments for validating Inuit land claims. also determined the most appropriate research methods for collecting this information .The completed study would define the actual geographic location of Inuit territory
John Amagoalik at a Press Conference, circa 1975 to establish the specific seasonal use of this territory; determine the unbroken unity between our cultural system and the land; and provide an explanation and record of Inuit knowledge about land and resources. In February 1973, ITC proposed to the Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs that research be undertaken to produce a comprehensive and verifiable record of Inuit land use and occupancy for the Northwest Territories and Labrador.

45. Company History -- First Air
Company history. Air bought 100% of Ptarmigan Airways Ltd., a regional carrier based previouslyserved the Western portion of the northwest territories for over
http://www.firstair.ca/About_First_Air/company_history.html
Company History
Charter Services
Pilot training and small aircraft, local charter work were the backbone of the company's operations until the mid-fifties. The advent of the DEW line (Distant Early Warning line) construction program brought about the first major sortie into expanded operations. During 1954-1956 four Cessna 180s were engaged in the Northwest Territories (NT) for charter and aerial survey for the DEW line construction contractors. This was just the beginning of an expansion program which has seen the company become the foremost Arctic air carrier in the world. In 1958 the company began regular operations in the High Arctic Islands in support of the Geological Survey of Canada using Piper Super Cubs on tundra tires which were especially engineered by First Air personnel. During 1958-1968 charter operations in the Arctic Islands continued to grow and expand. Larger aircraft such as Beavers and single-engined Otters were used for this unique requirement. Scientific and government agencies engaged in exploration, survey and mapping were the first major customers to use this service. In 1968 the company obtained the contract to supply the airborne support for the federal government's Polar Continental Shelf Project. This contract required extensive air support throughout the Canadian Arctic and Greenland as well as off-shore ice operations in the Beaufort Sea from bases at Point Barrow, Alaska and Tuktoyaktuk, NT. The company, to this day, still provides air support to the Polar Continental Shelf Project.

46. Suicide In The Northwest Territories: A Descriptive Review
for various population subgroups of the northwest territories and for death and mentalhealth history, where available On a regional basis, the further east the
http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/pphb-dgspsp/publicat/cdic-mcc/19-4/c_e.html
Volume 19, No.4 - 2000 Table of Contents
Suicide in The Northwest Territories:
A Descriptive Review Sandy Isaacs, Susan Keogh, Cathy Menard and Jamie Hockin Abstract
Key words:
aboriginal health; intentional injuries; Northwest Territories; suicide Introduction Suicide among aboriginal groups in Canada has been reported to be two to four times more frequent than in the population at large. In the Northwest Territories (NWT), where aboriginal populations represent the majority, considerable attention has focused on an apparent increase in the occurrence of suicide in a number of communities. In 1992 the annual age-standardized suicide rate for the NWT was estimated at 23 per 100,000 population compared to 13 per 100,000 for Canada as a whole. In the spring of 1997, the Department of Health and Social Services of the Government of the NWT (GNWT) invited the Field Epidemiology Training Program at Health Canada’s Laboratory Centre for Disease Control to collaborate in a review of existing suicide mortality data with the following objectives.
  • To identify subgroups of the population in the NWT who are most at risk of suicide
  • To describe the circumstances surrounding the deaths of people in the NWT who have committed suicide

Material and Methods
For this report, suicides are defined as deaths due to self-inflicted injury with the intent of causing death. Two approaches were taken to achieve the study objectives: an analysis of a suicide database of suicide events recorded since 1981 and a review and summary of coroner’s reports on suicide cases for the period 1994–1996.

47. Northern Intercity News
Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Center, featuring regional history and aboriginal Yellowknife,the capital of Canada's northwest territories, is riding high
http://www.city.sapporo.jp/somu/nic/nic12-1/4p.htm
Northern Intercity News
Yellowknife, the capital of Canada's Northwest Territories, has a population of 17,700.
contributed to the growth of the city.
Yellowknife has always had a jewel-like quality. Set in pink and grey granite on the shores of Great Slave Lake, one of the world's largest pristine bodies of water, Yellowknife sparkles and glitters, summer and winter.
Tourist Attractions Abound
In contrast to Old Town, Yellowknife's New Town offers the services of a much larger city. Shopping for northern crafts and art is excellent. There is the Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Center, featuring regional history and aboriginal life-styles, the unique snow-house-shaped Legislative Assembly Building, and a lively visitors center.
Near the airport there is a beach and a summer stage, where visitors can catch folk and rock music performances. Nearby, a picturesque highway winds 70 kilometers east, passing cottages on lakes that are noted for their excellent fishing and boating. Walking trails link the major sites around Yellowknife, summer and winter. Mineral City Mineral exploration activity north of here has flourished since the discovery of diamonds in Yellowknife. Prospectors and geologists now believe the geological surface has only been scratched. With new mining technologies, improved baseline geological mapping, and increased ability to service exploration, Yellowknife residents are ready to invest in northern exploration and the environmentally sound development of northern resources.

48. Civilization.ca - A History Of The Native People Of Canada - Prologue To Period
well established in their various territories with their of stimulus diffusion wherebya regional population not West Coast I Late northwest Interior J
http://www.civilization.ca/archeo/hnpc/nppro4_e.html
QUICK LINKS Home page Archaeology Arts and Crafts Civilizations Cultures First Peoples History Treasures Military history Artifact catalogue Library catalogue Other Web sites Boutique
Prologue to Period IV (1,000 B.C. to A.D. 500) B y 1,000 B.C. environmental conditions in Canada were similar to those encountered by European colonizers. Native populations in the country were well established in their various territories with their cultures, in most instances, being clearly derived from the preceding period. Diffusion of technology, cosmological beliefs, and other cultural systems was the major stimulus to cultural change. Much of this diffusion, however, was in the form of stimulus diffusion whereby a regional population not only adopted an innovation but modified it in order to accommodate their particular cultural needs, thus complicating the process of tracing diffusion routes.
Map IV - Cultural Distributions, 1,000 B.C. to A.D. 500 A B C D E F G H I J Middle Palaeo-Eskimo T here are a number of changes in this map relative to the information published in Plate 8 of the Historical Atlas of Canada (Harris and Matthews ) from which it has been adapted. Most changes relate to culture name changes and do not affect cultural geographic distributions. Like earlier maps, Map IV is intended to act as a simplified geographic guide to the cultures discussed in Volume II.

49. Genealogy Pages: The World's Premier Genealogy Portal: Regional : Canada
Genealogy Pages regional Canada. New Brunswick (4) Newfoundland (2) northwest territories(2), Nova Hits 107). Canadian Genealogy and history Links Listing
http://www.genealogypages.com/Regional/Canada/
Home Regional Canada Genealogy Pages: Regional : Canada Find books at Amazon.com on genealogy Genealogy Pages Resources Categories:
Alberta British Columbia Labrador Manitoba ... Yukon
Resources:
  • Bob's Your Uncle, Eh? - A search engine that provides detailed access to Canadian genealogical information on the World Wide Web.
    (Added: 10-Mar-1999 Hits: 242)
  • British Home Children - Names of +3,000 British Home Children sent to Canada between 1870-1940
    (Added: 22-Aug-2000 Hits: 97)
  • Canada GenWeb Project (Added: 10-Mar-1999 Hits: 107)
  • Canadian Genealogy and History Links - Listing of web sites of interest to genealogists and historians studing Canadian information.
    (Added: 28-May-2000 Hits: 70)
  • Canadian Genealogy Links - Canadian Genealogy Links - categorized by province , some international sites, book search
    (Added: 19-Nov-1999 Hits: 103)
  • Canadian Genealogy Links (Added: 10-Mar-1999 Hits: 136)
  • Cdnroots.com - - A Canadian genealogy community, searchable directory of resources, message board, and a webring of family trees. The ring is a searchable database of surnames, and gedcom files of families researching their ancestors in Canada
    (Added: 20-Jan-2002 Hits: 40)
  • Sources for Genealogical Research in Canada - Print, electronic and other sources for genealogical research in Canada, organized by province, county or district.

50. X-Canada Tour Of Regional Events And Contact Information
Nova Scotia Newfoundland Labrador northwest territories Yukon Nunavut. CrossCanadaTour of regional Events. FRANÇAIS. X-CANADA. HOME. PARTICIPATE! history. DEMANDS.
http://www.canada.marchofwomen.org/en/XCanada/map.html

BC

Alberta

Saskatchewan

Manitoba
...
Nunavut
Cross-Canada Tour of Regional Events
X-CANADA
HOME

PARTICIPATE!

HISTORY

DEMANDS
...
PHOTOS
Alberta British Columbia Labrador Manitoba New Brunswick Newfoundland Northwest Territories Nova Scotia Nunavut Ontario Prince Edward Island Quebec Saskatchewan Yukon Territory Home Site Map

51. Canada WorkinfoNET - Site Map
Partnership Agreement; history; Documents Annual Report regional Sites Alberta;British Columbia; Manitoba; northwest territories; Nova Scotia; Nunavut; Ontario;Prince
http://www.workinfonet.ca/cwn/en_text/site_e.cfm

52. Internship Placements
L'Anse Aux Meadows. northwest territories Prince of London regional Children's Museum,London; McMichael Inn, Etobicoke; Multicultural history Society, Toronto;
http://www.utoronto.ca/museum/program/internship_placements.html
Listing of Internship Institutions (1979-Present) Canada Alberta
British Columbia

Manitoba
... Return to Internships Index Canada Alberta
  • Glenbow Alberta Institute, Calgary
  • Provincial Museum of Alberta, Edmonton
  • Royal Tyrrell Museum, Drumheller

British Columbia
  • British Columbia Provincial Museum, Victoria
  • Cown Vertebrate Museum, Vancouver
  • Maritime Museum, Vancouver
  • Maritime Museum of British Columbia, Victoria
  • Royal British Columbia Museum, Victoria
  • Sooke Regional Museum, Vancouver
  • UBC Museum of Anthropology, Vancouver
  • Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver
  • Vancouver Museum, Vancouver
Manitoba
  • Lower Fort Garry National Historic Site, Selkirk
  • Manitoba Museum of Man and Nature, Winnipeg
New Brunswick
  • Kings Landing Historical Settlement, Prince William
Newfoundland
  • L'Anse Aux Meadows
Northwest Territories
  • Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre, Yellowknife
Nova Scotia
  • Anna Leonowens (Nova Scotia College of Art and Design), Halifax
  • Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Halifax
  • Fortress Louisburg, Halifax
  • Nova Scotia Museum, Halifax
  • Old Sydney Society Museums, Sydney
Nunavut
  • Nunatta Sunqutangit, Iqaluit

53. Nature & Science In Canada
Grand Manan, Marine Natural history Museum, Zoology, Grand FallsWindsor,Mary March regional Museum, Geology, Anthro, northwest territories,
http://members.aol.com/darwinpage/museums/Canada.htm
Destinations to Visit in North America
Museums - Parks - Aquaria - Gardens - Refuges AL AK AZ AR ... WY Canadian Provinces Alberta All Alberta Alberta Provincial Parks Guide Wildlife Botany All Alberta Birding in Alberta Wildlife Banff Banff Park Museum Zoology Calgary Calgary Science Centre Kids Calgary Zoology Ecology Botany Coaldale Birds of Prey Centre Zoology Devon Devonian Botanic Garden Botany Drumheller Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology Paleo Edmonton SciTech Kids Edmonton Provincial Museum of Alberta Zoology Paleo Anthro Edmonton Telephone Historical Centre SciTech Kids Grand Prairie Grande Prairie Museum Paleo Zoology Anthro Lethbridge Nikka Yuko Japanese Gardens Botany Patricia Dinosaur Provincial Park Paleo Geology Wildlife British Columbia All British Columbia Birding in British Columbia Wildlife All British Columbia British Columbia Provincial Parks Guide Wildlife Botany Burnaby Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology Anthro Coombs Zoology Botany Coquitlam Riverview Horticultural Centre Botany Courtenay Paleo Zoology Anthro Gibsons Sunshine Coast Maritime Museum SciTech Prince George Fraser-Fort George Regional Museum Kids Vancouver Botanical Gardens Botany Vancouver Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden

54. Canadian Archival Resources On The Internet - Alphabetical Listing
northwest territories Archives; Nova Scotia Archives and Records Osler Library ofthe history of Medicine Prince Rupert City and regional Archives; Provincial
http://www.usask.ca/archives/car/car.html
Canadian Archival Resources on the Internet
Alphabetical Listing
Created and maintained by Cheryl Avery, University of Saskatchewan Archives and Steve Billinton, Archives of Ontario Canadian Archival Information Network This menu is maintained and updated periodically. If you know of any additional information about Canadian archival resources on the internet, or if you have comments or suggestions, please send e-mail to cheryl.avery@usask.ca or tim.hutchinson@usask.ca We are unable to answer any genealogical enquiries (unless your enquiry relates to people at the University of Saskatchewan). For information about genealogical research in Canada, please refer to our links to selected genealogical resources

55. Directions Canadian Travel Guides And Maps
Provincial, regional, City Guides, Maps, Etc the Canadian Rockies Discover YukonAnd northwest territories Alaska At Own Pace Alaska Yukon history Along the
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Directions Bookstore
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Canada
(Lonely Planet)
Canada
(Fodor's)
Canada (Rough Guide) Canada (Nat. Geographic) Canada (Ulysses) Canada (Berlitz) The Canada Trip Trans-Canada Rail Guide Wow Canada! The Canadians AAA Guide to Cruising Canada by Car Explore Canada Canadian Rockies Handbook Guide to Eastern Canada On Top of the World (video) Experience Canada (video) Discovering Canada By Rail (video) Amazing Wonders (of the North) (video) World War II Canada at War (video) Travel Smart! Travel Informed! (Note that publications illustrated above are also included in the list below) Canada Atlases Canada Travel Guides Videos Canada's North ... Atlantic Canada Atlases of Canada Atlas of Canada (Readers Digest Association of Canada) Rand McNally Road Atlas : United States, Canada, Mexico Rand McNally Road Atlas Deluxe : United States, Canada, Mexico

56. Book Review The Journal Of American History, 86.1 The History
regional history, like regional geography, has received a Katherine G. Morrissey'snew book, Mental territories. 1. region of the Pacific northwest, the Inland
http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/jah/86.1/br_69.html
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Book Review
Mental Territories: Mapping the Inland Empire. By Katherine G. Morrissey. (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1997. x, 220 pp. Cloth, $45.00, isbn 0-8014-3250-2. Paper, $18.95, isbn 0-8014-8326-3.)

57. UNBSJ Ward Chipman Library Current Research Geological Survey Of Canada Canadian
in the Yellowknife area, northwest territories, Kerr, DE Archean and Paleoproterozoicfault history of the 2000_C18, Integrated regional analysis of the Red Lake
http://www.unbsj.ca/library/govdocs/gsc3.htm
UNB Saint John Ward Chipman Library
GSC Current Research Canadian Shield
Current Research Canadian Shield Cordillera and Pacific Margin Eastern and National and General Programs ... Canadian Databases, Documents and Publications Main Page
Current Research
Current Research is produced by the Geological Survey of Canada. It is appears only in electronic format and is available for sale on the GSC web site . As a selective depository, the Ward Chipman Library provides internet access to Current Research. All files are in .pdf. Average file size is 3 to 5 MB; download times may vary due to individual machine configuration and access technology Items marked with a are available by depository agreement to on-campus users. All unmarked items are freely available to any internet user, regardless of affiliation or location.
Top of Page
Canadian Shield 2000
Implications of a preliminary fluid inclusion study of giant quartz veins of the southern Great Bear magmatic zone, Northwest Territories; Geological Survey of Canada Gandhi, S S; Carrière, J J; Prasad, N

58. Important Bird Areas In The Northwest Territories And Nunavut
s of 50 sites in the northwest territories and Nunavut.......
http://www.bsc-eoc.org/iba/regional.cfm?region=NWT&lang=en

59. History, Yellowknife City (regional Capital)
contributors . Yellowknife city (regional capital). history. Indigenousnations have lived around Yellowknife Bay for thousands of years.
http://www.greatestcities.com/North_America/Canada/Northwest_Territories/Yellowk
Search for a City or Keyword:
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Yellowknife
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    Indigenous nations have lived around Yellowknife Bay for thousands of years. The historic occupants were the Athapaskan-speaking Dogrib people , hunters of caribou. The Dogrib were displaced briefly in the early 19th century by the Yellowknife band of the Chipewyan nation, who moved into the area to participate in the fur trade. The bay, and eventually the city, were named for the Yellowknife band, whose name is believed to derive from their yellow knife blades hammered out of native copper. Scottish-born Canadian fur trader and explorer Sir Alexander Mackenzie came into the area in 1789, traveling down the river that now bears his name. His firm, the North West Company, operated a fur-trading post at Fort Providence near the western shore of Great Slave Lake until the 1820s. The area attracted outside interest again in the late 1890s when prospectors discovered gold there. However, the deposits were not extensive enough to spark serious mining activities.
  • 60. NWT - Inuvik // Legislative Assembly Of The Northwest Territories
    The Creation of a New northwest territories Ceremonial Circle 43'W. The town is1086 km northwest of Yellowknife to Inuvik being the regional government centre
    http://www.assembly.gov.nt.ca/VisitorInfo/NWTMapandHistory/Inuvik.html

    The Creation of a New Northwest Territories
    Ceremonial Circle Capital Park - Area of Preservation
    (photo courtesy of MACA)
    (photo courtesy of RWED)
    Community Name:
    Inuvik Traditional/Former Name:
    Inuvvik (place of man) Land Claim Area:
    Inuvialuit and Gwich'in in the surrounding areas Politics:
    Electoral Districts Member
    Inuvik Boot Lake Floyd Roland Inuvik Twin Lakes Roger T. Allen Member of Parliament
    Ethel Blondon-Andrew
    Contact Info:
    Scotia Centre
    4920-51 Street Yellowknife, NT Telephone: (867) 873-6995 Toll Free: 1-800-661-0802 e-mail: ethel@ssimicro.com Senator Nick G. Sibbeston Contact Info: Senator Nick G. Sibbeston The Senate of Canada Ottawa, ON Telephone: (613) 943-7790 Community Leader Mayor Peter Clarkson Contact Info: Town of Inuvik P.O. BOX 1160 Inuvik, NT Tel: (867) 777- 8600 e-mail: town@inuvik.net Location Inuvik is situated on the East Channel of the Mackenzie River Delta at 68'21'N latitude and 133'43'W. The town is 1086 km northwest of Yellowknife. Population 3,451 (2000 Census) Languages Inuvialuktun, Gwich'in, English Access The community is accessible by air year round. It is also accessible by road (the Dempster Highway from Dawson City) year round however during break-up (spring) and freeze-up (fall) the community is not accessible by road. Ice roads also link the communities of Aklavik and Tuktoyaktuk to Inuvik in the winter months.

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