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| Marine Ecozones |
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| Terrestrial Ecozones |
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Pacific
Marine Ecozone
The
Pacific Rim
The waters of the Pacific Coast are best known to Canadians today for
their popular tourism destinations and the prominent, though troubled,
fishing industry. But the Pacific coast of British Columbia is also home
to ancient indigenous cultures. On his famous third voyage around the
world in 1778, Captain James Cook became the first known European to reach
the Pacific coast of present-day B. C. There he encountered the ancient
communities of the "People of the Totem," who had been living
on the coast and in the Queen Charlotte Islands for at least 8 000 years.
The heavily forested and mountainous terrain led to the emergence of a
sea-dependent culture and the people of the Pacific coast acquired sea-faring
and fishing skills superior to those of the first European explorers.
The Haida in particular had a reputation for undertaking long, perilous
sea voyages.
The Pacific Marine Ecozone is home to abundant plant and
wildlife, but also has one of the fastest growing human populations in
North America. The ecozone extends from the southern tip of Vancouver
Island to Dixon Entrance, north of the Queen Charlotte Islands. Ignoring
international boundaries, it actually reaches as far north as Alaska and
the Bering Sea and south to the coasts of the states of Washington and
Oregon.
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