Navigational map produced by the Dept. of Interior, Topographical Survey of Canada and (0003) is of the scale 1:380,160 and is entitled "Map of Great Slave Lake: Western Sheet" [between 1923 and 1924]
Unannotated map of the Hunter Bay and Coppermine River area.
Map of the eastern part of the Great Slave Lake area, no annotations.
Map of the western part of the Great Slave Lake area, no annotations.
Map of the Camsell River.
Map of Wood Buffalo Park.
Staked locations on Great Slave Lake, south shore near Pine Point [Northwest Territories] Produced by McKay Turner Co.
Blueprint showing staked mining claims on the south shore of Great Slave Lake near Presqu'ile Point.
Navigational map produced by the Dept. of Interior, Topographical Survey of Canada and are of the scale 1:253,440. (0002) is entitled "Map of Great Slave Lake: Resolution to Windy Pt.". [between 1923 and 1924]
Navigational map produced by the Dept. of Interior, Topographical Survey of Canada and are of the scale 1:253,440 (0005) is entitled "Map of Mackenzie River: Simpson to Wrigley". [between 1923 and 1924]
Subjects include the Mackenzie River, Slave River, Great Slave Lake, Keewatin and Ungava.
Subjects include: Great Bear Lake, Great Slave Lake, Dismal Lakes, Coppermine River, Mackenzie River, Thelon River, Backs River (Back River), Camsell River, Slave River and Cameron Bay.
Map of the western part of the Great Slave Lake area, no annotations.
Map of the Lockhart River area.
Map of the Fort Smith area, no annotations.
Map of the Mackenzie River and the Aklavik area.
Map of the Rae [Behchoko] area.
Map of the Great Slave Lake area around Fort Resolution.
This accession consists of four cartographic sheets which collectively are entitled Map of Great Slave Lake and Hudson Bay. They were originally published by the Federal government in 1900 and reprinted in 1923, to accompany a report by J.B. Tyrell. They are stamped Department of Interior-Yukon and Northwest Territories Branch. They are annotated with the inscription "help yourself". (:0001) is entitled Sheet No. 1 and shows McLeod Bay in the east end of Great Slave Lake, the water route to Artillery Lake, Lac Du Bois, Casba Lake, Campbell Lake and Sifton Lake. (:0002) is entitled Sheet No. 2 and shows the Thelon River. It includes Granite Falls and Hanbury River. (:0003) Sheet No. 3A and 3B shows the Thelon River and includes Beverly Lake and Aberdeen Lake. (:0004) is entitled Sheet No. 4 and shows the lower Thelon River and includes Schultz Lake and Baker Lake. The maps also show Dene and Inuit encampments along the Thelon River. There are no copies of these maps on deposit with either the National Archives of Canada or the National Museum of Civilization.
Canada. Department of the InteriorMap of Great Slave Lake and Hudson Bay. Originally published by the Federal government in 1900 and reprinted in 1923, to accompany a report by J.B. Tyrell. They are stamped Department of Interior- Yukon and Northwest Territories Branch. (0001) is entitled Sheet No. 1 and shows McLeod Bay in the east end of Great Slave Lake (Old Fort Reliance), the water route to Artillery Lake, Lac Du Bois, Casba Lake, Campbell Lake and Sifton Lake. The maps also show Dene and Inuit encampments along the Thelon River.