. Die kanadische Feld - naturforscher. 2004 Brunton: Die Ottawa Field-Naturalists' Club - s. o')/-! - K, i^fii..v â â] C ^-^ fe') ^.^''^ II"^^^^ Ts^' "vjf';^! J GcutlciiiMi in Rli ich ff-f^Siili. t-rllic, ich ein ^ ââ ws §:&-s^% mil (Abb. ICniiibcr im NT-iiti Mühle ivlio ilo UOt^^ rlKlli zu nrr rcji cciriillj" rv: itic * t (* tl La rcliini iinnip Sterben". / ^-^-L Ci "JDiAS Fo "Es.": (G? vrtÂ" "Ti" "w I/O'uO3 "CH pcciCT fif LB}Biicriuiic, Cram iho (^V (X VERÖFFENTLICHT IM BÜRO nriiiE "Ottawa Citizen", Ottawa. X] p X Pric^15 s. ftT Anmxnx, im Voraus.  einzelne Nuvibera, Za 9 d. w. '- & G
1334 x 1874 px | 22,6 x 31,7 cm | 8,9 x 12,5 inches | 150dpi
Weitere Informationen:
Dieses Bild ist ein gemeinfreies Bild. Dies bedeutet, dass entweder das Urheberrecht dafür abgelaufen ist oder der Inhaber des Bildes auf sein Urheberrecht verzichtet hat. Alamy berechnet Ihnen eine Gebühr für den Zugriff auf die hochauflösende Kopie des Bildes.
Dieses Bild kann kleinere Mängel aufweisen, da es sich um ein historisches Bild oder ein Reportagebild handel
. The Canadian field-naturalist. 2004 Brunton: The Ottawa Field-Naturalists' Club -p.o')/-! - k, i^fii..v â â ]C^-^fe')^ .-^''^ii'^^^^Ts^'" vjf';^! J GcutlciiiMi In rli I ff-f^ Siili.t-rllic, I a^ ââ ws§:&-s^% mil (Ills ICniiibcr In nt-iiti mill ivlio ilo UOt ^rlKlli to nrr rcji^cciriillj' rv:itic*t(*tl la rcliini Die iinnip«. / ^-^ -L Ci »JDiAS Fo« It.': (G?vrt«"ti" "w I /o'uO 3 "CH pcciCT fif LB} Biicriuiic, Cram iho (^V( X PUBLISHED AT THE OFFICE nriiiE OTTAWA CITIZEN', OTTAWA. X]p X Pric^ 15s. ftT Anmxnx, in advance. â Single Nuvibera, Za 9d. f It. '->;"::. <^2-. 5^ Figure 2. r/ze Canadian Naturalist and Geologist, first pub- lished in 1856 at the office of The Ottawa Citizen by Elkanah Billings, and later continued in Montreal. 1860s with the transfer of the seat of government of the colony of Canada to Ottawa, heralded by the start of construction of the new Parliament Buildings in 1860 (Eggleston 1961). This represented a mega-project with huge economic benefits to local businesses. Similarly, the 1863 transfer of some 300 bright, educated, and rel- atively financially secure members of the civil service from the old capital represented both economic and social opportunities for the city and the Ottawa Valley. Confederation-era city business and social leaders quickly embraced the idea of broadening and deepen- ing the intellectual resources of the community. In furtherance of this, they encouraged the development of various clubs and societies to enhance the prestige and intellectual capacity befitting the new capital (Brault 1946; Gwyn 1984). It is useful to consider how really rough and ready Ottawa and the larger world were in 1863. The Arctic was still largely unknown to Europeans and North Americans alike but was being charted with great speed by the continuing search for the ill-fated Third Frank- lin Expedition. The United States Civil War and the accompanying ferocious slavery debate rage