'Discover the Seine' in Winter

'Discover the Seine' in Winter



The Seine River


  • References and Appendix


References:

Cunjak, R. 2004. Winter habitat of selected stream fishes and potential impacts from land-use activity. Moncton, Canada: Department of Fisheries and Oceans. 

Danyluk, D. 2004. Coordinator: Save Our Seine River Environment Inc. Winnipeg, Canada. 

Eagle Bluff. 2003. The Big Freeze (Winter ecology). [cited 13 March 2004]. Available from World Wide Web: (http://www.eagle-bluff.org)

Hindelang, M. The Science of Winter Ecology. Michigan, USA: Winter Ecology Institute, Michigan Technological University. [cited on 13 March 2004]. Available from World Wide Web: (http://www.ed.mtu.edu/esmis/winter/ecology.html)

Labaree, J. M. 1992. How Greenways Work: A Handbook on Ecology. CA, USA: American Trails. [cited on 15 March 2004]. Available from World Wide Web: (http://www.americantrails.org/resources/greenways)

Marchand, P. 1991. Life in the Cold: An Introduction to Winter Ecology. London, UK: University Press of New England.

Marsh, W. M. 1997. Landscape Planning: Environmental Applications. New York, USA: John Wiley& Sons, Inc.

Seine River Task Force. 2000. Seine River Greenway Study. Winnipeg, Canada: Seine River Task Force.

http://www.saveourseine.com/

Save our Seine Newsletter Spring 2005

Appendix:

There are different words that the Inuit culture uses to describe different forms of snow (The Big Freeze, 2003).

Api – fluffy snow
Pukak – depth hoare
Upsik – hard windpacked snow
Siqoq – blowing snow
Qali – snow on trees
Siqoqtoag – crushed snow that determines where animals are

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