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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