This decommissioned ERA site remains active temporarily to support our final migration steps to https://ualberta.scholaris.ca, ERA's new home. All new collections and items, including Spring 2025 theses, are at that site. For assistance, please contact erahelp@ualberta.ca.
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Skip to Search Results- 438Campbell, Sandy
- 8Beaudreau, Diane, biologist, artist
- 4Ivanova, Semenova Polina
- 3Alberta Aviation Museum
- 3Inuvialuit Cultural Resource Centre
- 2Ruben, Abraham Anghik
- 139Photographs
- 57Canada, Northwest Territories, Yellowknife
- 37Russia, St. Petersburg
- 21September, 2016
- 17Arctic flowers
- 16Public Art - Polar Regions
- 426Canadian Circumpolar Institute
- 426Canadian Circumpolar Institute/Circumpolar Digital Image Collection
- 10School of Library and Information Studies
- 10School of Library and Information Studies/Digital Library North
- 6University of Alberta Library
- 6University of Alberta Library/Libraries Staff Publications
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2015-07-09
This painting on the corrugated metal exterior wall of the Yellowknife Inn in Yellowknife, NWT shows the flower, foliage and green and ripe berries of the green gooseberry plant. Gooseberries are used as both traditional food and traditional medicine by Indigenous people in Canada's North
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2024-06-08
This collection of Androsace varieties is planted between vertical slabs of rock at the Arctic and Alpine Botanic Garden (latitude 69.6769° N) in Tromsø, Norway. Androsasce are a genus of the Primulaceae family, found in Arctic/Alpine regions including the Alps, Causcaus, Himalayas, and...
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Part of the primula collection at the at the Arctic and Alpine Botanic Garden in Tromsø, Norway
Download2024-06-08
View of part of the primula collection planted on a rocky outcrop at the Arctic and Alpine Botanic Garden (latitude 69.6769° N) in Tromsø, Norway blooming in early June, 2024. Varieties visible include Primula angustifolia and Primula lutea.
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2015-07-08
The plaque reads: Peace River Flats. The promise of gold drew families north in the 1930's and 40's. Many an Alberta farm boy built a barge to float \"down north\" on the Peace and Slave Rivers and sail across Great Slave Lake to Yellowknife. These settlers were attracted to this flat expanse...