Academic literature on the topic 'Michigan Sault Sainte Marie'

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Journal articles on the topic "Michigan Sault Sainte Marie"

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Johnston, John W., Erin P. Argyilan, Todd A. Thompson, Steve J. Baedke, Kenneth Lepper, Douglas A. Wilcox, and Steven L. Forman. "A Sault-outlet-referenced mid- to late-Holocene paleohydrograph for Lake Superior constructed from strandplains of beach ridges." Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 49, no. 11 (November 2012): 1263–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/e2012-057.

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The most detailed Lake Superior paleohydrograph relative to the current outlet near Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario–Michigan, was constructed from four strandplains of beach ridges. This provides a history of water-level, glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA), and the active outlet prior to monitoring and regulation. Four relative paleohydrographs that are offset and subparallel owing to differences in GIA were produced from 321 basal foreshore elevations and 56 optically stimulated luminescence ages. Subtracting modeled elevations in defined millennial lake phases between relative paleohydrographs and similarity between an inferred Sault Ste. Marie (hereinafter, Sault) paleohydrograph and data near the zero isobase corroborates rates of GIA derived from water-level gauges. A change in trend in the Sault paleohydrograph is related to the final separation of Lake Superior from Lakes Michigan and Huron and is the youngest age reported at 1060 ± 100 years. A near-horizontal trend in the Sault paleohydrograph for the past millennium has an intercept that is close to the historical average for Lake Superior. A consistently linear trend from about 2 to 1 ka suggests a relatively stable outlet similar to the past millennium, but a decreasing trend from 3 to 1 ka suggests an outlet other than the Sault. Although intercept data beyond the last millennium are similar in elevation to the reported bedrock sill near Chicago (Hansel et al. 1985), we argue that the Port–Huron outlet was the active outlet during this time and the inferred paleohydrograph of Baedke and Thompson (2000) requires reevaluation.
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McBride. "Aspects of Community Healing: Experiences of the Sault Sainte Marie Tribe of the Chippewa Indians." American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research 11, no. 1 (2003): 67–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.5820/aian.1101.2003.67.

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Rivard, Étienne. "Les sentiers battus de l’ethnogenèse métisse au Québec." Francophonies d'Amérique, no. 40-41 (March 8, 2018): 185–211. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1043703ar.

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Avec la reconnaissance en 2003 des droits autochtones de la communauté métisse de Sault-Sainte-Marie, en Ontario, partie intégrante de l’espace francophone historique ontarien, la Cour suprême du Canada a créé une onde de choc ressentie tous azimuts à l’échelle du pays. Non seulement cette décision a-t-elle encouragé la mobilisation métisse et engendré une pléiade de causes juridiques nouvelles, elle a aussi profondément bouleversé l’image du Métis aux yeux des Canadiens – laquelle image collait jusque-là essentiellement aux provinces de la Prairie – et jette ainsi un éclairage nouveau sur les phénomènes culturels et migratoires qui peuplent l’histoire de la francophonie canadienne. Pourtant, cette décision n’est rien d’autre que la reconnaissance juridique de plusieurs décennies de recherche fondamentale en ethnogenèse, un champ d’études justement né du besoin de traiter cette « myopie de la rivière Rouge » qui affectait les études métisses depuis longtemps. À la suite de ce jugement, on assiste toutefois à un changement de situation qui n’est pas sans soulever quelques inquiétudes. Dans les cours de justice, la recherche fondamentale est largement remplacée par une démarche scientifique qui vise avant tout à répondre à ce qu’on appelle maintenant le « test Powley ». La communauté de Sault-Sainte-Marie est en quelque sorte devenue le modèle métis par excellence, faussant ainsi largement la vision de la diversité du fait métis et, avec lui, de la francophonie. C’est sur ces prémisses que s’appuie le regard critique que nous posons ici sur l’intégration récente des études métisses dans l’univers juridique. Nos arguments reposent en bonne partie sur notre expérience en tant que témoin expert pour les intimés dans la cause Corneau au Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean.
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Bock, Michel. "L’évêque Scollard et la question canadienne-française. Le diocèse de Sault-Sainte-Marie au coeur du conflit franco-irlandais (1904-1934)." Cahiers Charlevoix 10 (April 5, 2017): 13–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1039290ar.

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Michel Bock porte son regard sur le conflit franco-irlandais qui a divisé les catholiques du diocèse de Sault-Sainte-Marie, dans le nord de l’Ontario, pendant le règne de l’évêque David Scollard (1904-1934). En situant le conflit dans le contexte des événements qui déclenchèrent la crise du Règlement 17 (1912-1927) et dans celui de la Première Guerre mondiale (1914-1918), il analyse le rôle qu’ont pu jouer les nombreux affrontements entre coreligionnaires canadiens-français et irlando-canadiens entourant les nominations paroissiales et le bilinguisme scolaire dans la mutation du champ intellectuel franco-ontarien. En effet, la double intervention du Saint-Siège dans la crise des écoles bilingues, par les encycliques Commisso Divinitus (1916) et Litteris Apostolicis (1918), conduisit l’élite nationaliste de l’Ontario français non seulement à abandonner l’ardeur belliqueuse et l’intransigeance qui caractérisaient son combat contre les « Irlandais » depuis le début du siècle, mais aussi à remettre en cause, du moins publiquement, le fondement même du nationalisme canadien-français traditionaliste, soit l’union, jugée inviolable jusqu’alors, des questions nationale et religieuse. La thèse de la langue « gardienne » de la foi étant devenue insoutenable aux yeux de la hiérarchie romaine, dont la compréhension du nationalisme était pour l’essentiel inspirée du contexte européen, l’élite franco-ontarienne sentit la nécessité de faire preuve d’une plus grande modération idéologique et stratégique dans ses tractations avec l’évêque Scollard.
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Tuthill, Andrew M. "A physical model study of ice passage at the Soo Locks." Canadian Journal of Civil Engineering 27, no. 6 (December 1, 2000): 1207–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/l00-070.

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A physical model study investigated alternatives to improve ice passage at the Soo Locks in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan. This paper describes the ice problems at the Soo Locks and the solutions developed in the study. Model tests were conducted to evaluate the performance of high-flow air curtains to deflect ice pushed ahead of vessels entering the 366-m-long Poe Lock. A series of air curtains and an array of point source bubblers were also tested to break ice jams in the upper approach of the adjacent MacArthur Lock. In addition, an array of high-flow point source bubblers was developed in the model to relieve ice congestion in front of the downstream miter gates of the Poe Lock. A model water cannon was also found effective for clearing ice in front of miter gates and breaking jams in the upper lock approach.Key words: Soo Locks, physical model study, ice passage, winter navigation, Great Lakes, high-flow air curtain, point source bubbler, miter gate, water cannon.
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Parent, Gabrielle. "Subjects of Interpretation: Second Language Acquisition by Jesuit Missionaries among the Northern Ojibwa, 1842–1880." Montreal 2010 21, no. 1 (May 9, 2011): 59–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1003043ar.

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This article focuses on second-language learning and “linguicide” in Upper Canada between 1843 and 1877. From the small group of Jesuits that made up the ranks of the Society of Jesus’ new missions to Canada in the post-suppression era, it was Jean Pierre Choné, Joseph Hanipaux, Nicholas Frémiot, and Dominique du Ranquet, August Kohler, Nicolas Point, and Joseph Jennesseaux that first learned Algonquin languages in order to proselytize to the Northern Ojibwa populations at the Upper Canada. The Upper Canada mission, led by superior Pierre Chazelle, re-established some of the Society of Jesus’ older Aboriginal missions, and expanded their evangelical territory north and west along Lake Huron and Lake Superior. Important stations were built among the Ojibwa at Wikwemikong on Manitoulin Island in 1844, in Sault Sainte Marie in 1846, and along the Pigeon and Kamanistikwa Rivers, near Fort William, in 1848. This paper examines why the new Jesuits were motivated to learn the languages spoken at their Aboriginal missions in the nineteenth century and simultaneously investigates how the massive and unexpected psychological challenges of the 1800s, including anti-Catholicism, British rule, mass immigration, and formidable industrial development in Upper Canada, supported or discouraged the Jesuits’ language acquisition.
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Lumsden, H. G. ""Prairie Grouse", Tympanuchus cupido × phasianellus, Hybridization on Manitoulin Island, Ontario." Canadian Field-Naturalist 119, no. 4 (October 1, 2005): 507. http://dx.doi.org/10.22621/cfn.v119i4.180.

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Greater Prairie Chickens started their range expansion from Wisconsin about 1900. They reached Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, by 1925 and completed colonization of Manitoulin Island by 1945. In the fall of 1932, an irruption of Northern Sharp-tailed Grouse from the Hudson Bay Lowlands occurred. Residents of Manitoulin distinguished the two species and reported the presence of “square-tails” and “sharp-tails” in the winter of 1932-1933. There is no specimen evidence or verbal reports that Northern Sharp-tailed Grouse reached Michigan during that irruption. Prairie Sharp-tailed Grouse were in the northern peninsula of Michigan by 1930. In 1941, Michigan Department of Natural Resources made a planting of 37 Prairie Sharptailed Grouse on Drummond Island. Thence they spread east and the first lek was found at the west end of Manitoulin Island in 1952. By 1960, these birds had virtually colonized the whole island. Development of a hybrid index from the morphology of specimens of skins and skeletons from Manitoulin indicated that more than 50% of all birds in the 1960s were hybrids. In Michigan, less than 1% of the birds necropsied or checked in hunters’ bags were hybrid. It seems likely that ethological isolation broke down on Manitoulin Island. The booming display of the Prairie Chicken and the tail rattling display of the Sharp-tailed Grouse can be broken down into their component parts. They appear to be homologous to five discrete displays of the Spruce Grouse, grouped in different patterns in each of the two lek species. There was little hybridization between Prairie Sharptailed Grouse and Prairie Chickens that had lived sympatrically for thousands of years. Northern Sharp-tailed Grouse had probably never lived sympatrically with Prairie Chickens and the evolution of the perception of species distinctions may not have evolved to the point where hybridization was restricted to a rare event.
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"Michigan vs. The Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa IndiansCase No. 13-1438, 2013 WL 6645395 (U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, December 18, 2013)." Gaming Law Review and Economics 18, no. 1 (February 2014): 119–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/glre.2014.18111.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Michigan Sault Sainte Marie"

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Dorow, Rory T. J. "Control through design." This title; PDF viewer required. Home page for entire collection, 2009. http://archives.udmercy.edu:8080/dspace/handle/10429/9.

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Books on the topic "Michigan Sault Sainte Marie"

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Mount, Graeme S. The border at Sault Ste. Marie. Toronto: Dundurn Press, 1995.

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McCormick, Michael J. Lake Superior water temperature data, Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, 1906-1992. Ann Arbor, MI (2205 Commonwealth Blvd., Ann Arbor 48105): U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Environmental Research Laboratories, Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory, 1996.

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Weaver, Margaret Curtiss. The descendants of John Johnston and Oshauguscodaywayquay of Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan. [Olympia, WA]: M.C. Weaver, 1990.

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4

Osborne, Brian S. Le canal de Sault-Sainte-Marie: Un chapitre de l'histoire des transports sur les Grands Lacs. Ottawa, Ont: Direction des lieux et des parcs historiques nationaux, Parcs Canada, 1986.

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Brannen, J. R. Hydrogeology of four Sault Ste. Marie tribal communities in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Lansing, Mich: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1997.

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Brannen, J. R. Hydrogeology of four Sault Ste. Marie tribal communities in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Lansing, Mich: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1997.

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Brannen, J. R. Hydrogeology of four Sault Ste. Marie tribal communities in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Lansing, Mich: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1997.

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International Conference on Implementing Ecosystem Management (1995 Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. & Ont.). Proceedings, sustainable forests: Integrating the experience : an International Conference on Implementing Ecosystem Management, June 5-9, 1995, Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, U.S.A. & Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada. Sault Ste. Marie, Mich: B.R.I.D.G.E. (Bi-National Region Initiative Developing Greater Education), 1996.

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First and foremost in community health centres: The centre in Sault Ste Marie and the CHC alternative. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1985.

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10

Great Lakes Fishery Commission. Lake Michigan Committee. Annual meeting. Lake Michigan Committee 1993 annual meeting, Algoma's Water Tower Inn, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, March 31-April 1, 1993: Minutes (with appendices). Ann Arbor, MI: Great Lakes Fishery Commission, 1993.

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Conference papers on the topic "Michigan Sault Sainte Marie"

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Bostick, Wyatt Andrew, Matt Ede Bell, and M. Kathryn Rocheford. "APPLIED TERRESTRIAL PHOTOGRAMMETRY OF SOIL SLUMPS ON ASHMUN CREEK, SAULT SAINTE MARIE, MI." In Joint 53rd Annual South-Central/53rd North-Central/71st Rocky Mtn GSA Section Meeting - 2019. Geological Society of America, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2019sc-326846.

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Reports on the topic "Michigan Sault Sainte Marie"

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Hite, Jr, Bislip-Morales John E., and Carlos. New Lock for Soo Locks and Dam, Model Investigations During 2006-2010, Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, St. Mary's River: Hydraulic Model Investigation. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, January 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada554944.

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