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Other Borealis Collections Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Government of Canada; Army Survey Establishment 2022-09-06 This is a georeferenced raster image of a printed paper map of the Saunders Lake, Saskatchewan region (Sheet No. 063L06), published in 1972. It is the first edition in a series of maps, which show both natural and man-made features such as relief, spot heights, administrative boundaries, secondary and side roads, railways, trails, wooded areas, waterways including lakes, rivers, streams and rapids, bridges, buildings, mills, power lines, terrain, and land formations. This map was published in 1972 and the information on the map is current as of 1970. Maps were produced by Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) and it's preceding agencies, in partnership with other government agencies. <b>Please note:</b> image / survey capture dates can span several years, and some details may have been updated later than others. Please consult individual map sheets for detailed production information, which can be found in the bottom left hand corner. Original maps were digitally scanned by McGill Libraries in partnership with Canadiana.org, and georeferencing for the maps was provided by the University of Toronto Libraries and Eastview Corporation.
Other Borealis Collections Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Government of Canada; Army Survey Establishment 2022-09-06 This is a georeferenced raster image of a printed paper map of the Mannville, Alberta region (Sheet No. 073E06), published in 1969. It is the first edition in a series of maps, which show both natural and man-made features such as relief, spot heights, administrative boundaries, secondary and side roads, railways, trails, wooded areas, waterways including lakes, rivers, streams and rapids, bridges, buildings, mills, power lines, terrain, and land formations. This map was published in 1969 and the information on the map is current as of 1959. Maps were produced by Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) and it's preceding agencies, in partnership with other government agencies. <b>Please note:</b> image / survey capture dates can span several years, and some details may have been updated later than others. Please consult individual map sheets for detailed production information, which can be found in the bottom left hand corner. Original maps were digitally scanned by McGill Libraries in partnership with Canadiana.org, and georeferencing for the maps was provided by the University of Toronto Libraries and Eastview Corporation.
Other Borealis Collections Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Government of Canada; Army Survey Establishment 2022-09-06 This is a georeferenced raster image of a printed paper map of the Meeyomoot River, Saskatchewan region (Sheet No. 073I11), published in 1973. It is the first edition in a series of maps, which show both natural and man-made features such as relief, spot heights, administrative boundaries, secondary and side roads, railways, trails, wooded areas, waterways including lakes, rivers, streams and rapids, bridges, buildings, mills, power lines, terrain, and land formations. This map was published in 1973 and the information on the map is current as of . Maps were produced by Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) and it's preceding agencies, in partnership with other government agencies. <b>Please note:</b> image / survey capture dates can span several years, and some details may have been updated later than others. Please consult individual map sheets for detailed production information, which can be found in the bottom left hand corner. Original maps were digitally scanned by McGill Libraries in partnership with Canadiana.org, and georeferencing for the maps was provided by the University of Toronto Libraries and Eastview Corporation.
Other Borealis Collections Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Government of Canada; Army Survey Establishment 2022-09-06 This is a georeferenced raster image of a printed paper map of the Firebag River, Alberta region (Sheet No. 074E11), published in 1966. It is the first edition in a series of maps, which show both natural and man-made features such as relief, spot heights, administrative boundaries, secondary and side roads, railways, trails, wooded areas, waterways including lakes, rivers, streams and rapids, bridges, buildings, mills, power lines, terrain, and land formations. This map was published in 1966 and the information on the map is current as of 1963. Maps were produced by Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) and it's preceding agencies, in partnership with other government agencies. <b>Please note:</b> image / survey capture dates can span several years, and some details may have been updated later than others. Please consult individual map sheets for detailed production information, which can be found in the bottom left hand corner. Original maps were digitally scanned by McGill Libraries in partnership with Canadiana.org, and georeferencing for the maps was provided by the University of Toronto Libraries and Eastview Corporation.
Other Borealis Collections Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Government of Canada; Army Survey Establishment 2022-09-06 This is a georeferenced raster image of a printed paper map of the Damfino Creek, British Columbia region (Sheet No. 082E15), published in 1968. It is the first edition in a series of maps, which show both natural and man-made features such as relief, spot heights, administrative boundaries, secondary and side roads, railways, trails, wooded areas, waterways including lakes, rivers, streams and rapids, bridges, buildings, mills, power lines, terrain, and land formations. This map was published in 1968 and the information on the map is current as of 1960. Maps were produced by Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) and it's preceding agencies, in partnership with other government agencies. <b>Please note:</b> image / survey capture dates can span several years, and some details may have been updated later than others. Please consult individual map sheets for detailed production information, which can be found in the bottom left hand corner. Original maps were digitally scanned by McGill Libraries in partnership with Canadiana.org, and georeferencing for the maps was provided by the University of Toronto Libraries and Eastview Corporation.
Other Borealis Collections Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Government of Canada; Army Survey Establishment 2022-09-06 This is a georeferenced raster image of a printed paper map of the Shuswap Falls, British Columbia region (Sheet No. 082L07), published in 1968. It is the first edition in a series of maps, which show both natural and man-made features such as relief, spot heights, administrative boundaries, secondary and side roads, railways, trails, wooded areas, waterways including lakes, rivers, streams and rapids, bridges, buildings, mills, power lines, terrain, and land formations. This map was published in 1968 and the information on the map is current as of 1962. Maps were produced by Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) and it's preceding agencies, in partnership with other government agencies. <b>Please note:</b> image / survey capture dates can span several years, and some details may have been updated later than others. Please consult individual map sheets for detailed production information, which can be found in the bottom left hand corner. Original maps were digitally scanned by McGill Libraries in partnership with Canadiana.org, and georeferencing for the maps was provided by the University of Toronto Libraries and Eastview Corporation.
Other Borealis Collections Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Government of Canada; Army Survey Establishment 2022-09-06 This is a georeferenced raster image of a printed paper map of the Nagle Creek, British Columbia region (Sheet No. 083D02), published in 1968. It is the first edition in a series of maps, which show both natural and man-made features such as relief, spot heights, administrative boundaries, secondary and side roads, railways, trails, wooded areas, waterways including lakes, rivers, streams and rapids, bridges, buildings, mills, power lines, terrain, and land formations. This map was published in 1968 and the information on the map is current as of 1962. Maps were produced by Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) and it's preceding agencies, in partnership with other government agencies. <b>Please note:</b> image / survey capture dates can span several years, and some details may have been updated later than others. Please consult individual map sheets for detailed production information, which can be found in the bottom left hand corner. Original maps were digitally scanned by McGill Libraries in partnership with Canadiana.org, and georeferencing for the maps was provided by the University of Toronto Libraries and Eastview Corporation.
Other Borealis Collections Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Government of Canada; Army Survey Establishment 2022-09-06 This is a georeferenced raster image of a printed paper map of the Godin Lake, Alberta region (Sheet No. 084B01), published in 1973. It is the first edition in a series of maps, which show both natural and man-made features such as relief, spot heights, administrative boundaries, secondary and side roads, railways, trails, wooded areas, waterways including lakes, rivers, streams and rapids, bridges, buildings, mills, power lines, terrain, and land formations. This map was published in 1973 and the information on the map is current as of . Maps were produced by Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) and it's preceding agencies, in partnership with other government agencies. <b>Please note:</b> image / survey capture dates can span several years, and some details may have been updated later than others. Please consult individual map sheets for detailed production information, which can be found in the bottom left hand corner. Original maps were digitally scanned by McGill Libraries in partnership with Canadiana.org, and georeferencing for the maps was provided by the University of Toronto Libraries and Eastview Corporation.
Other Borealis Collections Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Government of Canada; Army Survey Establishment 2022-09-06 This is a georeferenced raster image of a printed paper map of the Narrow Lake, British Columbia region (Sheet No. 093H12), published in 1960. It is the first edition in a series of maps, which show both natural and man-made features such as relief, spot heights, administrative boundaries, secondary and side roads, railways, trails, wooded areas, waterways including lakes, rivers, streams and rapids, bridges, buildings, mills, power lines, terrain, and land formations. This map was published in 1960 and the information on the map is current as of 1955. Maps were produced by Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) and it's preceding agencies, in partnership with other government agencies. <b>Please note:</b> image / survey capture dates can span several years, and some details may have been updated later than others. Please consult individual map sheets for detailed production information, which can be found in the bottom left hand corner. Original maps were digitally scanned by McGill Libraries in partnership with Canadiana.org, and georeferencing for the maps was provided by the University of Toronto Libraries and Eastview Corporation.
Other Borealis Collections Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Government of Canada; Army Survey Establishment 2022-09-06 This is a georeferenced raster image of a printed paper map of the Cut Thumb Creek, British Columbia region (Sheet No. 093O11), published in 1968. It is the first edition in a series of maps, which show both natural and man-made features such as relief, spot heights, administrative boundaries, secondary and side roads, railways, trails, wooded areas, waterways including lakes, rivers, streams and rapids, bridges, buildings, mills, power lines, terrain, and land formations. This map was published in 1968 and the information on the map is current as of 1966. Maps were produced by Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) and it's preceding agencies, in partnership with other government agencies. <b>Please note:</b> image / survey capture dates can span several years, and some details may have been updated later than others. Please consult individual map sheets for detailed production information, which can be found in the bottom left hand corner. Original maps were digitally scanned by McGill Libraries in partnership with Canadiana.org, and georeferencing for the maps was provided by the University of Toronto Libraries and Eastview Corporation.
Other Borealis Collections Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Hossain, Fahim 2017-11-17 This file contains the latitude and longitude information of the bird routes for the North American region. This is a test file
Other Borealis Collections Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Khan, Salman 2020-10-24 Data set contains contours composed of co-aligned Gabor (contour) fragments embedded in a sea of similar but randomly oriented (background) fragments. Contours differ in the location, length (number of fragments), inter-fragment rotation and the Gabor fragments used in their construction. 64 Gabors Fragments, contours lengths of [1, 3, 5, 7, 9], beta rotations of 0, +-15 degrees are included. The dataset contains 64,000 training and 6,400 validation images. Images are all 256x256 pixels. Each image is divided into a grid of 14x14 pixels. Each grid square contains a 7x7 Gabor fragment. The center of middle square tile is aligned with the image center. This results in a binary label of size 19x19 of whether a grid square contains the center of a contour fragment.
Other Borealis Collections Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Government of Canada; Army Survey Establishment 2021-11-04 This is a georeferenced raster image of a printed paper map of the Kapuskasing, Ontario region (Sheet No. 042G08), published in 1959. It is the first edition in a series of maps, which show both natural and man-made features such as relief, spot heights, administrative boundaries, secondary and side roads, railways, trails, wooded areas, waterways including lakes, rivers, streams and rapids, bridges, buildings, mills, power lines, terrain, and land formations. This map was published in 1959. Maps were produced by Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) and it's preceding agencies, in partnership with other government agencies. <b>Please note:</b> image / survey capture dates can span several years, and some details may have been updated later than others. Please consult individual map sheets for detailed production information, which can be found in the bottom left hand corner. Original maps were digitally scanned by McGill Libraries in partnership with Canadiana.org, and georeferencing for the maps was provided by the University of Toronto Libraries and Eastview Corporation.
Other Borealis Collections Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Government of Canada; Army Survey Establishment 2021-11-04 This is a georeferenced raster image of a printed paper map of the Hanlan Lake, Ontario region (Sheet No. 042G13), published in 1987. It is the third edition in a series of maps, which show both natural and man-made features such as relief, spot heights, administrative boundaries, secondary and side roads, railways, trails, wooded areas, waterways including lakes, rivers, streams and rapids, bridges, buildings, mills, power lines, terrain, and land formations. This map was published in 1987. Maps were produced by Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) and it's preceding agencies, in partnership with other government agencies. <b>Please note:</b> image / survey capture dates can span several years, and some details may have been updated later than others. Please consult individual map sheets for detailed production information, which can be found in the bottom left hand corner. Original maps were digitally scanned by McGill Libraries in partnership with Canadiana.org, and georeferencing for the maps was provided by the University of Toronto Libraries and Eastview Corporation.

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