Accession N-2021-002 - Jean Boulva - 1964-68 slides

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Jean Boulva - 1964-68 slides

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  • Document cartographique

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N-2021-002

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Juridiction responsable et dénomination (philatélique)

Zone des dates de production

Date(s)

  • 1964-1968 (Création/Production)

Zone de description matérielle

Description matérielle

274 photographs : col. slide ; 35 mm
1 map ; 22 x 28 cm

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Nom du producteur

Notice biographique

Jean Boulva was born in Montreal and completed his Bachelor of Science degree from the Université de Montréal in 1968. He continued his studies at Dalhousie University, Halifax, earning a master’s degree in marine biology and a doctorate in biology. Dr. Boulva was employed as a professor of marine ecology at Université Laval, Regional Science Director for the Quebec Region in the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO), then Director of the Maurice Lamontagne Institute (MLI) in Mont-Joli, Quebec. Dr. Boulva is the author of numerous publications, has lectured on marine biology, served as a board member for teaching and research agencies, and been a guest expert on advisory committees.

During the summers of 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, and 1968, Jean Boulva worked as a summer student for the Fisheries Research Board of Canada onboard the M. V. Salvelinus, a 12 meter research vessel.

In the summer of 1964, along with Captain Ingram Gidney and summer student David Patriquin, he was directed to prepare and sail the M. V. Salvelinus some 1000 kilometers from Cape Parry to Cambridge Bay. Jean took many photographs on the journey north, while staying in Inuvik for nine days (June 18-27), and while delayed in Cape Parry nearly 2 months (June 27-August 16) due to poor ice conditions. He also spent time on bird and plant studies. At the time, Cape Parry had a church, Hudson’s Bay store, and was the site of a DEW line station, PIN-Main. In later years, the population of Cape Parry relocated to Paulatuk, further south. They travelled from Cape Parry via Coppermine and southern Coronation Gulf, arriving on August 25 in Cambridge Bay, where they studied oceanography and marine fish populations until beginning their return trip on September 19.

In 1965, the same team returned for the summer (June 27-September 11). They conducted oceanographic and fishery work first in Cambridge Bay and then in Bathurst Inlet (August 9-12), and traveled alongside the patrol vessel R.C.M.P. Spalding from Cambridge Bay to Baychimo (Bay Chimo). They took a side trip to a field camp at Keyhole Lake (50 kilometers northwest of Cambridge Bay) to study a landlocked arctic char population.

From July 2 to September 17, 1966, Ingram Gidney, Jean Boulva, and David Curtis (also a summer student) conducted research in Cambridge Bay and at a site in Dease Strait near Starvation Cove (69° 09' 41"N 105° 58' 50"W, 36 kilometers west of Cambridge Bay), where they built a small laboratory to support a multi-year study of arctic marine waters and small arctic lakes. On August 19, the trio visited a commercial char fishery at Wellington Bay.

From June 19 to September 25, 1967, Ingram Gidney, Jean Boulva, Steve McColl, and David Curtis (also summer students), and Moses Koihok (a local Inuit assistant) continued the research from 1966 in Cambridge Bay and Dease Strait near Starvation Cove. During the sea ice breakup period, David Curtis and Steve McColl coordinated scientific field work at Starvation Cove while Moses Koihok, Jean Boulva and Ingram Gidney worked on fisheries, oceanography and preparing the M.V. Salvelinus in Cambridge Bay.

From June 16 to September 8, 1968, a larger group carried out scientific research, including Ingram Gidney, two Fisheries Research Board of Canada (F.R.B.C.) technicians (Marsha Joynt and Shirley Leach), two F.R.B.C. scientists (Ken Muth and Jay Wacasey), the scientist head of the M.V. Salvelinus research program (J. Gerald Hunter), as well as two summer students, Gary Atkinson and Jean Boulva. The group carried out studies of marine and freshwater productivity near Starvation Cove, and fisheries research in Cambridge Bay. The group took a trip to Bathurst Inlet “with a lot of bad weather from August 5 to 11”; on August 11 Ingram Gidney departed due to an arm injury; on August 16 the vessel’s transmission broke down and became inoperable until the end of the season.

Historique de la conservation

Portée et contenu

Records include photographs taken by Jean Boulva during his summers on the research vessel M.V. Salvelinus which operated from 1964 to 1968 mainly around Cambridge Bay and Bathurst Inlet, NU. Records include photographs taken during his 1965 trip to Cambridge Bay, Keyhole Lake, Bathurst Inlet, and Baychimo; during his 1966 trip to Cambridge Bay, Wellington Bay and a research site in Dease Strait near Starvation Cove (69° 09' 41"N 105° 58' 50"W, 36 km west of Cambridge Bay); during his 1967 trip to Cambridge Bay, Dease Strait, and Starvation Cove; and during his 1968 trip to Starvation Cove, Cambridge Bay, and Bathurst Inlet.

Zone des notes

État de conservation

Classement

The processing archivist has retained the donor's arrangement of the slides and map.The received order is chronological, indicated on each slide with the creator's numbering scheme.

According to the creator's notes, the original numbering of the 1965 slides does not necessarily follow the chronology of the journey.

Physical arrangement is chronological and in order of reference code, with the following exceptions: Slides 167-169 were missing from the initial accrual and received after. An additional five slides were appended at the end of the donation by the donor: 100, 138, 242, 243, 253. Physically, these 11 slides are filed at the end.

Langue des documents

  • anglais
  • français

Écriture des documents

  • latin

Localisation des originaux

Disponibilité d'autres formats

Restrictions d'accès

No access restrictions.

Délais d'utilisation, de reproduction et de publication

CREDIT: NWT Archives/Jean Boulva Photograph Collection/N-2021-002

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Copyright transferred to NWT Archives by donor.

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Langue de la description

  • anglais

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