 |
|
Vancouver, BC
|
|
Juneau, AK
|
|
Skagway, AK
|
|
Whitehorse, Yukon
|
|
Dawson City, Yukon
|
|
Eagle, AK
|
|
Chicken, AK
|
|
Tok, AK
|
|
Fairbanks, AK
|
|
Fort Yukon, AK
|
|
Denali National Park
|
|
Anchorage, AK
|
|
Dempster
Highway
The
Dempster Highway, also referred to as Yukon Highway 5 and
Northwest Territories Highway 8, is a
highway that
connects the
Klondike Highway in the
Yukon Territory of
Canada to
Inuvik,
Northwest Territories on the
Mackenzie River delta.
During the winter months, the highway extends another 121 mi
to Tuktoyaktuk, on the northern coast of Canada, using frozen portions of the
Mackenzie River delta as an
ice road.
The highway crosses the
Peel River and the
Mackenzie Rivers using a combination of seasonal
ferry service and
ice bridges.
The highway begins about 25 mi east of
Dawson City, Yukon on the
Klondike Highway and extends 457 mi to Inuvik.
Much of the highway follows an
old dog sled
trail. The highway is named after
Royal Canadian Mounted Police Inspector William Dempster, who as a young
constable, frequently ran the dog sled
trail from
Dawson City, Yukon to
Fort McPherson, Northwest Territories.
My pictures of our trip on
the Dempster Highway
History
In 1958 the Canadian government
made the historic decision to build a 417 mi road through the Arctic
wilderness from Dawson City to Inuvik. Oil
and gas exploration was booming in the Mackenzie Delta and the town of Inuvik was under
construction. The road was billed as the first-ever overland supply link to
southern Canada,
where business and political circles buzzed with talk of an oil pipeline that
would run parallel to the road. The two would ultimately connect with another
proposed pipeline along the
Alaska Highway.
On
17 August 1959,
Ottawa announced that oil had been discovered in the territory’s Eagle
Plains and, almost immediately, the government gave major concessions to the oil
industry in an attempt to stimulate more exploration in the area. It was
realized that a highway across the
Arctic Circle would be needed to transport equipment, infrastructure and
revenue to and from the sites. Consequently, construction began at Dawson City
in January 1959. However, the highway's high costs, in addition to ongoing
wrangling between the federal and
Yukon
governments kept progress at a snail’s pace until 1961, when building stopped
altogether. Only 72 mi of roadbed had been built before the project was
abandoned.
There were no more developments
until 1968, when a discovery of huge reserves of oil and gas at
Prudhoe
Bay,
Alaska was made. This led to increased
competition between the authorities in America
and Canada.
Billions of dollars were at stake, and political fortunes hung in the balance on
both sides of the border. The Canadian government was afraid that the United States
would develop the massive oil field with no consultation, no consideration and
no benefits to its next-door neighbor. It wanted to assert Canadian sovereignty
over the Arctic seabed off the Yukon’s north
coast in the
Beaufort Sea, and over the waters among the Arctic islands which, though
claimed by Canada, were
asserted by the United States
as high seas.
Final
Construction
The Dempster Highway - Canada’s first all-weather road to cross the
Arctic Circle - was officially opened on
18 August 1979, at Flat Creek, Yukon.
It was unveiled as a two-lane, gravel-surfaced, all-weather highway that ran 417 miles from the
Klondike Highway near Dawson
City to Fort
McPherson and
Arctic Red River in the Northwest
Territories. The Canadian Armed Forces 1st Combat
Engineer Regiment from
Chilliwack,
British Columbia, built the two major bridges over the Ogilvie and Eagle
rivers. Ferries handle the traffic at the Peel River crossing near
Fort McPherson and the Arctic Red River crossing near
Tsiigehtchic. The design of the highway is unique, primarily due to the
intense physical conditions it is put through. The highway itself sits on top of
a gravel berm to insulate the permafrost in the soil underneath. The thickness
of the gravel pad ranges from 4 feet up to 8 feet in some places.
Without the pad, the permafrost would melt and the road would sink into the
ground.
In addition to services in Fort McPherson,
Tsiigehtchic and Inuvik, there is one location
with commercial services along the highway, at Eagle Plains. It is an important
fuel and food stop because of the great distance, and harbors stranded
travelers when the highway is closed due to extreme weather conditions. (Until
1979, the highway was only open in summer.)
During the early 1990s,
Northwestel erected microwave towers along the highway to facilitate public
safety with
manual mobile telephone service and to provide government agencies such as
highway maintenance and the RCMP with communications. The microwave project was
opposed by some environmental interests and those who preferred the pristine
appearance of the route. A suggestion to install fiber optics would not have
enabled mobile communications. Since then, the route has become the terrestrial
link to the exchanges in the Mackenzie Delta region.
Source: www.WikiPedia.org
Last page
|