Canadian High Arctic

E1216607 UNEXPLORED

The Canadian High Arctic is a remote, sparsely populated polar region of northern Canada characterized by extreme cold, sea ice, tundra landscapes, and unique wildlife adapted to harsh Arctic conditions.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Referenced by

All labels observed (3)

Label Occurrences
High Arctic 12
Canadian High Arctic canonical 5
Canadian Arctic 3

Referenced by (20)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Ivory gull breedingRange Canadian High Arctic
Ross's goose breedsIn Canadian High Arctic
this entity surface form: Canadian Arctic
Barbeau Peak region Canadian High Arctic
this entity surface form: High Arctic
Quttinirpaaq National Park locatedIn Canadian High Arctic
this entity surface form: High Arctic
Alert, Nunavut locatedIn Canadian High Arctic
this entity surface form: High Arctic
Eureka, Nunavut isLocatedIn Canadian High Arctic
Grise Fiord locatedIn Canadian High Arctic
this entity surface form: High Arctic
Grise Fiord locatedIn Canadian High Arctic
this entity surface form: Canadian Arctic
Lake Hazen locatedIn Canadian High Arctic
Lake Hazen region Canadian High Arctic
this entity surface form: High Arctic
Greenland by Nares Strait environment Canadian High Arctic
this entity surface form: High Arctic
British Empire Range locatedIn Canadian High Arctic
this entity surface form: High Arctic
Alert locatedIn Canadian High Arctic
this entity surface form: High Arctic
Eureka locatedIn Canadian High Arctic
subject surface form: Eureka, Nunavut
Sirius Passet climate Canadian High Arctic
this entity surface form: High Arctic
Crocker Mountains partOf Canadian High Arctic
Haughton-Mars Project Research Station locatedIn Canadian High Arctic
this entity surface form: Canadian Arctic
Jones Sound locatedIn Canadian High Arctic
this entity surface form: High Arctic
Wellington Channel locatedIn Canadian High Arctic
this entity surface form: High Arctic
Dundas Harbour locatedIn Canadian High Arctic
this entity surface form: High Arctic