The Rothschilds fabulous stake in canada
Peter C. Newman
SAYS ANTHONY DE ROTHSCHILD: There was the De Beers diamond mine, then the loan that helped Disraeli buy the Suez. Now this. This could be the biggest of them all
LAST WINTER twenty Quortok Eskimos and two bearded prospectors herded ten huskydrawn sleds loaded with six tons of iron Ore through northern Quehecs numbing cold from Morgan Lake to an inlet off Ungava Bay just below the 60th Parallel. l.ike thousands of other Canadians who do not realize it. the members of this Arctic caravan were working for N. Ni. Rothschild & Sons. the world s most powerful private hank, which has during the past tour ears cautiously and secretly acquired a huge stake in (`anada. 1 he ore was being brought out I rom deposits owned by Oceanic Iron Ore of Canada ltd. for trans-shipment to metallurgical laboratories in Montreal after spring breakup. Oceanic is a suhsidiar y of i echnical NI Inc Consultants I ,ti,I., which in turn is owned by Rio
Canada launches North American Safe Boating Awareness Week
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Les changements climatiques compromettent le mode de vie des Inuit du Labrador
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As shrubs take over Labrador s tundra, the effects of climate change stretch beyond the ice
From tracts of tundra being claimed by birch to swarms of biting blackflies, climate change is creating human and ecological disruption in northern Labrador and not just in the winter.
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Inuit elders first flagged the explosion of green across what was formerly rocky tundra in the region
Posted: Apr 29, 2021 5:30 AM NT | Last Updated: April 29
A caribou grazes on dwarf birch and fireweed near the shore of Saglek Fjord, in Torngat Mountains National Park. Shrubs are rapidly overtaking tundra on the northern tip of Labrador, one of the many signs of climate change, which is altering the region.(Darroch Whitaker/Parks Canada)