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Tour participants, Baby Point Uncovered, July 29, 2023. Image by Oscar Akamine.  

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4500 × 3000 pixels (13.5 MP)

38.1 cm × 25.4 cm @ 300 PPI

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2000 × 1333 pixels (2.67 MP)

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Resource details

Resource ID

10474

Access

Open

Credit Line

Image by Oscar Akamine

Date of Creation

29 July 2023

Description

Tour participants stand next to the Humber River, named after the Humber estuary in England by John Graves Simcoe, first Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada. It was referred to by many other names in the past, including Niwa'ah Onega'gaih'ih (Anishinaabemowin /Ojibwe language), meaning Little Thundering Waters, and Gabekanaang-ziibi (Anishinaabemowin /Ojibwe): "leave the canoes and go back river." The Mississauga called the river Kabechenong, meaning “gathering place to tie up." It was mapped by the French (1688) as the "passage de taronto." A 1733 British map of French and Spanish settlements in the Americas shows the "Tanaovate River."

Keywords

Indigenous History, Natural history, natural heritage

Program Category

Tours

Rights

Oscar Akamine

Caption

Tour participants, Baby Point Uncovered, July 29, 2023. Image by Oscar Akamine.

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