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Natural Resources Click on the thumbnail to view the image, and for information about ordering reproductions.

Forestry: Québec
Timber Slide Timber slide, Hull, Lower Canada, carrying timber rafts past the rapids. In 1806 the first raft of heavy beams was taken down the Ottawa River by Philemon Wright. Engraving by J.P. Newell (active c.1855-1878).
ID #20302
Montmorency, 1810 Timber base at Montmorency, just below Quebec, in the 1810s, with a distant view of Quebec, both Lower and Upper Town.
ID #10226
Lumber Driving Driving lumber in northern Quebec, with lumberjacks at the start of a river drive.
ID #10011
Lumber Establishment Lumber establishment at Montmorency and Bay of Quebec, c. 1824.
ID #21835
Timber Yards The timber yards at Sheppard's Cove on the St. Lawrence River, near Quebec City, c. 1830. By James P. Cockburn (1779-1847).
ID #21825
Pulpwood Cut A pulpwood cut (90,000,000 feet) floating down the Saguenay River.
ID #20882
Pulp and Paper Mill Pulp and paper mill on Saguenay River, Quebec.
ID #21867
Timber Raft Timber raft on the Ottawa River. From the 19th century onward, huge rafts of square hewed timber were floated down the Ottawa and St. Lawrence Rivers for export to Britain.
ID #20243
Lumber Rafts Lumber rafts at the junction of the St. Lawrence and Ottawa rivers, early 1840s, one of a series of celebrated engravings by W.M. Bartlett, published in Canadian Scenery, 1842.
ID #10010
Timber Rafts Timber rafts on the St. Lawrence River, with sails helping the current.
ID #10224
Timber Raft An Ottawa timber raft with its crew on the Ottawa River.
ID #10227
Square-Hewing Square-hewing the big timbers in the wilds with the broad-axe.
ID #10228
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