What is a peer-reviewed article?
Peer-reviewed or scholarly articles are studies that are evaluated by experts prior to publication. Experts consider if the article meets certain criteria of originality and quality, recommending revisions that must be made as a condition for publication in an academic journal.
North America’s premier journal of northern research. Now in its seventh decade of continuous publication, Arctic is a peer-reviewed, primary research journal that publishes the results of scientific research from all areas of scholarship dealing with the Arctic and subarctic regions.
An open access, peer-reviewed journal published by Yukon University in Whitehorse, Canada, on the traditional territories of the Kwanlin Dün First Nation and the Ta’an Kwäch’än Council.
This library is particularly strong in Yukon scientific and research materials; the library also holds over 150,000 aerial photos, 60,000 of which are available online through GeoYukon.
A map viewer which will allow you to find Yukon aerial photographs for a given location. Use to map to find the location of watercourses, roads, aerial photographs of specific places, and more.
Search for Yukon-related materials through the public access catalogue, covering subjects such as Yukon and northern history, environment, ethnography, science and nature, and exploration.
Listed heritage publications, archeology booklets, Occasional Papers series for Archeology and Earth Sciences, Yukon history and historic sites, and heritage best management practices.
Bibliography of Indigenous Peoples in North America is a bibliographic database covering all aspects of native North American culture, history, and life. This resource covers a wide range of topics including archaeology, multicultural relations, gaming, governance, legend, and literacy.