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Klondike Gold Rush

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Nome
city in Alaska, USA
Skagway
consolidated city-borough in Alaska, United States of America
Dawson City
town in Yukon Territory, Canada
Klondike Gold Rush
C.E.1890s migration
Klondike River
watercourse in Yukon, Canada
Colt Single Action Army
single-action revolver
Klondike
region of Yukon, Canada
Robert W. Service
Canadian poet and writer (1874-1958)
Bennett Lake
lake in British Columbia and Yukon, Canada
White Pass and Yukon Route
railway line
Colt New Service
Revolver
Keish
Keish ( – July 11, 1916), also known as James Mason and by the nickname Skookum Jim Mason, was a member of the Tagish First Nation in what became the Yukon Territory of Canada. He was born near Bennett Lake, on what is now the Yukon–British Columbia border. He lived in Caribou Crossing, now Carcross, Yukon.
Bonanza Creek
tributary of Klondike River in Yukon, Canada
Chilkoot Pass
mountain pass
Lake Laberge
lake in Yukon, Canada
Burning Daylight
novel by Jack London
Dyea
ghost town
The Chechahcos
1924 film
North-West Mounted Police
former Canadian police force (1873–1920)
White Pass
mountain pass on border between Alaska and British Columbia, Canada
Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park
United States National Historical Park, in Skagway, Alaska with a unit in Seattle, Washington
Colt M1877
Revolver
Colt M1892
Revolver
Forty Mile
locality in Yukon, Canada (lat 64.45, lon -140.55)
SS Princess Sophia
Canadian steel-built passenger liner
Fort Selkirk
town in Yukon, Canada
King Solomon's Dome
mountain in Canada
Bennett
abandoned town in British Columbia, Canada
Taiya Inlet
water body in Alaska, USA
Chilkoot Trail
long-distance hiking trail in Canada and United States of America
Lindeman Lake
lake in Stikine Region, British Columbia, Canada
SS Islander
ship
Colt M1878
Revolver
Taiya River
river in Alaska
Nome Gold Rush
a gold rush in Nome, Alaska, approximately 1899–1909
The Alaska Kid
television series
Tr'ochëk
thumb|Tr'ochëk, shown just above Dawson City '''Tr'ochëk''' is the site of a traditional Hän fishing camp at the confluence of the Klondike River and Yukon River. Tr'ochëk lies on the upstream flat, an alluvial deposition of the Klondike River, at the river confluence. Dawson City is directly north of the site, just across the Klondike. The site is owned and managed by the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in First Nation, and is operated by the First Nation's Department of Heritage. Tr'ochëk became part of the Tr’ondëk-Klondike UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2023 because of its unique testimony to the transforma