Alberni canal
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alberni Canal or Alberni inlet is a is a long, narrow inlet in Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada that stretches from the open ocean of Barclay Sound and the Pacific Ocean 40 kilometers inland terminating at Port Alberni. It was named by the Spanish explorer Francisco de Eliza after Pere d'AlbernÃ, Captain of the First Free Company of Volunteers of Catalonia who was appointed in the Spanish fort in Nootka Sound from 1790 to 1792. The canal includes traditional territories of the Ucluelet, Pacheedaht and Tseshaht peoples, who are part of the Nuu-chah-nulth.
Contents |
[edit] History
Exposed to the open Pacific, Alberni Canal has been subject to tsunamis. The largest in historic times was the result of the Good Friday Earthquake in the Alaska Panhandle in 1964, and destroyed part of downtown Port Alberni. Tsunamis have repeatedly hit the First Nations village of Sarita, which is situated on a low sand beach the canal's eastern shore about halfway along.
[edit] Name Change
In 1931 there was a recommendation that the name be changed from canal to inlet so that foreign shippers would avoid Alberni. As described by the BCGNIS: "First labelled Canal de Alberni on Spanish charts. In 1931 H.D.Parizeau, Hydrographic Service recommended that the ambiguous term 'canal' be changed to 'inlet', "...it is most important for the foreign trade existing between Port Alberni and the outside world, that this word canal, which is greatly mistaken, should be changed for the proper word of inlet. It is needless to tell you that a great difficulty of this word canal comes in with the foreign shipping in general, who figure themselves the extra expense and the danger attached to sending their ships through a canal; for they figure that Alberni Canal is something similar to Manchester Canal, Panama Canal and Suez Canal, where extra fees for pilotage, canal dues, extra insurance and so forth come into the question." [1]
[edit] References
- ^ Alberni Inlet, BCGNIS