标题和责任声明版块
正题名
000221AHB_Yucluta
总体资料名称
- Graphic material
并列标题
其他标题信息
标题 责任声明
标题说明
- Source of title proper: Title based on computer folder name as received from Alan Haig-Brown.
描述层级
File
参考代码
版本版块
版本声明
版本责任声明
资料细节等级版块
比例说明(地图的)
投影说明(地图的)
坐标说明(地图的)
比例说明(建筑的)
发行方管辖权和名称 (集邮的)
创建日期版块
日期
物理描述版块
物理描述
24 photographs (tiff) : colour
出版社连续出版物版块
出版社连续出版物的正题名
出版社连续出版物的并列标题
出版社连续出版物的其他标题信息
与出版社连续出版物相关的责任声明
出版社连续出版物编号
对出版社连续出版物的说明
文献著录版块
创建者名称
传纪历史
Alan Haig-Brown was born in Campbell River, British Columbia. In his teens, he worked as a deck-hand and was later taught to seine fish by his father-in-law Herb Assu of Quadra Island. As a young man, he worked on commercial fishing boats and coastal freighters. He seined salmon and herring until 1973, and then served for eleven years as coordinator of First Nations education in the Cariboo-Chilcotin. He also taught in the Chilcotin and Shuswap First Nations.
Haig-Brown photographs and writes about commercial boats and their crews, from tugs to fishing boats, in British Columbia and internationally. He has published several books, including the award-winning Fishing for a Living (1993) and The Fraser River (1996). He became editor of the West Coast Fisherman in 1986 and later founded The West Coast Mariner and The West Coast Logger. He continues to contribute to a number of commercial marine and commercial fishing magazines, such as Professional Mariner and Maritime Life and Traditions. He also writes a regular column for Cummins, a marine engine manufacturer.
Alan Haig-Brown is the son of writer and conservationist Roderick Haig-Brown, brother of Valerie Haig-Brown and father of filmmaker Helen Haig-Brown. He lives in New Westminster, British Columbia and Bangkok, Thailand.
保管历史
范围和内容
File contains photographs of the Yucata Spirit tug towing log booms through the Yucultas.
说明版块
物理条件
藏品直接来源
整理
资料的语言
资料文字
原件位置
其他格式的可用性
检索限制
Online access to some photographs in the file is restricted to protect the privacy of the individuals depicted within them. Restricted files can be viewed onsite in the Rare Books and Special Collections reading room.