Tongass Passage
Tongass Passage (Tlingit: Séet Tlèin[1]) is a strait on the Canada–United States border between Alaska and British Columbia, located on the southwest side of Wales Island. Wales Island, and Pearse Island, to its northeast, were claimed by the United States prior to the settlement of the Alaska boundary dispute in 1903. Prior to that time, numerous American-owned canneries lined its shores. Canadian claims to the islands were affirmed in the Alaska Boundary Settlement of 1903, in which Tongass Passage, Pearse Canal and the Portland Canal were defined as comprising "Portland Channel",[2] a term first used in the Anglo-Russian Treaty of 1825 as part of the marine boundary between Russian America and British claims in the region, but which remained undefined until the boundary settlement.
Tongass Passage | |
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Tongass Passage | |
Location | Alaska and British Columbia |
Coordinates | 54°44′39″N 130°38′10″W |
Type | Strait |
Native name | Tlingit: Séet Tlèin |
Basin countries | Canada and United States |
Islands | Pearse Island, Wales Island |
References
- "Tongass Passage". BC Geographical Names.
- U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Tongass Passage
- "Ketchikan Area Native Place Names" (PDF). Lingít Yoo X̲ʼatángi. Southeast Native Subsistence Commission Place Name Project. 1994–2001. pp. 98, 129. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
- "Pearse Canal". BC Geographical Names.