The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1971, Page 36

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1971, Page 36
34 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN WINTER 1971 (continued from page 31) south route. Hundreds of ruins still stand in Greenland as silent evidence of this great tragedy. In the corridor of one of the ruins, the skeleton of Nordic man was recently found, prob- ably that of the last living man in the settlement whom no one was there to bury. How the final end came is not cer- tain. Failure of trade monopoly, ad- verse climatic change, the Black Death, and the return of the Eskimo to their former hunting grounds, were among the principal causes. Recent historical research indicate the likelihood that Leifr Eiriksson carried out his explorations in North America about 990 A.D. See article by Haraldur Bessason “Some Notes on Leifr Eiriksson’s National Origin and the Sources on Greenland and Vin- land”, in The Icelandic Canadian, Winter, 1965. By the same token Eirikr the Red may have been born in Iceland about 930 A.D. -ED. NORTHERN CO-OPS Agricultural Minister Sam Uskiw says progress made by Indians and Metis in northern co-operatives is “nothing short of amazing”. The co-ops formed to include fisher- men, lumbermen and general store workers. At Island Lake, 310 miles northeast of Winnipeg, fishermen at the Kee- No-Sae co-op receive $1.50 an hour, plus unemployment insurance during the off-season. The co-op covers 17,000 square miles and employs 230. Last year, earnings per fisherman were $1,033, total earn- ings $180,775. MAKING PROGRESS Administration of the co-op is en- tirely in the hands of local people, under the watchful eye of an appoint- ed supervisor. As of mid-November, the fishermen had caught 1,467,000 pounds of fish, which is shipped to the Savage Island plant for grading, and packing for final shipment. Helgi Johnson, formerly of Win- nipeg and Gimli, and now of West St. Paul, is one of the two Supervisors from the Dept, of Co-op Development who works directly with 'the Kee-No- Sae Co-operative.

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