Sahtu Northwest Territories

The Sahtu Region is an administrative region in Canada's Northwest Territories. Coterminous with the settlement region described in the 1993 Sahtu Dene and Metis Comprehensive Land Claim Agreement, 41,437 km² of the Sahtu is collectively owned by its Indigenous Sahtu and Métis inhabitants. Although the region's population is predominantly First N…
The Sahtu Region is an administrative region in Canada's Northwest Territories. Coterminous with the settlement region described in the 1993 Sahtu Dene and Metis Comprehensive Land Claim Agreement, 41,437 km² of the Sahtu is collectively owned by its Indigenous Sahtu and Métis inhabitants. Although the region's population is predominantly First Nations, a significant non-Indigenous presence exists in Norman Wells, the regional office, established in 1920 to serve the only producing oilfield in the Canadian Territories. Considered to be of vital strategic importance during World War II in the event of a Japanese invasion of Alaska, the region's petroleum resources were exploited by the United States Army with the Canol Project, but the pipeline never became necessary and ultimately operated for less than one year.
  • Country: Canada
  • Territory: Northwest Territories
  • Territorial riding: Sahtu
  • Settlement area: Sahtu
  • Regional office: Norman Wells
  • Time zone: UTC−07:00 (MST)
Data from: en.wikipedia.org