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info about Yukon
Yukon is larger than life with breathtaking wilderness, a wealth of opportunities, abundant natural resources and friendly welcoming people. It is home to a skilled and educated work force, modern infrastructure and endless options for outdoor activities year-round.
In 1898, two years after the start of the Klondike Gold Rush, which brought a stampede of about 100,000 fortune seekers to within its borders, the Yukon became Canada's second northern territory - and would soon become a beehive of human activity.
The site of an Indian fishing camp in 1896, four years later Dawson City emerged as Canada's largest urban centre west of Winnipeg, with a population as high as 40,000 consisting of people coming and going in search of gold.
Today, Dawson City, Yukon's second largest city, is home to nearly 2,000 people out of a total territorial population of just over 31,000 - most of it (almost 23,000) based in the capital, Whitehorse.
Yet Yukoners haven't minded trading early 20th-century frenetic activity for 21st-century tranquility where the territory's "untouched wilderness" is a source of great pride for its people.
Kluane National Park, situated in the southwestern corner of the Yukon and a United Nations World Heritage Site, contains Canada's highest peak, Mount Logan. Surrounding the 6,050-metre-tall mountain are several massive glaciers, including the world's largest non-polar ice fields - an area "where the Ice Age isn't over yet," according to a Yukon government promotion.
Ironically, the Yukon was spared the deep freeze the last great Ice Age had on the rest of Canada. Untouched by glaciers, the area was part of a region that joined Asia and America known as Beringia from which North America's first inhabitants - and ancestors to the Yukon's First Nations people - are believed to have arrived at least 24,000 years ago.
Yukon is an excellent place to live, work and play - it is a way of life.
Programs and Services contact information
If you have problems contacting a Yukon government program or service, you can call the Inquiry Centre at the (867) 667-5811. If you live outside Whitehorse, you can call the government's toll free number 1-800-661-0408. This number does not work outside Yukon.
Inquiry Centre (Information Desk) 667-5811. Outside Whitehorse toll free 1-800-661-0408.
To access the number for the Telecommunications Device for the Hearing Impaired (TDD) please call (867) 393-7460. Outside Whitehorse call Relay Operator.
Business
 Business Directories, Business Resources, Funding, Tax Credits and Partnerships, Human Resources , Investment, Jobs, Employment, Workers, Training and Careers, Labour force, Workplace, Land, acquisitions and development, Liens, Bankruptcy, Taxes, Tenders and Tendering forecast, Yukon Government Source list
Aboriginal, Agriculture, Art and Culture, Building and Construction, Consumer Information, Contracting, Ecology and Environment, Education, Emergency Services and Public Safety, Environment, Finance programs and services, French Services, Funds and Grants, Government, Health and Well-being, History, Inspections, Land, Languages, Laws, Legislation and Justice, Libraries and Archives, Licensing, Registrations, Certificates, Permits, and Identification Cards, Motor Vehicles, Online Services, Recreation, Science and Technology, Subscriptions, Taxes, Telecommunications (Television, Radio), Tourism, Transportation
Departments and Corporations
 Community Services, Economic Development, Education, Energy, Mines and Resources, Environment, Executive Council Office, Finance, Health and Social Services, Highways and Public Works, Justice, Public Service Commission , Tourism and Culture , Women's Directorate , Yukon Energy Corporation , Yukon Housing Corporation , Yukon Liquor Corporation , Yukon Workers Compensation Health and Safety Board
Life Events
Buying a home, Housing, Death, Divorce, Having a Baby, Illness, Lost Wallet, Marriage, Retirement
People
Aboriginal, Children, Employers, Entrepreneur, Business owner, Parents and Families, Seniors, Students, Women, Youth
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