22 THE SALMON FISHEK. 



identified. The inter-oceanic boundary of the Atlan- 

 tic and Pacific Salmon has been determined, and the 

 range of the sea trout from Labrador to Alaska 

 established. For this result and consummation I 

 am especially indebted to Prof. Robert Bell, M. D., 

 assistant director of the Geological Survey of Canada, 

 whose scientific researches make his testimony in- 

 valuable and irrefutable. To summarize the results 

 so far as obtained, it may be stated that the Atlantic 

 Salmon (salar) is abundant along the entire Labra- 

 dor coast and up around Cape Chidley, its extreme 

 northern point, in about latitude 62 , and thence 

 around into the Koksok, Georges River, Whale 

 River and other rivers of the great Ungava Bay, on 

 the north coast of Labrador. The west entrance of 

 Hudson Strait seems to be the limit of its range. 

 The Pacific Salmon (Onchorhyncus chouicha) begins 

 on the mainland of the continent about Wager 

 Inlet, and is netted somewhere around Melville Pen- 

 insula, and thence westward. Between Y/ager Inlet 

 and the western entrance of Hudson Strait the Hud- 

 son Bay is projected southward in one tremendous 

 indentation, and in its waters no Salmon are found 



