The large Windy Craggy copper project of Geddes Resources (TSE) in northwestern British Columbia may become a part of a provincial wilderness park. In June, the provincial government announced that it was going to expropriate the property.
The park will be more than one million hectares in area and link two national parks in Alaska with one in the Yukon, making for a wilderness preserve measuring 8.5 million hectares. The province plans to designate the park as a World Heritage Site, a status already enjoyed by the neighboring Alaska and Yukon parks.
Be the first to comment on "1993 A LOOK BACK — Windy Craggy rejected"