Mapping
How can we tap natural capital—timber, wildlife, fresh water, plants, minerals—to produce economic wealth in a socially and environmentally responsible manner if we have little understanding of our surrounding landscape?
A rainforest, for instance, is more than a stand of trees. It is a medicine cabinet for First Nations, a home to myriad animals and habitat for spawning salmon. The value of a rainforest goes well beyond the market price of wood fibre. But how do we measure these other values? One way is mapping.
In 1995, Ecotrust Canada began its work on the coast by collecting and then mapping scientific data and the traditional knowledge of First Nations and coastal communities using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) technology. Since then, Ecotrust Canada has held GIS training sessions or helped set up mapping programs in more than two dozen First Nations and communities. We also operate the Aboriginal Mapping Network, a free, online resource and forum connecting native mappers around the globe.
Ecotrust Canada’s mapping and GIS program is founded on six operating principles: open access to public information, respect for local and traditional knowledge, a commitment to best practices, helping to realize local community visions, building long-term local capacity and a commitment to network communities and individuals. Taken together, these principles promote what we call “information democracy” and the empowerment of communities.
- Lil’wat GIS Programproject name:Lil’wat GIS Program
“Roadblocks!” That’s Johnny Jones’ one-word answer when asked why he became interested in mapping the traditional territory of the Líl’wat Nation, his homeland centred in Mt Currie.
- Haida Mapping Office
Haida field crews use helicopters to access remote areas for surveying.project name:Haida Mapping Office“Knowledge is power,” Sir Francis Bacon once wrote. And nobody knows that better than First Nations in British Columbia.
- Tsleil-Waututh GIS Trainingproject name:Tsleil-Waututh GIS Training
With the mountaintops of Tsleil-Waututh Territory in Indian Arm as a backdrop, Chief Leah George-Wilson tells a group of visitors about her First Nation's vision for their territory.


Neil Hughes
Program Director, Forestry
t 604.682.4141 ext 224For more information on our mapping services, click here.

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