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Sachs Harbour, Northwest Territories

Sachs Harbour
Ikahuak
Hamlet
Sachs Harbour cairn and community 02.jpg
Sachs Harbour is located in Northwest Territories
Sachs Harbour
Sachs Harbour
Sachs Harbour is located in Canada
Sachs Harbour
Sachs Harbour
Coordinates: 71°59′08″N 125°14′53″W / 71.98556°N 125.24806°W / 71.98556; -125.24806Coordinates: 71°59′08″N 125°14′53″W / 71.98556°N 125.24806°W / 71.98556; -125.24806
Country Canada
Territory Northwest Territories
Region Inuvik Region
Constituency Nunakput
Census division Region 1
First permanent settlement 1929
Incorporated (hamlet) 1 April 1986
Government
 • Mayor Lloyd Acheson
 • Senior Administrative Officer Steve Wylie
 • MLA Herbert Nakimayak
Area
 • Land 290.94 km2 (112.33 sq mi)
Elevation 86 m (282 ft)
Population (2011)
 • Total 112
 • Density 0.4/km2 (1/sq mi)
Time zone Mountain (MST) (UTC-7)
 • Summer (DST) MDT (UTC-6)
Canadian Postal code X0E 0Z0
Area code(s) 867
Telephone exchange 690
- Living cost 177.5
- Food price index 177.5
Sources:
Department of Municipal and Community Affairs,
Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre,
Canada Flight Supplement
^A 2009 figure based on Edmonton = 100
^B 2010 figure based on Yellowknife = 100

Sachs Harbour is a hamlet located in the Inuvik Region of the Northwest Territories, Canada. Situated on the southwestern coast of Banks Island in the Inuvialuit Settlement Region, the population according to the 2011 census count was 112 people. The two principal languages in the town are Inuvialuktun and English. The traditional name for the area is "Ikahuak", meaning "where you go across to". Bulk supplies of food and other items are brought by barge in the summer months and flights from Inuvik, some 325 mi (523 km) to the southwest, operate all year, via the Sachs Harbour Airport. Sachs Harbour is the only permanent settlement on Banks Island.

The town was named after the ship Mary Sachs, which was part of the Canadian Arctic Expedition of 1913.

The community's economy is based largely on hunting and trapping, but tourism also plays a small role. Most of the town lies within 250 yd (230 m) of the shoreline. Residents also engage in ice fishing, harvesting fish from the Amundsen Gulf and the Beaufort Sea. There is a goose hunt every spring - Banks Island being the home to the largest goose colony in North America. The community is also home to the largest commercial muskox harvests in Canada. Three quarters of the world's population of muskoxen roam the island. Barren-ground caribou and polar bear are also seen on the island. On April 26, 2006, the world's first documented wild-born grizzly–polar bear hybrid was shot near the town.


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