Close
Help
Login
Staff Login
Register
FR
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Add to Cart
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Hide details
Conceptually similar
CP173453631 | Animal advocates praise Alberta wildlife corridors
CP16566519 | Newsroom Ready: Wildlife advocates thrilled with success of overpasses in Banff National Park
CP16566427 | Newsroom Ready: Advocate wants protection for Alberta wild horses
CP173406147 | Newsroom Ready: Popular Banff landmark being moved
CP170357499 | Newsroom Ready: Trans-Canada Highway slowed by carbon pricing protest
CP173589127 | Newsroom Ready: Crowsnest Pass voters support new coal mine
CP165526181 | Newsroom Ready: Social groups say the poor and homeless at risk due to high inflation
CP166814996 | Newsroom Ready: Crowsnest Pass residents say highway twinning will desecrate historical site
CP167656395 | Newsroom Ready: Alberta premier eyes expanding LNG reach globally
CP170638231 | Newsroom Ready: Alberta announces plan to protect consumers against power price spikes
Placeline/People
State Province
Alberta
Country
Canada
Newsroom Ready: Animal advocates praise Alberta wildlife corridors
Alberta is continuing to build wildlife corridors in an effort to make highways safer, especially on major highways connecting the province to British Columbia. A new overpass east of Canmore is nearly complete and a wildlife advocate says it's already doing the job. (Nov. 3, 2024)
Actions
Add to collection
Add to cart
Information
Source name:
The Canadian Press
Unique identifier:
CP173456847
Legacy Identifier:
r_Alta-Wildlife-Corridors20241103T1200
Type:
Video
Duration:
1m23s
Dimensions:
1920px × 1080px 80.85 MB
Usage rights:
FOR ONE TIME USE ONLY. NO STORAGE FOR FUTURE USE.
Create Date:
11/3/2024 12:00:00 PM
Display aspect ratio:
16:9
Tags
alberta
animals
banff
conservation
corridors
crossing
Exshaw
safety
traffic
wildlife
wildlife corridors