{
    "system": "GoGuides Verified Text",
    "api_version": "verified-text-v1",
    "status": "ok",
    "response_type": "verified_text_record",
    "source_key": "britannica_1926",
    "source_title": "Encyclopaedia Britannica (1926)",
    "license_code": "public_domain",
    "attribution": null,
    "license_url": null,
    "chunk_id": "1926:labrador:4a80065ce491",
    "title": "LABRADOR",
    "section": null,
    "hash_alg": "sha256",
    "hash_sha256": "c4171481e17ab6fa15692cc15af40f17aa6b64d2edae2f12a7690a7b1f4ae757",
    "normalizer": {
        "name": "ggnorm",
        "version": "1.0"
    },
    "verified_text": "by the end of 1925 considerable progress had been made by the agents of canada and newfound- land with the proposed case for submission to the privy council for its decision as to the boundary between the areas claimed 654 by the two dominions. newfoundland claimed broadly, that her jurisdiction should embrace the whole watershed draining into the atlantic, while canada contended that a strip of sea- board a mile deep from high water is all newfoundland should have. the territory in dispute contains the famous ‘‘ grand falls ’” of labrador, one of the greatest waterfalls in the world, besides several minor cascades capable of producing vast hydro- electric energy, while in the river valleys are large areas of forest growth capable of being converted into pulp and paper, so that the potential value of the region is very great. the population of newfoundland labrador at the census of 1921 was 3,774: this showed roughly a 10% decrease since ro1it, mainly among the esquimaux population in the northern section, who were decimated by the epidemic of influenza in the winter of 1918-9. these natives do not exceed 1,000 in all, a decline of about one-half in some 35 years. lumbering, which in the period 1900-10 was undertaken in hamilton inlet, virtually ceased, largely because of difficulties arising out of the boundary dispute. the missionaries in the north, the hudson bay and revillon fur companies further south and newfoundland traders all over the region conduct its limited commerce. the grenfell mission pursues its humane activities among both transient fisherfolk and permanent set- tlers, and the churches in newfoundland, both protestant and catholic, maintain missionaries there in the summer, with one or two residing permanently. the hinterland is unpeopled save by some wandering tribes of indians, who number only a few hundreds altogether, and are slowly dying out. industrial conditions continue unchanged and the annual value of fish, furs and other articles exported from the coast to foreign mar- kets averages about $500,000. codfish to the value of about $1,000,000 a year is taken on the coast, brought to newfound- land to be cured, and figures in the exports from that country. bibliography.—w . t. grenfell, vikings of today (1898); w. t. grenfell, labrador (1922); w. g. gosling, labrador, zis discovery, exploration and development (1910). (p. ts mm,)",
    "source_url": "https://archive.org/details/encyclopaedia-britannica-encyclopaedia-britannica.-3-encyclopaedia-britannica-inc.-1926",
    "observed_at": "2026-05-17 12:14:12",
    "integrity": {
        "hash_check": "match",
        "hash_scope": "full_normalized_text",
        "computed_sha256": "c4171481e17ab6fa15692cc15af40f17aa6b64d2edae2f12a7690a7b1f4ae757"
    },
    "machine_use": {
        "read": true,
        "cite": true,
        "decision": "verified_public_domain_text"
    },
    "documentation": {
        "white_paper_url": "https://www.goguides.com/white-paper.php",
        "pdf_url": "https://www.goguides.com/whitepapers/goguides-ai-source-clearance-white-paper.pdf"
    }
}