FACTOID # 74: More than a third of the time, Icelanders don't show up for work. Perhaps that's why they're the world's happiest nation.
 
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Encyclopedia > Codex canadiensis

Codex canadiensis, the name of an illustrated book on the subject of the native peoples and wildlife in Canada, was written in or about 1700 by a French missionary priest called Louis Nicolas. This document, today preserved by the Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa, Oklahoma, is handwritten and hand-drawn on parchment in ink and watercolours. The Codex canadiensis provides extremely valuable documentation of the people, flora, and fauna of the New World as European explorers were first discovering them. Louis Nicolas was a French missionary in Canada in the late-seventeenth and early-eighteenth century. ...


References

  • Codex canadiensis at Library and Archives Canada


 

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