Home World News Canada news Skookum Jim, whose discovery led to the Klondike gold rush, gets a namesake asteroid
Canada news

Skookum Jim, whose discovery led to the Klondike gold rush, gets a namesake asteroid

Share
skookum jim whose discovery led to the klondike gold rush gets a namesake asteroid
Share

A legendary Yukoner received a posthumous honour that’s out of this world.

Skookum Jim, also known as Jim Mason, discovered gold in the Bonanza Creek in 1897, leading to the Klondike gold rush. When he died in 1916, he put the fortune he made into a trust to help improve the lives of Indigenous people in the Yukon.

Last week, on the recommendation of the Yukon Astronomical Society, an asteroid between Mars and Jupiter was named after him.

“I think it’s great,” said Zena McLean, Skookum Jim Mason’s great grand niece who didn’t know her ancestor’s name had been submitted.

“Anything that keeps Skookum Jim Mason’s name up in public history of the Yukon is important to his remaining nieces and nephews and family.”

skookum jim whose discovery led to the klondike gold rush gets a namesake asteroid
The Skookum Jim Friendship Centre in Whitehorse. (Philippe Morin/CBC)

Skookum Jim Mason was Tagish of the Dak l’a Weidi Clan. The trust fund he established in his will is still in existence today, according to the friendship centre that bears his name in Whitehorse. The interest generated from the fund is used to provide recognition to Indigenous people who have helped their community.

Maria Benoit, Haa Shaa du Hen, or chief, of the Carcross/Tagish First Nation and former executive director of the Skookum Jim Friendship Centre, was very happy to hear the news. Her great grandfather was Skookum Jim Mason’s nephew.

“Coming from a First Nation, it’s history in the making,” she said.

Skookum Jim asteroid

The Skookum Jim asteroid is a main belt asteroid. It orbits with other asteroids in between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. 

“It takes a little over five years to complete a full orbit around the sun,” explained Christa Van Laerhoven, president of the Yukon Astronomical Society. “Its orbit is not quite circular. It’s not wildly what we call eccentric. It’s not highly uncircular, but just a bit. And it’s tilted relative to Earth’s orbit by about 15 degrees.”

As far as Van Laerhoven knows, it’s the second asteroid whose name has a link to the Yukon.

“The only other asteroid that I can find with the Yukon connection is named Klondike,” she said, adding it’s named after two brothers who came up for the Klondike gold rush, made a fortune and donated money to a university in Finland that built a library.

In a quirk of fate, Van Laerhoven said it’s the university where the Skookum Jim asteroid was initially discovered.

However, if you’re hoping to see the Skookum Jim asteroid, Van Laerhoven said you’ll need a telescope. 

“Something fairly large,” she said, large enough that it wouldn’t be easy to bring out in your backyard.

McLean said she hopes that one day, science will be able to identify what the asteroid is made of.

“Wouldn’t it be fantastic if it was heavily laden with gold?” she said with a laugh.

Naming process

The naming all started with an email from the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada to the Yukon Astronomical Society that said they had an opportunity to put some names forward to the International Astronomical Union (IAU), which is in charge of naming things in space.

The way the email was worded, Van Laerhoven said, sounded like the IAU wanted to honour someone who had served society well.

“We really felt that if we were going to honour a Yukoner, we wanted to honour Skookum Jim,” she said.

“We really felt that his presence in Yukon history loomed so large that if we were going to get an asteroid named after a Yukoner, then it really should be him.”

9:30Look! Up in the sky! It’s the Skookum Jim asteroid

There is now an asteroid officially named after Yukoner Skookum Jim. Christa Van Laerhoven of the Yukon Astronomical Society explains how this came about. 9:30

The suggestion was put forward in 2018. 

The Yukon Astronomical Society was notified of the honour last week, on April 11.

“I’m absolutely tickled pink that the IAU took our suggestion,” said Van Laerhoven.

Share

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest Posts

Related Articles
Drug precursors the new 'primary threat' entering Canada as fentanyl imports drop
Canada news

New Focus on Drug Precursors: The Evolving Battle Against Fentanyl in Canada

As Canada grapples with a devastating opioid crisis, law enforcement agencies are...

This boy hurt in collision didn't have an Indian status card, so Ottawa wouldn't pay for medical evacuation
Canada news

Family Calls for Change After Young Boy Denied Medical Evacuation Due to Status Card Issue

The family of a seven-year-old boy from the Deer Lake First Nation...

B.C. village mourns deaths of 2 longtime residents in landslide
Canada news

Tragedy Strikes Lions Bay: Community Grieves Loss of Beloved Couple in Landslide

The picturesque village of Lions Bay, located just 25 minutes north of...

This Alberta town has mountains on one side, Calgary on the other — and some big growing pains
Canada news

Cochrane, Alberta: A Town in Transition Faces Growing Pains Amidst Rapid Expansion

Nestled in a stunning river valley at the base of the majestic...