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| ABOUT  Edo Nyland *(Contact)          Edo Nyland, born in Amsterdam, the Netherlands in 1927,
  the youngest of four sons. The usual six years elementary school, five years
  high school (during the German occupation years) and one year Normal School,
  all in Amsterdam. Switched to study botany (taxonomy) at the University of
  Amsterdam. Study interrupted in 1947 by compulsory military service. In the
  army he received a ten months crash training course at the eye hospital
  "Oog in Al" in Utrecht, and then was assigned to a team of four
  ophthalmologists in the Medical Corps, assembled to help the many tragically
  afflicted survivors of the Japanese concentration camps in the former Dutch East
  Indies. Assisted in eye operations such as cornea transplantation, trachoma,
  cataract, detached retina etc.   
             Back in Holland, the military offered training courses
  for returned veterans and, as he had planned to go to Canada, he took the
  full time cabinetmakers course for 11 months, which also included a fair pay
  cheque. The course came in very handy during the first two years of
  University in Canada and throughout life. The money earned from the army
  service and cabinetmaker's course was saved and paid for the trip over the
  ocean. He arrived in Halifax April 1, 1952 with $50. - in his pocket.             Continuing his botany study was no longer appealing so
  he switched to the ruff-tuff "forestry" of British Columbia. The
  Faculty of Forestry in Vancouver demanded upgrading in physics, English and
  mathematics which courses were taken at the University of Alberta in Edmonton
  1952/53. Then followed four years at the University of British Columbia,
  resulting in a B.S.F degree in Forestry, awarded in May 1957. Summers
  were spent working for the large logging and timber companies at a time that
  steam logging and log transport by railway was still commonly used. The work
  involved the locating and surveying of logging roads, establishing survey
  controls, cut-block layout, contour mapping and detailed evaluation of large,
  pristine forest holdings, work which was always associated with aerial photo
  interpretation, map making and difficult travel conditions.              From December 1957 until May 1968 he was District
  Forester for the Whitecourt Forest in Alberta where 95 sawmills, small and
  large, needed to be supplied with timber and supervised, work done by a staff
  of forest rangers and a seven man timber management crew. This involved tree
  marking, cutting plan judging, road- and bridge- construction supervision,
  reforestation such as soil scarifying and seeding as well as tree planting,
  fire fighting and some forest ecology research. In 1968 promoted to land use
  specialist at the Alberta Forest Service head office in Edmonton and attached
  to the Land-use Assignment Section. In April 1971 he was appointed Regional
  Manager of the uniformed (federal) Yukon Lands and Forest Service, based in
  Whitehorse, capital of the Yukon Territory. Here his main task was modernizing
  and building of the Yukon Forest Service, which included staff training, fire
  prevention and aerial fire suppression, supervision of road, bridge, airstrip
  and seismic line construction activities of many oil and mining companies,
  environmental protection, inspection of private recreation facilities, timber
  disposal, silvicultural and some genetic research etc. etc. Retired Jan. 1,
  1983 at the age of 55 and moved to British Columbia with wife Elisabeth. Here
  he served two three-year terms as alderman (1990-1996). A very different
  challenge laid ahead, the subject of the following pages.   | 
For further detail, please
refer to:
 
Nyland, Edo. 2001. Linguistic Archaeology: An
Introduction. Trafford Publ., Victoria, B.C., Canada.
               ISBN 1-55212-668-4. 541 p. [
see abstract & summary]
 
          Nyland, Edo.  2002. 
Odysseus and the Sea Peoples: A 
               Bronze Age History of Scotland  Trafford Publ., Victoria, 
               B.C., Canada. 
307 p.   [see
abstract & summary].
 
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