Want this question answered?
how many people trekked to Alaska during the Klondike Gold Rush?
Merp.
150,000 people
The gold rush wasn't an employer, so people didn't "work for it". People looked for gold. Some did it full time and others did it in their spare time. Many people sold items or services to the miners in the camps to earn a living.
There are about 7 people per family in the gold rush.
how many people trekked to Alaska during the Klondike Gold Rush?
Merp.
There were many challenges faced in the gold rush. This includes violence, inflated prices on food and supplies, lack of gold and disease.
150,000 people
There is no way to know. Many people were buried in unmarked graves.
A lot but I don't know the amount for sure like 50,000
Yes and no. The Klondike is a place in the Yukon Territory of Canada, where the main gold was found. The area around Dawson city in the Yukon has produced between 15 and 20 million ounces of placer gold and geologists estimate 200+ million ounces of hard-rock gold in the area. The Klondike borders on Alaska and the Yukon river flows from the Yukon into Alaska. When glaciers pulverized the gold rich mountains of the Yukon into gravel it washed the gold and gravel into the Yukon drainage basin, the western portion of this basin is in Alaska. As the gold washed into Alaska the gold became more pulverized and as result the gold nuggets become smaller and fewer and the amount of flour gold increases the further west the gold is washed. although the main gold-rush was in the Yukon it doubled the population of Alaska as the easiest way to get to the Yukon was by ship to Alaska then across the border into Canada. The Klondike gold-rush also spurred gold exploration and and discovery in Alaska. also as the Klondike gold-rush was discovered at about the time the California gold-rush had been exhausted many of them headed to the Klondike and many of the non native settlers of the Yukon are their descendants.
Shipping and timber industries sprang up during the Klondike Rush. TheRuse brought many new settlers to the area, boosting the economy. Businesses, housing developers and employment opportunities flourished.
Short answer: They weren't... Siberian Huskies were not introduced in any numbers into North America until 1909 (and into Alaska, in that case), a full decade after the Klondike Gold Rush ended. Alaskan Malamutes, on the other hand, were among the most prized dogs available during the Rush, although there were many other "heavy duty" canine breeds and crossbreeds in use.
the Klondike Gold rush brought many Americans toward Canada and the canadians thought that the ameriacans would use this to take over Canada.
Women saw many new business opportunities by the needs of men in the camps. Women found business success by doing laundry, mending clothing, and cooking for men in the camps.
Women saw many new business opportunities by the needs of men in the camps. Women found business success by doing laundry, mending clothing, and cooking for men in the camps.