We present a CFH12K wide field survey of the carbon star population in and
around NGC 3109. Carbon stars, the brightest members of the intermediate-age
population, were found nearly exclusively in and near the disk of NGC 3109,
ruling out the existence of an extensive intermediate-age halo like the one
found in NGC 6822. Over 400 carbon stars identified have = -4.71,
confirming the nearly universality of mean magnitude of C star populations in
Local Group galaxies. Star counts over the field reveal that NGC 3109 is a
truncated disk shaped galaxy without an extensive stellar halo. The minor axis
star counts reach the foreground density between 4' and 5', a distance that can
be explained by an inclined disk rather than a spheroidal halo. We calculate a
global C/M ratio of 1.75 +/- 0.20, a value expected for such a metal poor
galaxy.Comment: Accepted in Astronomy and Astrophysic