This is a purely hypothetical situation...
Hypothetically speaking, if you were taking off from say.... Fairbanks in... let's say a Beech 1900C.
So you take off and are on climb out on the McKinley 5 departure from 19R up to 10,000 ft.. That departure is heading 190 to 2000 ft then a climbing right turn to 220 to intercept the 190 radial off of the FAI VOR. There is another 1900 on the visual for 1L (the same runway, opposite direction). This... completely hypothetical... situation happens quite often in Fairbanks as tower tries to let you land whatever way you're coming in from. So this 1900 is already on a direct final as you lift off and probobly out of 4,000 ft, likely on the ILS glideslope.
So in this situation you are on tower, get switched to approach and on intiial contact passing 1,000 ft you get "xxx, traffic 12 o'clock 6 miles, opposite direction out of 3,000 ft, Beech 1900. Continue the Mick 5" And then tells the other traffic "xxx, traffic, 12 o'clock, 5 miles, opposite direction out of 1,000 ft, Beech 1900. Will be turning to 220 shortly. Continue on the visual, tower has you both in sight and is maintaining visual seperation."
This is a completely new on one me. The hypthetical aircraft... is not even talking to tower anymore (yes I realize approach is probobly standing right next to him) and he's maintaining a visual seperation between traffic that neither aircraft has called in sight yet? This is with both aircraft operating under IFR with the departing aircraft on an IFR departure procedure.
And this, hypothetically speaking, has the aircraft pass within 1.5 miles (could have been 1 or a little less) of eachother at the same altitude, with neither aircraft ever calling the other in sight.
I just didn't know tower could maintian visual seperation like that.....

Or would this... purely hypothetical.... situation be an "Alaska thing?"