Geography and climate of Canada |
| Canada occupies a major northern
portion of North America, sharing land borders with the contiguous United
States to the south and with the U.S. state of Alaska to the northwest,
stretching from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the
west; to the north lies the Arctic Ocean. By total area (including its
waters), Canada is the second largest country in the world after
Russia and largest on the continent. By land area it ranks fourth. Since
1925, Canada has claimed the portion of the Arctic between 60°W and 141°W
longitude, but this claim is not universally recognized. The northernmost
settlement in Canada and in the world is Canadian Forces Station (CFS)
Alert on the northern tip of Ellesmere Island—latitude 82.5°N—just 817
kilometres (450 nautical miles) from the North Pole. Canada has the
longest coastline in the world: 243,000 kilometres. The population density, 3.5 inhabitants per square kilometre (9.1/sq mi), is among the lowest in the world. The most densely populated part of the country is the Quebec City-Windsor Corridor along the Great Lakes and Saint Lawrence River in the southeast. To the north of this region is the broad Canadian Shield, an area of rock scoured clean by the last ice age, thinly soiled, rich in minerals, and dotted with lakes and rivers. Canada by far has more lakes than any other country and has a large amount of the world's freshwater. In eastern Canada, most people live in large urban
centres on the flat Saint Lawrence Lowlands. The Saint Lawrence River
widens into the world's largest estuary before flowing into the Gulf of
Saint Lawrence. The gulf is bounded by Newfoundland to the north and the
Maritime provinces to the south. The Maritimes protrude eastward along the
Appalachian Mountain range from northern New England and the Gaspé
Peninsula of Quebec. New Brunswick and Nova Scotia are divided by the Bay
of Fundy, which experiences the world's largest tidal variations. Ontario
and Hudson Bay dominate central Canada. West of Ontario, the broad, flat
Canadian Prairies spread toward the Rocky Mountains, which separate them
from British Columbia. Source : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada |
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