the country's large size and separate cultures
Middle East
prairie region of canada
canada
Cajuns is the term that describes French Canadians in Louisiana. The term refers to the descendants of French-speaking residents of what are now the Maritime provinces of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island in eastern Canada. Cajuns will be called les Acadiens or les Cadiens ("the Acadians") in French since the above-mentioned region historically was called Acadie ("Acadia").
Canada
The Canadians settled in Canada (which is not the US). Canada is to the north of the US.
The Canadians settled in CANADA (which is not the US). Canada is to the north of the US.
Most Canadians do not live in the tundra. The tundra is actually sparsly populated. The majority of the population live along the border.
False. Most Canadians live in urban and suburban areas, particularly in cities like Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver. The tundra region in Canada, which includes the northernmost parts of the country, has a much smaller population due to its harsh climate and remote location.
the interior plains have the most oil in Canada.
Canada is not a region, but it does contain a large variety of regions. It's a beautiful country and it has everything one would need, it is much like the U.S. but with more wilderness though Canada is almost equally as high-tech and modern as any other country.
Although the land presently known as Canada was occupied for thousands of years by first nations people it was not known as Canada until 1535 when French explorer Jacques Cartier used the word Canada to identify lands used by local inhabitants. By 1545, European books and maps commonly referred to this region as Canada. So these first "Canadians" were the local natives and the French explorera and settlers. If, however, there were no "Canadians" until the Dominion of Canada was formed in 1867, then the first Canadians were the native population, the British and French settlers, freed and escaped slaves from America, and immigrants from around the world. Aboriginal were the first Canadians. The first Canadians could speak 53 different languages.
No, only a tiny minority live in the North and even fewer in Tundra or Arctic regions. About 75% of Canadians live within 100 miles of the USA border, many below the 49th parallel.
Hot dogs, chicken, apples, burgers... (Meats, Vegetables + Fruits, Poultry, Grains, Others (Things like candy and similar) Anything you eat, Canadians eat. :)
more south because its warmer
The Inuits region is Canada, Alaska, and the Artic
The Atlantic region of Canada derives its name from geography: it is the region of Canada in which the Atlantic Ocean is the dominant natural feature.