Copper can be found in several provinces across Canada, with significant deposits located in British Columbia, Alberta, and Ontario. British Columbia is particularly known for its large copper mines, such as those in the Copper Mountain and Highland Valley regions. Additionally, copper is also present in smaller quantities in other provinces like Quebec and Newfoundland and Labrador.
The Maritimes provinces (PEI, New Brunswick & Nova Scotia) consist of the smallest provinces in Canada and all border the Atlantic Ocean. If you add Newfoundland these four provinces are referred to as the Atlantic provinces (Newfoundland is an Island in the Atlantic) Beyond that there is very little in terms of geography that makes it different then the rest of Canada. However there are some large differences in terms of culture within the Maritimes vs the rest since it is the part of Canada that was first colonized and hence people have the longest history in. Add to this a long history of employment relating to the sea and you have many of the reasons for the difference in culture.
The bay you are referring to is Hudson Bay. It is located in northeastern Canada and is bordered by the provinces of Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, and Newfoundland and Labrador. Hudson Bay is a large inland sea that plays a significant role in the region's ecology and economy.
Canada has many different climates fore it is a country that has a large horizontal mass. You have BC and the Maritime provinces surrounded by ocean and the Prairie provinces in the center of land mass. The thermal of effect of the Pacific and Atlantic Ocean's call for milder winters and summer where as provinces such as Manitoba and Alberta have much harsher winters and hotter summers.
Actually there are not large number of rail lines in the prairie provinces. There were many more in Ontario and Quebec. The rail lines that were build in the prairies were done so to ship grain to the mainline which took the grain to Eastern Canada where it was sold to the world.
No. The prairie provinces such as Alberta contribute a significant portion of Canada's energy needs. Fort McMurray is one such area where a large portion of Canada's oil comes from.
Most everywhere, all large provinces have a Freshwater fishery.
Countries with large deposits of coal include the United States, Russia, China, India, and Australia. Countries with large deposits of oil include Saudi Arabia, the United States, Russia, Canada, and Iraq.
English is spoken in all ten provinces and in all three territories. Quebec and New Brunswick have large numbers of French-speaking people.
it has large deposits of it
just able any where Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitobia are large provinces in Western Canada. Canadian is about the 7Th largest wheat producer in the world.
where are large deposits of salt found in rajasthan
Some countries with large tar sands deposits include Canada, Venezuela, and Russia. These deposits are a significant source of unconventional oil resources, but their extraction often involves high environmental and carbon emissions impacts.
The Maritimes provinces (PEI, New Brunswick & Nova Scotia) consist of the smallest provinces in Canada and all border the Atlantic Ocean. If you add Newfoundland these four provinces are referred to as the Atlantic provinces (Newfoundland is an Island in the Atlantic) Beyond that there is very little in terms of geography that makes it different then the rest of Canada. However there are some large differences in terms of culture within the Maritimes vs the rest since it is the part of Canada that was first colonized and hence people have the longest history in. Add to this a long history of employment relating to the sea and you have many of the reasons for the difference in culture.
Canada has many different climates fore it is a country that has a large horizontal mass. You have BC and the Maritime provinces surrounded by ocean and the Prairie provinces in the center of land mass. The thermal of effect of the Pacific and Atlantic Ocean's call for milder winters and summer where as provinces such as Manitoba and Alberta have much harsher winters and hotter summers.
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Actually there are not large number of rail lines in the prairie provinces. There were many more in Ontario and Quebec. The rail lines that were build in the prairies were done so to ship grain to the mainline which took the grain to Eastern Canada where it was sold to the world.