In the St.Lawrence Lowlands.
Canada, Ontario, on the coast of a great lake.
No, Toronto is not a formal region, it is a functional region.
The Landform Region of Toronto is Great Lakes - St. Lawrence Lowlands.
Toronto
Depends on your definition of "region"...The Greater Toronto Area, metropolitan areaThe Greater Toronto-Hamilton Area, metropolitan area that also includes the nearby City of HamiltonSouthern Ontario, southern region of provinceOntario, province
Toronto, Ont.
Toronto
it is toronto out.
Well, an economic region would be a region that has produced goods and services. A physical region is is a region that includes landforms such as mountain and etc. So, an economic region is not a physical region.
The largest urban center in Canada is the city of Toronto and surrounding suburbs: The borders of Toronto and area can be defined by the Census Metropolitan Area (CMA) of Toronto, used for census purposes, or by the Greater Toronto Area (GTA). The population of Toronto and area based on the 2006 Statistics Canada census: City of Toronto: 2,503,281 Toronto Census Metropolitan Area: 5,113,149 Greater Toronto Area: 5,555,912 The Greater Toronto Area consists of the City of Toronto and the following four regional municipalities: 1) Peel Region: 1,159,405 2) York Region: 892,712 3) Durham Region: 561,258 4) Halton Region: 439,256
The definition of a physical region is an area of land divided by natural borders. An example of a physical region is the interior plains of the U.S. with the borders of the Appalachians on the east, the Rocky Mountains in the west.