Edmonton isn't on a lake, but it is on the North Saskatchewan River
165
160 kilometres taking this route:Take HIGHWAY 2 - SOUTH, from Edmonton, to HIGHWAY 11A - WEST to SYLVAN LAKE off EXIT 405B.Take HIGHWAY 11A - WEST to Sylvan Lake.
Great Slave lake is 550 miles north of Edmonton, Alberta.
about 1,100 miles, or a 16 hour drive.
The Great Slave Lake
It is 181 miles according to Google Maps.
just over 3 hrs at regulation
It is 1,042 miles according to Google Maps.
In 1795, Fort Edmonton became established as a trading post by the Hudson's Bay Company. The fort was named for Edmonton in London, England - the home town of HBC deputy governor, Sir James Winter Lake. The current site of Edmonton is built on the location of the fifth and final Fort Edmonton - the others having fallen into disrepair or disregard - which was founded in 1830.
Edmonton has never hosted an Olympic Games, either Summer or Winter. Salt Lake City hosted the Winter Olympics of 2002.
Edmonton is the capital of the Canadian Province of Alberta. Edmonton got its name from Fort Edmonton. Fort Edmonton got its name from a small community in England with the same name. The name Edmonton has a long history in England. Edmonton, Alberta was established as a town in 1892. The town was named after Fort Edmonton which had been established by 1795. The name of the fort was suggested by John Peter Pruden after Edmonton, London, which was his home in England as well as the home of Sir James Winter Lake, the deputy governor of the Hudson's Bay Company at the time. Edmonton, England got its name from a region known as the Edmonton Hundred which was a district of the historic county of Middlesex from Saxon times. Edmonton appears in the Domesday Book of 1086, where it is recorded as Adelmetone.
no thats a lie i think. it takes 1hour and a half