The provinces entirely surrounded by salt water in Canada are Newfoundland and Labrador, specifically the island of Newfoundland. Additionally, the province of Prince Edward Island is also entirely surrounded by salt water. These regions are characterized by their maritime geography and coastal ecosystems.
PEI
The provinces and territories in Canada with no saltwater boundaries are Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. Additionally, the territories of Yukon and Northwest Territories also lack direct access to saltwater. These regions are landlocked, surrounded by other provinces and territories, and do not border any oceans.
Alberta and Saskatchewan are Canada's two landlocked provinces.
yokon territoryi have no idea
Nigeria is not surrounded by a body of water since it is not an island. The Gulf of Guinea runs along the southern border of Nigeria.
The provinces that lack a coastline in Canada are Saskatchewan and Alberta. These two provinces border the U.S. and other provinces without outer access to a body of water.
It shares a Lake Superior water border with MichiganLand and water border with WisconsinIowa is to the southNorth and South Dakota are to the westCanadian provinces of Manitoba and Ontario are to the north
Alberta and Saskatchewan
Switzerland and Luxembourg do not have any water around them.
No, Alaska has a land border with Canada.
Hawaii is entirely surrounded by water. In terms of percentage of border surrounded by water it would be Hawaii. If you're measuring the total length of the coastline, it would be Alaska.
Alberta and Saskatchewan are the only provinces that don't border salt water. They are both landlocked provinces. British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, Prince Edward Island, Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut all border salt water.