Regions Of Canada Essay

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In this course, Canada is divided into six regions; the Atlantic Provinces, the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Lowlands, the Canadian Shield, the Western Interior, British Columbia and the North. These six regions are based on either economy, landforms or politics. The Atlantic Provinces of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador is a region focused around the economy. The population shares many historical and cultural ties and is characterized based on their moderately low incomes and the high unemployment rate therefore relying on financial aid from the federal government. Also, because the region does not offer a major urban area, the residents are dependent on their natural resources, for example, oil from …show more content…

Lawrence Lowlands of Quebec and Ontario is a region based on landforms. This region is the smallest region discussed in this course, but at the same time, contains more than half of Canada’s population and is known as the industrial and manufacturing heartland. There are clear boundaries separating this region from the others, such as the United States border to the south and the Precambrian escarpment of the Canadian Shied to the north. The region can be divided into three subdivisions emphasizing the different landforms: the rolling lowland between the Great Lakes structured from moraines and spillways, the marine deposited flat land along the St. Lawrence River and the Appalachian hills. The Canadian Shield, which includes the Northwest Territories, Quebec, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and Newfoundland and Labrador is the largest of the six regions examined in this course, surrounds Hudson Bay, and covers half of Canada. This region is based on landforms, specifically the exposed bedrock that covers the landscape. The region contains mountainous areas, many lakes creating the swampy lowlands, patterns of lineation from ice movements, a vast forested range, and a treeless, Arctic

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