regional geography of canada
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Transcript regional geography of canada
REGIONAL GEOGRAPHY OF
CANADA
Social Studies 9/10
Chapter Notes
CANADA: A REGIONAL GEOGRAPHY
What regions are evident?
Five Themes of Canada’s Geography
Location: relative and absolute
Place: human and physical
Human and Environment Interactions: adaptation,
modification, dependence
Movement: migration and transportation
Regions: consistent, focused, aligned, linked
Canada: territorial template over
satellite photo composite
Divisions and Places
Placing the Canadian
map
Political divisions:
provinces and territories
Fundamentals of physical geography
Geology-process,
structure, time
Topography-relief,
slope
Soils-texture, pH,
organic matter
Vegetation-water,
arboreal, ecotone
Climate-air mass,
current,
precipitation,
temperature,
system
Underlying geology
Pink: precambrian
granites
Green: younger
sediments
Yellow: faulted and
meta-morphized
sediments
Blue: older sediments
Glacial legacy
Wisconsin-last ice age,
maximum 18,000 yrs. BP
Southern limitsWisconsin and Ohio
Valley
Recedes-15,000-7,000
yrs. BP
Covers virtually all of
Canada and northern US
Ice free corridor from
Alaska through Yukon
into northern BC
Remnant glacial landscapes
Ice margin
End moraine
Glacial lakes
Spillways
Kettle lakes
Eskers
Drumlins
Till plain
Erratic
Glacial till and erratic
esker
Drumlin and drumlin field
Glacial lake Louise and Paternoster
Lakes
St. Lawrence Lowlands
Less than 2% of
landmass; smallest
region
Windsor to Quebec City
Sedimentary geology
with glacial deposits
Moderate climate
Fertile soils
Long growing season
Close to the US
Canadian HEARTLAND
French Canadian ‘long lot’ farms and
Niagara Falls
The Great Lakes and Ottawa
Toronto climate
Canadian Shield
50% of Canada’s
landmass; largest region
Almost entirely contained
in Canada
Geological core underlies
North America
Precambrian rocks more
than 3 billion yrs.
Exposed granite and
shallow soils
Glaciation evident
Mixed Boreal forest
Northern continental
climate
Canadian shield vistas
Ste. Agathe climate
Appalachian Uplands
Over 2% of landmass
Northern part of
Appalachians
Rounded uplands and
plateaux
Numerous islands along
drowned shoreline
Narrow river valleys
Rocky, shallow soils
Mixed forests
Cool maritime climate
Short summer wet, winter
Interior farms and forests, coastal
settlements
Fredericton, NB
Hudson Bay Lowlands
Over 3.5% landmass
Muskeg or wet peat lands
Many lakes
Low ridges of sand and
gravel
Poorly drained
Level
Northern climate
Maritime influence
Short, warm summer
Long, cold winter
Moosonee climate graph and Hudson
Bay Lowland vista
Interior Plains
About 20% land mass
Geologic base of
sedimentary rock
Shaped by glaciation and
re-directed drainage
Incised river valleys
Slopes up from east to
west with rich soils
Hudson’s Bay watershed
Oil and gas deposits
Continental climate
Moderate to low
precipitation
Plains agriculture and Regina climate
graph
Cordillera
Region of intra-regional
differences
About 16% of land mass
Formed 40-80 million years
ago from collision of North
American and Pacific Plates
Rockies up thrust sediments
Coastal mountains volcanic:
‘ring of fire’
Glaciers remain in Alpine
areas
Fertile valleys and deltas
Coniferous
Multiple micro-climates
Mountains and valleys
Banff and Victoria climate graphs
Arctic lowlands
About 13% land mass
Coastal plains and
lowlands
Islands and drowned
shorelines
Sedimentary
Permafrost
Frost action is the main
geomorphic process
Polar desert with very low
precipitation
Extreme arctic climate
conditions
Iqaluit climate graph and Arctic
Lowlands vista
Innuitian Mountains
About 12% land mass
Plateaux and mountains
Extreme glaciation and
extensive weathering of
sedimentary rock
Extensive coastal
drowning and fjiords
Islands
Uplifting and isostatic
rebound
Extreme cold
Pack ice and ice flows
Glacier calving
Arctic mountain scenery and resolute
climate graph
Drainage: Well drained south; poorly
drained north
Climate
Continental and maritime
influences
Prevailing winds
Jet stream
Mountain effects
Air masses
Freezing point
Seasonal variability
Precipitation
Cloud cover
Evaporation
Where are the people? Population
distribution
In cities near the USA
80% in cities over 100,000
80% within 100km of the US
border
‘main street Canada’: Windsor
to Quebec City
Agricultural western interior
Coastal and river valley
settlement in Atlantic region
Resource points in the Shield
and the North
Western cordillera valleys and
the BC coast
Canada CMAs and Population
Change, 1996-2001
Canada’s Urban and Agricultural
settlement Archipelago
Pattern set over 100
years ago
Islands of population and
settlement amid a vast,
inhospitable and often
empty land
Contrast between
heartland and hinterland
Regional centers
Hugging the border
The empty north
The People, Place, Region
Relationship
Resource
extraction
periphery
Rural sphere
Suburban
area
Urban center
Canada has always had urban
centers where most people
lived and worked
Urban centers were
surrounded by a rural sphere
to constitute the heartland
Beyond the rural lands, towns
and villages, a sparsely
populated resource extraction
periphery or hinterland
extended to the farthest
reaches of the country
With transportation advances
people moved to the
commuting suburbs of cities
Three Popular Canadian Explanations
and One Not So Popular Bilateral
Explanation
Canada as a storehouse of raw
materials: old and new explanations
Fisheries, then and now: Historic
Grand Banks; Pacific Salmon catch
and prospects
Fur trade legacy
Renewable forestry
Agricultural potential
Agricultural production
Minerals and Mining
Mining potential
Oil
Metropolitan Heartland
“main street Canada”
Red area is continuous
urban ribbon
Green area is adjacent
commuter shed and
integrated use region
Toronto and Montreal
metropolitan cores linked
to other growth centers
along the spine
BC lower mainland and calgaryedmonton corridor
Financial services
CN and CP railway systems
Airports and airport authorities
Ethnic diversity
Ethnic “minorities” in cities
Toronto: Canada’s
cosmopolitan leader
Allophones in Montreal
Asian populations expand
in most cities
Black populations in
most Canadian cities but
predominate in east
Aboriginal populations
growing in all urban
centers
Canada’s regional character: socioeconomic regions shaped by
Shape affected by:
Topography
Heartland/Hinterlands
relations
Cultural
identity
Historical
patterns
Political
boundaries
Confluence of political,
cultural and social
dynamics=regional
identity
Proximity of the US
Language
Meshing physiography and human
geography to comprehend Canada’s
Regions
Canada’s regions map
North and south
distinguished
Settlement and
urbanization
acknowledged
Cultures recognized
Political divisions
sustained
Traditional aggregates
Placing Canada into temporal and
geographical context
1000s of years of
indigenous human
presence
European contact over
centuries: late 15th to 19th
European re-settlement by
force, treaty, depopulation
(disease)
Historical geography
matters socially, politically
and ecologically
Map shows Canada at
Confederation
Canada in global context
(globalization index)
Global
Relationships
Global
Linkages
Bordering
Canadian
participation
in
globalization
Current “Geographical” Issues
Native land claims: British
Columbia, the North,
creation of Nunavut
Environmental crises:
energy, climate change,
forest degradation
Borders: US, Arctic
Federal/Provincial: the
national/regional power
balancing act, fiscal
control
City growth and
expansion: newcomers,
transportation, crime,
planning
Key words and concepts
Physical Geography
Geography Basics
Air mass
Alpine
Appalachian
Adaptation
Archipelago
Human and environment
interaction
Arctic Lowlands
Boreal
Location
Canadian Shield
Place
Continental climate
Province
Cordilleran
Region
Drainage system
Territorial template
Drumlin
Territory
Drowned shoreline
End moraine
Physical Geography (cont.)
Erratic
Esker
Fjiord
Glacial lake
Glaciation
Glacier calving
Hudson Bay Lowlands
Ice free corridor
Incised valley
Innuitian
Interior Plains
Isostatic rebound
Jetstream
Kettle lake
Maritime climate
Micro-climate
Muskeg
Pack ice
Paternoster lakes
Peatlands
Permafrost
Physiographic region
Plant hardiness zone
Polar desert
Precambrian
Physical Geography (cont.)
Relief
‘Ring of Fire’
Sedimentary
Spillway
St. Lawrence Lowlands
Topography
Till plain
Wisconsin glaciation
Human Geography
Aboriginal
Agri-food
Airport authority
Allophone
Borderland relationship
Borders
CMA
CN and CP
Commuter shed
Climate change
Corridor
Confederation
Cultural identity
European contact
Energy crisis
Ethnic diversity
Ethnic minority
Federal/Provincial issues
Human Geography (cont.)
Forest heritage
Fur trade
Global linkages
Physical disunity
Global relationships
Population density
Globalization Index
Resource extraction periphery
Grand Banks
Resource points
Heartland/Hinterland
Rural sphere
Indigenous
Staples development
‘Main Street Canada’
Suburban area
Metropolitan core
Urban center
Mineral lease
Native land claims
Oil pipeline
References
Adams, Michael, Fire and Ice: The United
States, Canada, and the Myth of
Converging Values. Toronto: penguin,
2003.
Bone, Robert M. The Regional Geography
of Canada. Don Mills: Oxford, 2005.
Lemon, James T. Liberal Dreams and
Nature’s Limit: Great Cities of North
America Since 1600. Toronto: Oxford,
1996.
Lipset, Seymour M. Continental Divide:
The Values and Institutions of the United
States and Canada. New York:
Routledge, 1990.
McCann, L. D., ed., A Geography of
Canada: Heartland and Hinterland.
Scarborough: Prentice-Hall, 1982
(several later editions).
Warkentin, John, Canada: A Regional
Geography. Scarborough: Prentice-Hall,
1997.
Many maps and images may be obtained
at the following websites as well as
through search engines:
www.canadainfolink.ca/geog.htm
http://atlas.nrcan.gc/site/english/index.html
Any comprehensive atlas of Canada is an
asset
See also, Historical Atlas of Canada. 3
volumes. Toronto: University of Toronto
Press.