Tearing Canada apart
Canada’s not provinces and territories—it’s hockey zones, weather extremes, and political opposites. These quirky maps divide the country up in ways that’ll make you laugh and think.
Read MoreCanada’s not provinces and territories—it’s hockey zones, weather extremes, and political opposites. These quirky maps divide the country up in ways that’ll make you laugh and think.
Read MoreNew Brunswick 90.16%, Vermont 89.3%, West Virginia 89.14%. Atlantic Canadian provinces and rural American states have the highest white population shares in North America. Post-1970s immigration concentrated in Toronto, Vancouver, and major U.S. gateway cities, leaving these regions demographically unchanged.
Read MoreNew France was the area colonized by France in North America during a period initiating with the exploration of the Gulf of Saint Lawrence by Jacques Cartier in 1534 and finishing with the cession of New France to Great Britain and Spain in 1763.
Read MoreIn South Dakota, there are nearly four cattle for every person. Nebraska supports over six million head of cattle with just two million residents. Across the Great Plains and Prairie Provinces, a geographic belt exists where bovines genuinely outnumber humans.
Read MoreSaxManSteve The most popular advanced education degrees among the American Governors and Canadian First Ministers: • Law – 25 states/provinces
Read MorePersian Empire at its territorial peak (500 BCE) The Greek empire at its territorial peak (323 BCE) The Armenian Empire
Read MoreVia us-climate An urban heat island is a metropolitan area that is significantly warmer than its surrounding rural areas due
Read MoreNorth America 167 years ago today: Compromise of 1850 (09 Sep 1850). With its population booming, California wanted to join
Read MoreCanada is the second-largest country in the world. Therefore, it is not surprising that the total length of all roads in Canada is 1,042,300 kilometers (647,655 miles), of which 415,600 kilometers (258242 miles) are paved.
Read MorePop vs Soda vs Soft drink Pop is that prototypical Canadianism that distinguishes us from our neighbours to the south,
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