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Alberta

    Word:  
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Alternate uses: Alberta (disambiguation) Alberta can mean:
  • Alberta (the Canadian Province)
  • Alberta, Minnesota
  • Alberta, Virginia
  • Alberta Township, Minnesota


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Alberta
(In Detail Flag of Alberta

Alberta is one of the provinces of Canada.
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(In Detail Alberta Coat of Arms

Alberta is one of the provinces of Canada.

Blazon

Shield: Azure, in front of a range of snow mountains proper a range of hills Vert, in base a wheat field surmounted by a prairie both also proper, on a chief Argent a St. George's cross.

Crest: Upon a Helm with a Wreath Argent and Gules a Beaver couchant upholding on its back the Royal Crown both proper.
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Motto A motto is a phrase or collection of words intended to describe the motivation or intention of a sociological grouping or organization. Many countries, universities, and other institutions have mottos, as do families with coats of arms.

These mottos are traditionally in Latin or Romance languages, as well as in English or German. There are many exceptions, particularly in modern heraldry: for examples, the mottos of the State of Hawai‘i and the University of Hawai‘i are in Hawaiian, and the motto of Nunavut is in Inuktitut.
..... Click the link for more information. : Fortis et Liber (Strong and free)

Map of Canada highlighting Alberta
Capital This article concerns places that serve as centers of government and politics. For alternative meanings see capital (disambiguation)

In politics a capital (also called capital city or political capital) is located by the following:

  • Usually a capital of a country or other political entity is the city or town that contains the government.
  • Usually the location of the capital is stated in law.
  • Often a capital is a center of important activity.
  • In a monarchy, often a capital is wherever a monarch's court is (which can move from palace to palace).

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Largest city
Edmonton Edmonton, a Canadian city, is the capital of the province of Alberta.

History

Edmonton was founded in 1795 when a Hudson's Bay Company Trading Post was established with the construction of Fort Edmonton. John Rowand, a fur trader for the North West Company, arrived in Edmonton in 1804 and became respected and accepted as a leader by the Plains Indians, managing Edmonton's fur trade with the Cree and Blackfoot in Edmonton for about 30 years. Fort Edmonton became a local economic centre, the major stopping point before pioneers headed up north or farther west.
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Calgary City of Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Motto: Heart of the new west

Area: 701.79 sq. km.
Population
 - Total (2001)
 - Cdn. Mun. Rank:
 - Density
878,866
Ranked 3rd
1252.3/km²
Time zone Mountain: UTC-7
Latitude
Longitude
51°6' N
114°1' W

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Area Area is a quantity expressing the size of a region of space. Surface area refers to the summation of the exposed sides of an object. Area (Cx2) is the derivative of volume (Cx3). Area is the antiderivative of length (Cx1). In the case of the perfect closed curve in two dimensions, which is the circle, the area is the simple integral of the circumference. Thus, the circumference is 2πr, while the area is πr2.
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 - Total
 - % fresh water
6th largest
(4th lgst prov.)
Here is a list of Canadian provinces and territories ranked by area. Areas are in square kilometres.


Rank Rank
among
prov-
inces Rank
among
terri-
tories
Name Area Land area (km²) Freshwater area (km²) Area in percent of whole Canada
1 1 Nunavut 2 093 190 1 936 113 157 077 21.0
2 1 Quebec 1 542 056 1 365 128 176 928 15.4

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661 848 To help compare orders of magnitude of different geographical regions, we list here surface areas between 100,000 km² and 1,000,000 km². See also areas of other orders of magnitude.
  • Areas smaller than 100,000 km²
  • 100,000 km² is equal to:
  • 38,600 square miles
  • a square with side 316 km

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 km² Square kilometre (symbol km²) is an SI unit of surface area. It is one of the SI derived units.

1 km² is equal to:

  • the area of a square measuring 1 kilometre on each side
  • 1 000 000 m²
  • 100 hectares
  • 0.386 102 square miles (statute)
  • 247.105 381 acres

Conversely:

  • 1 m² = 0.000 001 km²
  • 1 hectare = 0.01 km²
  • 1 square mile = 2.589 988 km²
  • 1 acre = 0.004 047 km²

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2.95%
Population For the use of the word population in statistics, see statistical population.

In the most common sense of the word, a population is the collection of people—or organisms of a particular species—living in a given geographic area.

Populations are studied in a wide variety of ways and disciplines. In population dynamics, size, age and sex structure, mortality, reproductive behaviour, and growth of a population are studied.
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 - Total (2004)
 - Density Density (symbol: ρ - Greek: rho) (ISO 31: volumic mass) is a measure of mass per unit of volume. The higher an object's density, the higher its mass per volume. The average density of an object equals its total mass divided by its total volume. A denser object (such as iron) will have less volume than an equal mass of some less dense substance (such as water).
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Ranked 4th Here is a list of Canadian provinces and territories by population.


Rank Rank
among
prov-
inces Rank
among
terri-
tories
Name Population (in 1000s) Population density (pop/km²)

1 1 Ontario 11 874.4 12.94

2 2 Quebec 7 410.5 5.43

3 3 British Columbia 4 095.9 4.34

4 4 Alberta 3 064.2 4.63

5 5 Manitoba 1 150.0 1.78

6 6 Saskatchewan 1 015.8 1.72


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3 183 312
4.63/km²
Admittance into Confederation Canadian Confederation, or the Confederation of Canada, was the process that ultimately brought together a union among the provinces, colonies and territories of British North America to form a Dominion of the British Empire, which today is a federal nation state simply known as Canada.

Colonial organization

Before 1867, British North America was a collection of six separate
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 - Date
 - Order
Split off
from NWT A former territory in the United States is called Northwest Territory.
Northwest Territories
Territoires du Nord-Ouest

(In Detail) (In Detail)
Motto: None

Capital Yellowknife
Official Languages Chipewyan, Cree, Dogrib or Tli Cho, English, French, Gwich'in, Inuktitut (including Inuktitut proper, Inuvialuktun, and Inuinnaqtun), Slavey (including North Slavey and South Slavey)

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1 September

September 1 is the 244th day of the year (245th in leap years). There are 121 days remaining.

Events

  • 1772 - Mission San Luis Obispo de Tolosa founded in San Luis Obispo, California.
  • 1807 - Former US Vice President Aaron Burr is acquitted of treason. He had been accused of plotting to annex parts of Louisiana and Mexico to become part of an independent republic.

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 1905
Years:
1902 1903 1904 - 1905 - 1906 1907 1908
Decades:
1870s 1880s 1890s - 1900s - 1910s 1920s 1930s
Centuries:
19th century - 20th century - 21st century
1905 in art
1905 in aviation
1905 in film
1905 in literature
1905 in music
1905 in science
1905 in sports
1905 in Canada
List of state leaders in 1905
List of religious leaders in 1905
List of international organization leaders in 1905
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10
Time zone :Time Zone was also an old historical computer game.

Time zones are areas of the Earth that have adopted the same standard time. Formerly, people used local solar time (originally apparent and then mean), resulting in time differing slightly from town to town. As telecommunications improved and with the expansion of the railways this became increasingly awkward. Time zones partially
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UTC Coordinated Universal Time or UTC, also sometimes referred to as "Zulu time", the basis for civil time, differs by an integral number of seconds from atomic time and a fractional number of seconds from UT1. Time zones around the world are expressed as positive and negative offsets from UTC. UTC is the successor of Greenwich Mean Time, abbreviated as GMT, and is still colloquially called GMT sometimes. The new name was coined to eliminate having the name of a specific location in an international standard. UTC bases time measurement on atomic standards rather than GMT's celestial ones.
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 -7
Postal information
Postal abbreviation
Postal code A postal code is a series of letters and digits appended to a postal address for the purpose of sorting mail. Every postal service (usually having their service area defined by national borders) has a different format and placement for the postal code. In most English-speaking countries, the postal code goes after the name of the city or town, whereas in most European countries it goes before it and is often prefixed with a country code. This country code is similar to the one used on car license plates.
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 prefix
 
AB
T
ISO 3166-2 ISO 3166-2 is the second part of the ISO 3166 standard. It is a geocode system created for coding the names of subdivisions of countries (subnational entities) and dependent areas. The purpose of the standard is to establish a worldwide series of short abbreviations for places, for use on package labels, containers, and such; anywhere where a short alphanumeric code can serve to clearly indicate a location in a more convenient and less ambiguous form than the full place name.
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CA-AB
Parliamentary
representation

The Parliament of Canada is Canada's democratic legislative branch, seated at Ottawa, Ontario. According to section 17 of the Constitution Act, 1867 of the Constitution of Canada, Parliament consists of three parts:

  • the monarch (currently the Queen of Canada, Her Majesty Elizabeth II), who is most often represented by the Governor General of Canada. Most of the duties of the Queen are ceremonial and are defined by constitutional convention;

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 Seats in the House

The House of Commons (in French, la Chambre des communes) is the lower, directly elected house of the Parliament of Canada which sits in the nation's capital, Ottawa, Ontario.

Leadership

Prime minister and Cabinet

Under the Westminster system, the prime minister of Canada is usually selected from, and answerable to, the directly elected lower house
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 Seats in the Senate The Senate of Canada is the upper house of the Parliament of Canada. The senate has 105 members who are appointed by the Governor General on advice from the Prime Minister and serve until the age of 75.

  • 24 from Ontario;
  • 24 from Quebec;
  • 24 are from the Maritime Provinces (10 from Nova Scotia, 10 from New Brunswick, 4 from Prince Edward Island);
  • 24 from the Western Provinces (6 each from Manitoba, British Columbia, Saskatchewan and Alberta);
  • 6 from Newfoundland and Labrador;
  • and one each from Northwest Territories, the Yukon, and Nunavut.

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26
6
Premier The Premier of Alberta is the first minister for the Canadian province of Alberta. They are the province's head of government and de facto chief executive.

The current Premier of Alberta is Ralph Klein.

See also:

  • Prime Minister of Canada
  • Premier (Canada)
  • List of Alberta premiers

External link:

  • Premier of Alberta Official Site

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Ralph Klein

The Honourable Ralph Phillip Klein (born November 1, 1942) is Alberta's current premier.

Klein rose to public prominence as a radio and television personality, much as did radio-evangelist–cum–premier William Aberhart. Klein gained his first political experience when he was elected mayor of Calgary, Alberta, on October 15, 1980. While he was mayor the city was enjoying an economic boom, attracting many unskilled labourers from all over the country. Klein gained unfavourable national attention by blaming "eastern bums and scums" for straining the city's social services and police. Calgary hosted a very successful Winter Olympics during his tenure as mayor.
..... Click the link for more information.  (PC) The Alberta Progressive Conservative party is a provincial right of centre party in the Canadian province of Alberta. The PC party has formed provincial government, without interruption, since 1971 under the leadership of Peter Lougheed (1971-1985), Don Getty (1985-1992) and current Premier Ralph Klein (1992-present).

The Tories were a marginal party in Alberta for most of the province's
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Lieutenant-Governor This is a list of the lieutenant-governors of Alberta, Canada, since its establishment in 1905. Prior to 1905, the Sovereign's representative in what is now Alberta was the lieutenant-governor of the Northwest Territories.

Lieutenant-Governor From To
Hon. George H. V. Bulyea 1905-09-01 1915-10-20
Hon. Dr. Robert G. Brett 1915-10-20 1925-10-29
Hon. Dr. William Egbert 1925-10-29 1931-05-05

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Lois Hole
NeighboursNorth West Territories
Saskatchewan
British Columbia
Montana
Government of Alberta

Alberta is one of Canada's Canada is the northernmost country in North America. It is a decentralized federation of 10 provinces and 3 territories, governed as a constitutional monarchy and formed in 1867 through an act of Confederation. It is bordered by the United States to the south and to the northwest. The country stretches from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west. Canada also reaches the Arctic Ocean in the north where Canada's territorial claim extends to the North Pole.
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 provinces. Its capital is the city of Edmonton. Other cities and towns include Banff, Calgary, Red Deer, Lethbridge and Medicine Hat. See also: List of communities in Alberta.

As of 2004, the population of the province was 3,183,312 (Albertans). 81% of the population lives in urban areas and 19% is rural.

The Premier of the province is Ralph Klein. See also List of Alberta Premiers.

Alberta is named after Princess Louise Caroline Alberta (1848-1939), the fourth daughter of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. Princess Louise was also the wife of Sir John Campbell, who was the Governor General of Canada from 1878-1883. Lake Louise was also named in honour of Princess Louise.

Geography

Main Article: Geography of Alberta

Alberta is in western Canada. Area 661,190 km² (260,000 mi²) It is bounded to the south by the United States boundary line, 49° north. Eastwards at 110° west it borders the province of Saskatchewan. At 60° north it is separated from the Northwest Territories. To the west its border follows the line of peaks of the Rocky Mountains range, which runs northwesterly, until it reaches 120° west, at which point the border follows this meridian to 60° north.

With the exception of the southern section, the province of Alberta may be said to be well watered. Alberta contains dozens of rivers and lakes ideal for swimming, water skiing, fishing and a full range of other water sports. There are a multitude of fresh-water lakes each less than 260 km² situated in Alberta, and two of more considerable size. These are Lake Athabasca, 7898 km² , part of which is in the province of Saskatchewan, and Lesser Slave Lake, some 1550 km² in area.

As Alberta extends for 1200 km from north to south, and about 600 km wide at its greatest east-west extent, it is natural that the climate should vary considerably between parallels of 49° and 60° north and also between 110° and 120° west. It is also further influenced by the different altitudes above sea level of the different parts of the province.

Northern Alberta has many fewer frost-free days than Southern Alberta, which is almost desert-like in its summer heat and lack of rain. Western Alberta is protected by the mountains, and enjoys the warmth brought by winter chinooks, while eastern Alberta is flat, dry prairie, where temperatures can range from very cool (−35°C in the winter) to very hot (+35°C in the summer). Central and southern Alberta are the most likely places in Canada to experience tornados because of the summer heat, and violent summer thunderstorms are common in the eastern half of the province. Alberta's capital city, Edmonton, is located almost exactly in the center of the province, and most of Alberta's oil is refined here. Southern Alberta, where Calgary is located, is known for its ranching, and cattle run free through the whole winter. Much of the non-forested part of Alberta is given over to either grain or dairy farming, with ranching predominantly a southern Alberta industry.

Overall, Alberta has cool winters, with a daytime average of about −10°C, and warm summers, with a daytime average of about 25°C.

10 Largest Municipalities
Municipality 2001 1996
Calgary 878,866 768,082
Edmonton 666,104 616,306
Strathcona County 71,986 64,176
Red Deer 67,707 60,080
Lethbridge 67,374 63,053
St. Albert 53,081 46,888
Medicine Hat 51,249 46,783
Wood Buffalo 41,466 35,213
Grande Prairie 36,983 31,353
Rocky View No. 44 30,688 23,326 |-

Industry

Main Article: Industry of Alberta

Alberta is the largest producer of conventional crude, synthetic crude, natural gas and gas products in the country. Two of the largest producers of petrochemicals in North America are located in central and north central Alberta. In both Red Deer and Edmonton, world class polyethylene and vinyl manufacturers produce products shipped all over the world, and Edmonton's oil refineries provide the raw materials for a large petrochemical industry to the east of Edmonton.

The Athabasca Tar Sands (now referred to as the Athabasca Oil Sands) have estimated oil reserves in excess of that the rest of the world, estimated to be 1.6 trillion barrels (254 km³). With the advancement of extraction methods, bitumen and economical synthetic crude are produced at costs nearing that of conventional crude. This technology is Alberta grown and developed. Many companies employ both conventional strip mining and non-convention extraction methods to extract the bitumen from the Athabasca deposit. With current technology, only 315 billion barrels (50 km³) are recoverable. Fort McMurray, one of Canada's youngest and liveliest cities, has grown up entirely because of the large multinational corporations which have taken on the task of oil production

While Edmonton is considered the pipeline junction and refining centre of the province, Calgary is known for its senior and junior oil company head offices.

With concerted effort and support from the provincial government, several high-tech industries have found their birth in Alberta, notably the invention and perfection of liquid crystal display systems. With a growing economy, Alberta has several financial institutions dealing with several civil and private funds.

Agriculture and Forestry

Agriculture is a significant position in the province's economy. Over 5 million cattle are residents of the province at one time or another, and Alberta beef has a healthy worldwide market. Nearly one half of all Canadian beef is produced in Alberta. Alberta is one of the prime producers of plains buffalo (bison) for the consumer market. Sheep for wool and mutton are also raised.

Wheat and canola are primary farm crops, with Alberta leading the provinces in spring wheat production, with other grains also prominant. Much of the farming is dryland farming, with fallow seasons interspersed with cultivation.

Alberta is the leading beekeeping province of Canada, with some beekeepers wintering hives indoors in specially designed barns in the southern part, then migrating north during the summer into the Peace River valley where the season is short but the working days are long for honeybees to produce honey from clover and fireweed. Hybrid canola also requires bee pollination and some beekeepers service this need.

The vast northern forest reserves of softwood allow Alberta to produce large quantities of lumber and plywood, and several northern Alberta plants supply North America and the Pacific Rim nations with bleached wood pulp and newsprint.

Government

Main Article: Government of Alberta

The government of Alberta is a parliamentary democracy. It consists of one house -- the Legislative Assembly -- of 83 members. The legislature is headed by the Premier, Ralph Klein, the Lieutenant-governor, and the cabinet, and the city of Edmonton is Alberta's government seat. The province's revenue comes mainly from sales of oil, natural gas, beef, softwood lumber, and wheat, but also includes grants from the federal government primarily for infrastructure projects. Albertans are the lowest taxed people in Canada, and Alberta is the only province in Canada without a provincial sales tax. Alberta's towns and cities have their own municipal governments which (usually) work in cooperation with the provincial government.

Alberta's politics are more conservative than those of other Canadian provinces. Alberta has traditionally had three political parties, the Progressive Conservatives, the centrist Liberals, and the social democratic New Democratic Party. A fourth party, the strongly conservative Social Credit Party, was a power in Alberta for a number of decades, but disappeared from the political map when the Progressive Conservatives came to power in the early 1970s. Since that time, no other political party has led Alberta. See also: List of Alberta Premiers

Transportation

Alberta has over 180 000 km of highways and roads, of which nearly 50 000 km are paved. The main north-south corridor enters Alberta just south of Lethbridge at the Coutts border crossing. It travels northward through Lethbridge, Calgary, Red Deer, and Edmonton before dividing into two highways, one which continues northwesterly into Grande Prairie and the Peace River country, and the other, which continues to Fort McMurray, the location of the oil sands.

Alberta has two main east-west corridors. The northern corridor, known as the Yellowhead Highway, runs from Lloydminster in eastern Alberta, through Edmonton, and then west to Jasper National Park and into British Columbia. The southern corridor, the Alberta portion of the Trans-Canada Highway, enters the province near Medicine Hat, runs westward through Calgary, and leaves Alberta through Banff National Park. On a sunny spring or fall day, one of the most scenic drives in the world is along the Icefield Parkway, which runs some 300 km between Jasper and Banff, with mountain ranges and glaciers on either side of its entire length.

Alberta is well-connected by air, with international airports at both Edmonton and Calgary. Calgary's airport is the busier of the two, as it is a hub airport for more of the connecting international flights in and out of Alberta. There are over 9 000 km of operating mainline railroad track, and many tourists see Alberta as they pass through on Canadian National Railways' ViaRail service.

Culture

Main Article: Culture of Alberta

Alberta is well known for its warm and outgoing friendliness and frontier spirit.

Summer brings many festivals to the province. The Fringe Festivals, Canada's largest Folk Festival, Multicultural Festivals, Heritage Days -- just to name a few -- highlight the province's cultural diversity and love of entertainment. Most of the major cities have several performing theatre companies who entertain in venues as diverse as the Bus Barns and the Winspear Centre. Alberta also benefits from having the largest Francophone population west of Ontario; poutine and Bonhomme de Carnaval are no strangers to most Albertans.

Both cities brag of their first-class Canadian Football League and National Hockey League teams. Soccer, rugby and lacrosse are played professionally in Alberta. However, Alberta's last Pacific Coast League baseball team, the Edmonton Trappers, left the province (and Canada) after the 2004 season.

In 2001 one British journalist nicknamed Edmonton 'Deadmonton' for its lack of culture and night life. He later changed his mind after being given a tour by the mayor.

Tourism is also important to Albertans. Thousands of visitors come to Alberta each year just for Calgary's world-famous Stampede and for Edmonton's Klondike Days. Edmonton, as the kicking-off point to the only Canadian route to the Yukon gold fields, and the only route which did not require gold-seekers to travel the exhausting and dangerous Chilkoot Pass, also has a history of early air service to the North. Many of the first bush pilots, among them Wop May, flew out of Edmonton's Blatchford Field.

Visitors throng to Calgary each year for a taste of "Stampede Fever," ten days of celebrating Canada's own Wild West and the cattle ranching industry which is a symbol to many Albertans of the province's independence and self-reliance. Only an hour's drive from the Rocky Mountains, Calgary also makes a visit to tourist attractions like Banff National Park something which can easily be done in a day.

Alberta is an important destination for tourists who love to ski and hike; Alberta boasts several world-class ski resorts. Hunters and fishermen from around the world are able to take home impressive trophies and tall tales from their experiences in Alberta's wilderness.

Religion

Many Albertans practice some form of Christian faith; however, a wide variety of other faiths also present, as well as many people professing no religion. Alberta has a higher percentage of evangelical Christians than other provinces.

The Mormons of Alberta reside primarily in the most southerly part of the province. Many descend from Mormon settlers who emigrated from Utah around the turn of the twentieth century. Alberta also has a large Hutterite population, a communal sect similar to the Mennonites and Amish in holding to more traditional Christian values.

Many people of the Hindu, Sikh, and Muslim faiths also make Alberta their home; one of the largest Sikh temples in Canada is located just outside of Edmonton.

History

Main Article: History of Alberta

The present province of Alberta as far north as 53°N latitude was a part of Rupert's Land from the time of the incorporation of the Hudson's Bay Company (1670) . After the arrival in the northwest of the French in around 1731 they settled the prairies of the west, establishing communities such as Lac La Biche and Bonneville. Fort La Jonquière was established near the what is now of Calgary in (1752). The North-West Company of Montreal occupied the northern part of Alberta territory before the Hudson's Bay Company arrived from Hudson Bay to take possession of it. The first explorer of the Athabasca region was Peter Pond, who, on behalf of the North-West Company of Montreal, built Fort Athabasca on Lac La Biche in 1778. Roderick Mackenzie, cousin of Sir Alexander Mackenzie, built Fort Chipewyan on Lake Athabasca ten years later in 1788. Mackenzie followed the North Saskatchewan River to its northernmost extent near Edmonton, then setting northward on foot, trekked to the Athabasca River, which he followed to Lake Athabasca. It was there he discovered the mighty outflow river which bears his name the Mackenzie River, which he followed to its outlet in the Arctic Ocean. Returning to Lake Athabasca, he followed the Peace Riverupstream, eventually reaching the Pacific Ocean, and so being the first white man to cross the North American continent north of Mexico.

The district of Alberta was created as part of the Northwest Territories in 1875. Additional privileges and a local legislature were added as time went on. In 1905 the district of Alberta was enlarged and given provincial status.

Populations of Alberta since 1901
Year Population Percentage of
Canadian Pop.
1901 73,022 1.4
1911 374,295 5.2
1921 588,454 6.7
1931 731,605 7.0
1941 796,169 6.9
1971 1,627,874 7.5
1981 2,237,724 9.2
1986 2,365,825 9.3
1991 2,545,553 9.3
1996 2,696,826 9.3
2001 2,974,807 9.9

Fauna and Flora

Fauna

The three climatic regions (alpine, forest, and prairie) of Alberta are home to many different species of animals. The south and central prairie was the land of the bison, its grasses providing a great pasture and breeding ground for millions of buffalo. They were virtually destroyed by early white settlers, partly for sport, partly for the warm buffalo fur, which was used to make coats, and partly as one means of destroying the culture of the native people. The white settlers felt that the best way to "civilize" the natives was to make sure that they thought and behaved like the white men, and by removing the buffalo, a critical element of native culture, thought they could do so. Since then, buffalo have made a strong comeback, and thrive on farms and in parks all over Alberta, and the native culture is also growing stronger again.

Alberta is home to many large carnivores. Among them are the Grizzly and Black bears, which are found in the mountains and wooded regions. Smaller carnivores of the dog and cat families include coyotes, wolves, fox, lynx, and mountain lion (cougar).

Herbivorous, or plant-eating animals are found throughout the province. Moose deer (both mule and white-tail varieties) are found in the wooded regions, and pronghorn antelope can be found in the prairies of Southern Alberta. Bighorn sheep and Mountain goats live in the Rocky Mountains. Rabbits, porcupine, skunk, squirrels, and many species of rodents and reptiles live in every corner of the province. Alberta is fortunate in that it is home to only one variety of poisonous snake, the prairie rattlesnake.

Central and northern Alberta and the region farther north is the nesting-ground of the migratory birds. Vast numbers of ducks, geese, swans and pelicans arrive in Alberta every spring and nest on or near one of the hundreds of small lakes which dot northern Alberta. The eagle, hawk, owl and crow are plentiful, and a huge variety of smaller seed and insect eating birds can be found. Alberta, like other temperate regions, is home to mosquitoes, flies, wasps and bees. Rivers and lakes are well stocked with pike, pickerel, white fish rainbow, speckled and brown trout and even sturgeon. Turtles are found in some water bodies in the southern part of the province. Frogs, and salamanders are a few of the amphibians which make their homes in Alberta.

Flora

In central and northern Alberta the arrival of spring brings the prairie anemone, the avens, crocuses and other early flowers. The advancing summer introduces many flowers of the sunflower family, until in August the plains are one blaze of yellow and purple. The southern part of Alberta is covered by a short grass, very nutritive, but dries up as summer lengthens, to be replaced by hardy perennials such as the buffalo bean, fleabane, and sage. Both yellow and purple clover fill the roadways and the ditches with their beauty and aromatic scents. The trees in the parkland region of the province grow in clumps and belts on the hillsides. These are largely deciduous, typically birch, poplar, and tamarack. Many species of willow and other shrubs grow in virtually any terrain. On the north side of the Saskatchewan River evergreen forests prevail for hundreds of thousands of square kilometres. Aspen poplar, balsam poplar (or cottonwood, and paper birch are the primary large deciduous species. Conifers include Jack pine, Rocky Mountain pine, Lodgepole pine, both white and black spruce, and the needle-shedding tamarack.

See also

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       References in classic literature:More 
Four years ago his father was sick and had to go out to Alberta for his health and Gilbert went with him.
    Anne Of Green Gables by Montgomery, Lucy Maud   View in context
 
Some articles mentioning "Alberta":
Alberta (disambiguation)
Alberta Greens
Alberta Liberal Party
Division No. 6, Alberta
Elk Point, Alberta
Gainford
Gary Masyk
Harry Strom
Helen Hunley
List of Alberta census divisions
List of Alberta premiers
List of Alberta provincial highways
List of Alberta universities
List of communities in Alberta
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