Friday, February 25, 2011

Canada

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Canada
AREA
9,958,319 sq km (3,844,928 sq miles).
POPULATION
29,963,631 (1996).
POPULATION DENSITY
3.0 per sq km.
CAPITAL
Ottawa
CAPITAL POPULATION
1,000,000 (1997, including Hull).
GEOGRAPHY
Canada is bounded to the west by the Pacific Ocean and Alaska, to the east by the Atlantic Ocean, to the northeast by Greenland, and to the south by the 'Lower 48' of the USA. The polar ice-cap lies to the north. The landscape is diverse, ranging from the Arctic tundra of the north to the great wheatlands of the central area. Westward are the Rocky Mountains, and in the southeast are the Great Lakes, the St Lawrence River and Niagara Falls. The country is divided into ten provinces and three territories. A more detailed description of each province can be found under the separate provincial entries.
GOVERNMENT
Constitutional Monarchy. Head of State: HM Queen Elizabeth II, represented by Governor-General Sir Roméo LeBlanc since 1995. Head of Government: Prime Minister Jean Chrétien since 1993.
LANGUAGE
Bilingual: French and English. The use of the two languages reflects the mixed colonial history – Canada has been under both British and French rule.
RELIGION
46.2% Roman Catholic, 17.5% United Church of Canada, 11.8% Anglican, 24.5% other Christian denominations and other religions
STANDARD TIME
Canada spans six time zones. Information on which applies where may be found in the regional entries following this general introduction. The time zones are: Pacific Standard Time: GMT - 8. Mountain Standard Time: GMT - 7. Central Standard Time: GMT - 6. Eastern Standard Time: GMT - 5. Atlantic Standard Time: GMT - 4. Newfoundland Standard Time: GMT - 3.5. Note: From the first Sunday in April to the last Sunday in October, one hour is added for Daylight Saving Time (except in Saskatchewan).
ELECTRICITY
110 volts AC, 60Hz. American-style (flat) 2-pin plugs are standard.
COMMUNICATIONS
Telephone: Most public telephones operate on 25-cent coins. There is a reduced rate 1800-0900 Monday to Friday, and 1200 Saturday to 0900 Monday. For long-distance calls, telephone cards are available. Credit card telephones are to be found in larger centres. Full IDD is available. Country code: 1. Outgoing international code: 011. Fax: Services are available in commercial bureaux and most hotels all day at locally agreed rates. Telegram: These are handled by Canadian National Telecommunications or Canadian Pacific, and any telegrams must be telephoned or handed in to the nearest Canadian Pacific or Canadian National office (address in local phone book). Services available include Telepost, providing first-class door-to-door delivery, and Intelpost, which offers satellite communications for documents/photographs to London, Washington DC, New York, Berne and Amsterdam. In Newfoundland & Labrador, telegrams are sent through Terra Nova Tel. Post: All mail from Canada to outside North America is by air. Stamps are available in hotels, chemists and railway stations, or in vending machines outside post offices and shopping centres. Poste Restante facilities are available. Intelpost is offered at main postal offices for satellite transmission of documents and photographs. Post office hours: generally 0930-1700 Monday to Friday and 0900-1200 Saturday, but times vary according to province and location; city offices will have longer hours. Press: There is no national daily newspaper as such, but Toronto's The Globe & Mail has national distribution. Daily newspapers published in the larger population centres have a wide local and regional circulation. French-language dailies are published in seven cities, including Montréal, Québec and Ottawa. In Alberta, the main English-language newspapers are the Calgary Herald, The Edmonton Journal, The Calgary Sun and The Edmonton Sun; in British Columbia, the Vancouver Sun; in Manitoba, the Winnipeg Free Press and The Winnipeg Sun; in New Brunswick, the Daily Gleaner and The Times Transcript; in Newfoundland & Labrador, the Telegram and The Western Star; in Nova Scotia, The Chronicle-Herald and The Daily News; in Ontario, The Globe & Mail (the main national newspaper), The National Post, The Toronto Star, The Toronto Sun (which has the highest circulation throughout Canada), The Ottawa Citizen and the Ottawa Sun; in Québec, The Gazette (daily); in Prince Edward Island, the Guardian and the Patriot; in Saskatchewan, the Leader Post, Star-Phoenix, Times-Herald and the Daily Herald; and in Yukon, The Whitehorse Star.

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