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Canada’s Landform Regions Glacial Erosion Landform Region Map Canadian Shield • Lake near Port Cartier, Quebec • Rounded hills in the background Canadian Shield • Boulder field in the Northwest Territories • More evidence of glaciation Canadian Shield • Exposed rock along the lakeshore • Notice the scratches in the rock • They were caused by glaciers Canadian Shield • A boulder in the Northwest Territories • It was deposited here by a retreating glacier Canadian Shield • Exposed rock near Abitibi, Quebec • The scratches are the result of a glacier Canadian Shield • Canada’s oldest and largest landform. • Forms the foundation for the rest of Canada. • Very thin acidic soil. Poor for agriculture. • Shaped by erosion (glaciers and weather). Appalachian Mountains Appalachian Mountains • Bald Mountain NB • Notice the rounded mountains Appalachian Mountains • Aspy Bay in Cape Breton Appalachian Mountains • Cape Breton Highlands • The mountains have been flattened by erosion Erosion: soil and rock is moved by wind or water to a different location. Appalachian Mountains • • • • Atlantic Canada Rounded Mountains through erosion Rolling Hills and Valleys Fertile soil. Good for farming Western Cordillera • Mountains of the Yukon • Notice the jagged peaks • If you looks carefully, you will also see glaciers Western Cordillera • One of the large glaciers found in the Yukon Western Cordillera • A glacier-fed lake in Jasper National Park in Alberta Western Cordillera • Jasper National Park • The valley is Ushaped because it was carved by a glacier, not the river you see here Western Cordillera • The Coast Mountains provide a dramatic backdrop in this picture of North Vancouver, BC Western Cordillera • A series of parallel mountains • Are considered young as they have not been effected by erosion • Valleys are good for farming as soil has been put there through sedimentation • Western side has huge timber where as the eastern side has much smaller trees. Innuitian Mountains • The dramatic cliffs of Ellesmere Island, Nunavut Innuitian Mountains • A glacier and its melt water on Ellesmere Island, Nunavut Innuitian Mountains • Red rocks and barren landscape on Melville Island • Melville Island is divided between Nunavut and the Northwest Territories Innuitian Mountains • Due to their “young” age they have not been worn down through erosion. • Rugged Peaks • Approx 2000m in height • The area is too cold for trees to survive. Arctic Lowlands • Tundra in Nunavut • Notice the flat land and strewn rocks Arctic Lowlands • The flat, exposed land of Prince Patrick Island in the Northwest Territories Arctic Lowlands • Another image of Prince Patrick Island in the NWT • The flat land allows melting water to cover a vast area Arctic Lowlands • • • • South of the Innuitian Mountains Is a region of tundra and is treeless. Cold, dry and poorly drained soil. Sparse vegetation Interior Plains • Farmland near the Red River in Southern Manitoba Interior Plains • The meandering Red River in Southern Manitoba Interior Plains • The Cypress Hills in Southern Saskatchewan Interior Plains • The Qu’Appelle Valley in Southern Saskatchewan • A rare change from the flat landscape in this region Interior Plains • Cows graze in a rocky field • These rocks, deposited by glaciers, are called moraine Interior Plains • Located between Shield and Cordillera. • Created by a dried up inland sea and through erosion • In some areas the soil is very deep (black soil due to carbon content) and in others it is almost desert like • Extends to the Gulf of Mexico Great Lakes – St. Lawrence Lowlands • Typical farm in Ontario Great Lakes – St. Lawrence Lowlands • The city of Toronto from the air • Notice the lack of hills • Also notice the smog Great Lakes – St. Lawrence Lowlands • Farmland near Toronto Great Lakes – St. Lawrence Lowlands • Southern Ontario from the air • Notice the flat horizon Great Lakes – St. Lawrence Lowlands • Located south of the shield (southern Ontario and Quebec) • Good soil is a the result of flooding by the Champlain Sea that receded • Experienced volcanic activity a long time ago • Relatively flat. Hudson Bay Lowlands • A wetland known as a muskeg in Northern Manitoba Hudson Bay Lowlands • The watery terrain outside Churchill, Manitoba Hudson Bay Lowlands • The water-filled landscape near Fort Severn, Ontario Hudson Bay Lowlands • A forested bog outside Gilliam, Manitoba Hudson Bay Lowlands • • • • North of the shield Some places rock is 2000m thick Poor drainage and flat terrain swamp like forests.