Movie Pitch

Ideas:

 

Opening scene: The location is on a farm with a lot of slaves. Some of them get rescued by people from the undergrund railroad but halway through executing their plan they get caught, so the ones who already left the farm have to run away and in that moment the character sees that his family hasn´t made it and he has to leave them on the farm. When they go over a hill and he looks back a last time he sees how the slaves who could not get rescued get beaten and whipped and so does his family.

 

Character 1:

There is a free black man who got saved by the underground railroad an is in one of the free states. But his family did not get saved, so he realizes it is not worth being free without his family being there. So he makes a decision: He will go back south on the underground railroad. He starts his way on the railroad in Windsor, Canada where he reached free dom and was accepted by society. so now he has to go all the way back. He talks to people who are headed north and asks for directions or locations of safehouses. He causes confusion between those people who are wondering why he would want to go back south after he has been rescued, some people even say: „This is so dangerous, what if you get caught and have to be a slave again?“ Now he ralizes how bad all those people want to get out of their situation and it is not only about his family, it is about hundreds, if not thousands of families.

Character 2:

A landlord in England was rich and had lots of slaves but he lost everything when the fields and the land he owned burned down in a revolt started by people from that town. He used to let them live on his land, but then he wanted to make more and more money for himself and started taking it away from them again. Now they start a revolt and burn down all the plants that his farm has grown and the forest he owns and his house. From now on all he does is try to get rich again by trying to rebuild his farm and begging for money from his friends to start up a new farm. At the same time he sees how it is to have nothing and having to find a way to get enough food to eat.

Character 3:

An Irish man is controlled by absentee lanldords from England, who only give him the bad land where he cannot grow anything. He decides to go to Canada after the landlord takes away his last piece of land. He takes the next Coffin Ship to Canada, but that is going to be a very hard journey because the hygiene on that ship is really really bad. He manages to not get sick, but he sees people get sick and die and the crew on the ship makes him throw over the barrels that they put the bodys in. The Irish man still does not get sick, but he learns a lecture: He does not want anybody else to live in conditions like he did most of his life. Especially when he gets to Windsor, Canada and is accepted for the first time in his life he wants to help other people get frredom too.

 

Story:

It is an adventure movie mixed with a drama

The basic idea is that a man who had to leave his family behind does the journey on the underground railroad again to save them

The main conflict is that there is too many people that have to be saved

He goes from the free states back to the slave states on the underground railroad

 

 

Clearing Land:

They need to clear land to create farmland

It is so important that they get other people to help and give them some of the cleared land

 

 

Barter:

They don´t have a currency

They trade their work and help on the boat for the Metis to take them on the journey

 

 

Absente Landlord

The farm that the free black man escaped from was owned by an absentee landlord

Later the slaves are absentee landlords, when they go back to the slave states and let the former British landlord work on their farm

 

 

Metis/ Voyageurs

Both the British landlord and the group of the free black man, the Irish man and the slaves go with a group of Metis because they know the region

The Irish man falls in love with a Metis woman, so her family helps them bring more people to Rural Canada

Voyageurs go on journeys to Rural Canada with Metis

 

 

Portages:

The slaves have no problem carrying the boat over Portages because they worked hard all their live

The former landlord struggles at the portages because he has never done hard work and now he has to carry the heavy boat through the mud

 

Pemmican

 

The Metis women prepare Pemmican that they give to to group of Voyageurs when they come to the camps

The landlord is also struggling here because he is used to eating only the best food and not the same food everyday

For the slaves this food is very good because they never got that much food at a time

The food does not turn bad quickly and it is nutritious so it is really good for the journey

 

Catholic/ Protestant

The absentee landlord is British, so he is protestant and he is rich in the beginning

The Irish man is Catholic, so he was controlled by the British landlords

 

 

Acceptance of Irish and Black people

In the United States black people are slaves unless they get to the free states

Irish people are not slaves, but they still cannot get good jobs and are descriminated

In Canada they all are accepted

 

 

Coffin Ship experience

The Irish man arrives with a Coffin Ship

He manages not to get sick, but he is exhausted from the jourey

The free black man has to help him recover

He did not enjoy the journey on the coffin ship

 

 

Slavery:

The slaves in the opening scene who got caught got beat up

Some of them get sold at an auction because the landlord does not want them anymore

The slaves who get caught shipping themselves get whipped and brought back to the farm where they came from

 

Underground Railroad

The uderground railraod is the free black man´s way back to the farm to safe his family

They spend their nights at safehouses along the underground railroad

People on the way can tell them the way south

People who are headed North are confused because they do not know why somebody would go back south

They build up their own network on the underground railroad to be able to get more people North and not always have to all the way back by themselves

 

Womens´Role

In the Metis community the women make snowshoes, warm clothes, navigate and are the factor of surviving

In urban Canada, where they arrive, women are doing domestic chores and carinf for the children

There are not many women outside because most of their jobs are done inside the house

 

 

Visualization:

 

Barter

 

 

 

 

 

Clearing land

 

 

 

 

Slaves Escaping

 

 

 

 

 

Box

 

 

 

 

 

 

Coffin Ship

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Trigonometry Blogspost

IMG_3040

In the triangle angle b= 33° and side b= 28 cm were given. I found out side a= 43,1 cm by tan (33°), so now the Pythagoras theorem helped me find out the las missing side. Now, for the last angle, which is angle x= 57° I could choose between sin, cos or tan because I knew all the sides of the triangle.

 

 

 

 

Underground Railroad: Consequences- Life in Windsor

David Cooper

A North-Side View of Slavery. The Refugee, or The Narratives of Fugitive Slaves in Canada, Related by Themselves: With an Account of the History and condition of the Colored Population of Upper Canada. by Drew, Benjamin

Page 334-335

“ A part of them can principally support themselves on what they have cleared, but they have to work out to keep their families supplied.“

They are now their own masters. Before, when they were slaves, their masters told them what to do and made sure they do not starve to death. Now, there is nobody telling them what to do, so they have to learn everything by themselves, but they can decide what they want to use their land, their ow property for. It might be hard, and they might have to do something else to get enough food to live on, but they were not beat and whipped anymore.

 

„…, and sold to any colored men who were disposed to buy.“

Former slaves were allowed to have property. With the little money they had they could buy property and start a farm and build a house, so they were not owned by anyone else, they owned their own property. With that property they could do whatever they wanted, so whatever was good for their families and brought enough food. If they were able to grow enough they could even trade it and make more money.

Math 10- Week 5

  1. My ah-ha moment this week was today when we did the skills check on converting units. Converting units was always confusing for me because i kept messing the units up. But at home I practiced the factor label method, which helps me find the right numbers and units. I had to use it on the sills check so I learned how to adapt it to what we learned before.

Ahha moment math week 5

Consequences if Irish Immigration

Image: image

 

In the picture we can see two people sitting on a scale. One of them is Irish, because he looks like Irish were pictured at that time. He is the person on the right. The other person is Negro, that means he has dark skin. The scale is equally balanced, which tells a lot about how Irish were seen by the British. Dark skin colour people were seen as lower human beings and they were different, so weren’t allowed to belong in society. They were seen as the lowest human beings. Now the Irish man is pictured on a balanced scale with a Negro, so the British saw the Irish as the lowest human beings, too. Everyone thought they were better than the Negros, so by saying the Irish are not any better they show how much the British disliked the Irish. According to that picture Irish didn’t have human rights, because that is what happened to people with dark skin later, who were put on the same level in society. The picture also shows how important religion was at that time. Irish were Catholic and British were Protestant, and that is why the British saw them as a lower form of human being. For believing something different people were excluded and hated by the group that was in power, and that group was the British.

Explain how far women´s equality has progressed since the erly 1800´s.

 

According to the text women back in the 1800´s were crucial for the familiy´s survival. But they were still just objects ad not humans. Women were traded between fur traders and FN or Metis to get each others help. Both had benefits, so to get the other´s benefits, FN women had to marry a fur traders, so the FN family had access to the forts and posts of the fur traders and the fur traders could learn how to survive, navigate and live in the region, especially when it was cold and snowy. Today, it is not allowed to trade women. They can decide who they marry and mostly it is the person they love. If they marry does not depend on survival skills anymore. The wife could be the one in the family who earns money and the man cares for the household and children, which would have been impossible in the 1800´s. Even though it is still common in society that men work, and men get the good positions in their jobs and usually get paid more, evem in the same position, but women have the chance to work in a job they want to outside the household.

Math 10 Week 3

What was my aha moment this week?

IMG_2740

When we did the skills check on the exponent unit I was first struggling when I had to simplify the terms. The exponent laws themselves were not the problem, but using them in the questions was hard for me. When I did the skills check and got it explained I realized what I have to look for when I am dealing with exponents: I always have to remember that every number has the exponent one, so if there is the power law I have to multiply the exponent with the one, so even the numbers that have one as their exponent might get 2,3,4 or any other number as their exponent. Since I realized that I had no problem doing those questions anymore.

 

Life in the 19th Century Upper Canada

1)

Politics

  • Aboriginals forced to give up land for european settlers
  •  Colony and Community leaders often Loyalists or British officers
  • Ruled by rich aristocrates
  • upper class in charge
  • lower class starting to demand democracy vs. upper class wanting to stay in power
  • expected to conform or else cannot be in positions of power
  • loyalty to Britain
  • oligarchy (Family Compact)

Society

  • barely any roads, everything was hard to reach
  •  it took a long time to clear the land
  • there is an upper and lower society
  • communities and social groups were dependent on each other
  • majority of immigrants are lower class
  • close knit communities
  • colonists learn from First Nations
  • religion central to culture

 

Economy

  • this is a barter economy
  • payments are done with goods like wood or wheat
  • no currency
  •  fur trade was a big industry which was mostly controlled by Hudson´s Bay
  • trade to overseas (for example Britain) via ship
  • mortgage caused many people to be in dept
  • land reserved for government and church
  • most of the landlords were in Britain and just held on to the land to make profit

2)

Farming

In the picture we can see two men standing in an open space surrounded by trees. There is a path out of dirt with a cart on it. The cart is a cart for transporting wheat or other grains and is pulled by a horse. The field where the wheat come form is only a little field with barely enough grains on it to fill up that cart, but the farmer seems to make a living off the field and what he grows there. Another significance is that there are lots of tree stumps, so apparently he cleared the area by cutting down trees. The logs he could trade too, so that is a second way to make a living fir him. The two men look like they are in a handshake to finish a deal they just made. On of them, the one on the right, is well dressed and looks like he is part of the upper class, while the other man is not really well dressed, he might be lower class. That suggests that they are dependent on each other, because the farmer might trade the grains that he grows on his field to the land owner so he can us the land and live there. That is exactly what the textbook says about society and economy at that time.

 

Farming in Upper Canada in the 1800´s

 

Social Class

This picture shows a city like it looked like in the 1800´s. There are no high buildings, no traffic lights or cars. There are coaches pulled by horses and some buildings. One of those buildings, the one in the centre of the picture,  is big and in a bright color. It is also really big, so apparently it is owned by a member of the upper class. The buildings on the left side are smaller and look like they have not been painted in a long time. There is one door, but many units that all look the same, so there might be a lot of people living there together, each of them having not a lot of space for themselves. The people on the coaches that roll down the road are well dressed, so they might be the owner of the big and nice house or at least members of the upper class, while others are walking, maybe the people who live in one of the units in the apartment building. In the foreground of the picture there is a little hill and a river. Down at the bottom of the hill there are children playing in the mud, while above them, on top of the hill, there are people standing and talking. Those people, who are also well dressed, are looking at the playing children, maybe because it is their land.  The children look like they arrant a part of the upper class, so maybe that is the reason why the people on the hill are watching them and might not want them to be there. The fact that the upper class looking people are standing above the children and appearing higher, supports that impression.

 

Social Class

 

Religion

This picture shows Toronto in the 1800´s. There are people walking down the road, all in the same direction, so apparently they have one common destination. Significant is that people from the really big and nice houses on the left side of the picture that are connected to a good road, and the people from the smaller and less splendid houses are apparently walking to the same place. That place seems to be the church which is a big building in the centre of the town, with its big tower that can be seen from anywhere in town. It seems that religion was an important part of the peoples´ live in that time. They all are dressed nicely and families are together. In the other parts of the picture there are no people, just on the roads toward the church there are people. The textbook says religion was a central part of the culture and this picture supports that statement.

 

Religion

 

Land Issues

 

This picture show a group of tents within a forest.  In the foreground there used to be lots of trees, but now there are only tree stumps, so most of that forest has been cut down. The two really high trees in the centre of the picture look like they are falling over, so maybe they are just being cut down in that scene. The forest is cut down by British settlers, which is shown by the British flag on on of the tents. Apparently the British cleared land to create a space for living and for building homes, a church and public institutions. The soil must be affected by the actions that were happening because all the trees, which have the shape of evergreen tress, have lost their needles, maybe due to a lack of nutrients in the soil. That is a problem that is still occurring as more and more trees are cut down, the whole ecosystem is affected. That picture partly agrees to the textbook. The textbook does say they clear land,but it says it took along time. In the picture it looks like they are cutting down the forest in a really short time.

Land Issues

 

Sources:

Upper Canada Image Gallery

 

Amazing Canada- Luca and Andrew

  • Cordillera

 Map:

Detailled Map

The Region on the left side of the map, which shows the Western part of Canada ist he Cordillera Region. British Columbia and Yukon are the Provinces in that Physiographic region, in the East there is a little part of Alberta included. The Western and Northern extent are the Northern Corner of the Yukon, where the border to the USA is. The Eastern extent peeks into Alberta and the Southern extent ist he border to the USA.

 Relative Location:

The Cordillera Region extents from Southern BC to Northern Yukon. It is 800 kilmeters wide and, going from the Pacific Coast in the West to peeking into Alberta in the East. The Southern extent ist he US border with the Ivvavik Park and ist Northern Extent.

 

 Absolute Location:

Northern Extent: 69°32´59.5572´´N

Southern Extent: 48°4´41.0844´´N

Western Extent. 140°53´19.2192´´W

Eastern Extent:   113°54´22.5000´´W

 

 

Place and Region:

The Cordillera has a diverse , varying landscape composed by parallel mountain ranges, which are separated by plateaus, trenches and valleys. There are also dormont volcanoes and in the Northern part oft he region there are large glaciers and ice fields. The region also has a teeming with wildlife and vegetation, as its comprised of 6 different biomes, which are: Tundra, Coniferous Forest, Coast and Interior Forest, Parkland, Grassland and Open Woodland. Since both Coniferous and Coast and Interior Forest are forest biomes, there are a lot of evergreens (spruce, fir, spine, etc.) and large trees with greater groth due to wet and mild climate.

 

 

 

Coast and Interior Forest

Stanley Park, Vancouver, BC

 

The cultural landscape is mostly located in the Coastal areas in Southern BC with Vancouver, the Tri Cities area and other cities and communities. Those cities are surrounded by mountains, which are the main part that shapes the physical landscape of of the Cordillera Region. On those mountains the cultural landscape is composed from skiing resorts and their towns, skiing lifts and roads.

 

 

waddington

Mt. Waddington

Whislter. Canada

Golf Chateau, Whistler, BC

 

 

The other major part of the physical landscape are trees and green spaces in the grasslands and Ice fields in the Northern Yukon.

 

Wernecke Mountains, Yukon

Wernecke Mountains, Yukon

 

 

Formation:

The region was formed by the shifting of the Pacific Plate, which is an oceanic plate and the North American Plate, which is a continental plate. They are moving towards each other so oceanic subduction occurs, which causes the less dense, lighter oceanic plate to subduct under the more dense, heavier continental plate. This process caused Mountains, Plateus, Valleys and Volcanoes to form out of volcanic rock.

In this picture there a visualzation of oceanic subduction, like it occurs on the Pacific Coast of the Cordillera Region.

subduction-diagram

 

 

That is the reason why the coastal region in BC is mostly shaped by mountians. Erosion, caused by two factors, shaped the mountains to what they are now. First, in the last ice age, flowing glaciers carved the mountains under huge pressure and weight, and now rivers are still carving out valleys and moving minerals all over the region.

 

Human and Environmental Interaction

Natural Resources: The Cordillera Region has a variety of natural resources, with mining and forestry as the main industries. The rich, fertile soil maked agriculture another profitable industry in BC.

 

Economy in Numbers:

 

GDP

 

Total GDP: 204.805.000 Dollars

 

Real Estate: 36.365.000 (17.75%)

Construction: 16.767.000 (8.18%)

Health Care: 15.127.000 (7.38%)

Manufacturing: 14.693.000 (7.17%)

Public Administration: 12.736.000 (6.21%)

 

 

People Employed:

 

Total: 2.336.000

 

Retail and Wholesale: 348.000

Other Services: 305.000

Health Care: 275.000

Construction: 201.000

Educational Services: 189.000

 

Forestry: 54.000

Africulture: 21.000

 

The GDP and the numbers of employment are not necessarily dependent on each other, so for example there is an employment number of 189.000 in the Educational Services, this Industry is not in the Top 5 list of the industries with the highest GDP.

 

 

 

  • Interior Plains

 

Map

alberta_map_2005

 

Relative Location

The Interior Plains region extents from Western Alberta, where the border to BC is, to its Eastern extent in Western manitoba. It is very wide in the South, along the US border, but as we look more up North, it has only the West- East extent of Alberta. Ist Southern border is the United States border, the Northern border is the arctic sea in the Northwest Territories.

 

Absolute Location

Northern Extent: 69°57´37.5804´´N

Southern Extent: 48°57´56.8584´´N

Western Extent: 120°11´25.5480´´W

Eastern Extent:   97°7´8.9076´´W

 

Place and Region

The landscape of the Interior Plains is mostly composed of flat lands, rolling hills and river valleys. The region is varying in biomes, with the Southern half composed of parklands, grasslands and coniferous forest, with the Northern half composed of open woodland.

 

Alberta Highway 63

 

Alberta, Highway 63

 

 

porcupine hills

 

Porcupine Hills, Southwest of Calgary, Alberta

 

Formation

Soil, carried by the rivers from the Canadian Shield, formed this region as they settled as sedimentary rock in horizontal layers. That is why the land is mostly flat.

 

sedimentary rock

This picture shows how Sedimentary rock is formed.

 

Human and Environmental Interaction

 

Resources

The region has vast amounts of fossil fuels, making it have one oft he largest oil industries in Canada. The landscape, which flat and rich soil is also ideal for farming and agriculture. By digging huge holes into the ground and carrying soil away natural habitats are destroyed. In addition to that people have to build roads to get there, so they might have to cut down forests, which are important natural habitats.

 

Economy in Numbers (Alberta)

 

Employed: Total: 2.276.000

 

Top 5, Emplyoments by industry

  1. Trade (324.000)
  2. Health and Social Assistance (273.000)
  3. Construction (255.000)
  4. Professional scientific and technical services (175.000)
  5. Forestry, fishing, mining, oil and gas (155.000)

 

GDP: Total: 286.600.000

  1. Energy (80.248.000; 28%)
  2. Finance and Real Estate (40.124.000; 14%)
  3. Business and Commercial services (28.660.000; 10%)
  4. Construction (25.744.000; 9%)
  5. Retail and Wholesale (22.928.000; 8%)

 

 

Energy contributes most of GDP

  • due to oil industry
  • due to large deposits of fossil fuels

 

 

 

 

  • Canadian Shield

Map

Detailled Map

Relative Location

The Canadian Shield surrounds the Hudson Bay, so it coverst he provinces Newfoundland, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba and Nunavut. It extents from the southernmost of Ontario to all the way up north tot he south-east corner of Ellesmere Island in Nunavut. In width, the Canadian Shield goes from the Eastern part of Quebec to the Eastern part oft he Northwest Territories and the North- East corner of Alberta. Its southern neighbour are the St. Lawrence Lowlands and in the east it touches the Appalachian region and the Atlantic ocean.

 

Absolute Location

Northern Extent: 76°38´21.2136´´N

Southern Extent: 45°31´18.2784´´N

Western Extent: 83°9´59.4144´´W

Eastern Extent: 61°36´40.7807´´W

 

Place and Region

The Canadian Shield is a large area, making up half of Canada’s land surface. The region is mainly flat bare rocks, which makes it hard to build houses and nearly impossible to grow plants. The region is also composed of lakes and wetlands. This is due to the fact that the region was once a volcanic mountain range, that was worn down to its present state by the effects of glaciers (glacial erosion). The region is primarily coniferous in the Southern part, with small amount of mixed forests and open woodland. The northern part is primarily tundra with some subarctic areas.

 

 

Picanoc River, Pontiac, Quebec

 

Picanoc River in Pontiac, Quebec with bare rock and surrounded by a coniferous forest.

 

 

Our Tundra Lodge is located in an area of high bear density. See polar bears from dawn till dusk. One of the most unique polar bear tours in the world!

Tundra in Churchill, Manitoba just west of the Hudson Bay. Polar bears are one oft he few animal species that live in the northern biomes.

 

 

Human and Environmental Interaction

In this region there are many minerals to find, due to the region being covered by mostly bare

rock. The most common minerals are copper, coal iron along with gold and diamonds.

 

Numbers employed (Quebec)

 

Total: 4.097.000

 

  1. Health Care (576.500)
  2. Manufacturing (488.600)
  3. Wholesale, Retail and Trade (662.000)
  4. Professional, Technical and Scientific services (315.000)
  5. Accomodation and Food services (270.400)

 

 

GDP

 

Total: 370.064.000

 

  1. Manufacturing (5.439.940; 14,7%)
  2. Real Estate (4.181.723; 11,3%)
  3. Health Care (3.071.531; 8.3%)
  4. Public Administration (2.775.480; 7,5%)
  5. Construction (2.442.422; 6,6%)

 

 

  • St. Lawrence Lowlands

Map

Detailled Map

Relative Location

The St. Lawrence Lowlands region extents from southern extent of Ontario to the very edge of the Northwest of Newfoundland. In the west it goes from the western Manitoulin Island to the west coast of Newfoundland. At ist south is the US border which also surrounds the eastern and western area oft he southern most extent of the St. Lawrence Lowlands.

 

Absolute Location

Northern Extent: 49°33´13.4136´´N

Southern Extent: 41°46´16.7232´´N

Western Extent: 83°9´59.4144´´W

Eastern Extent: 61°36´40.7808´´W

 

 

Place and Region

 

The region has many fertile areas of of flat lands and rolling hills , leading to many fruits and vegetables to be grown. There are many trees as the region mainly consists of the mixed forest biome and traces of open woodland.

 

 

Lanaudier Plain, Quebec

Lanaudier Plain, the picture show lots of rich soil which provides perfect conditions for farming.

 

Reserve Faunique de Portneuf, Quebec

 

Reserve Taunique de Portneuf, Quebec

 

Formation

The land was carved and shaped by retreating ice sheets from the ice age. These sheets also pushed soils from the shield onto the land, which is why areas are so fertile. The lakes were made as the ice melted and filled the holes, that were pressed into the ground by the huge weight of the ice. That is why most of the lakes are not connected to any rivers or other lakes. They got their present state due to drainage.

 

Glaciation_2

 

Human and Environmental Ineraction

While not great in mineral resources the region has very rich and very fertile soils, leading to plenty of of farmlands.

 

Numbers employed (Ontario)

 

Total: 618.050.000

  1. Wholesale and Retail (1.042.000)
  2. Health Care (812.000)
  3. Manufacturing (244.000)
  4. Professional, Scientific and Technical services (529.000)
  5. Finance (543.000)

 

 

GDP

 

Total: 618.050.000

  1. Real Estate (84.591.000; 13,6%)
  2. Finance and Insurance (60.125.000; 9,7%)
  3. Professional and Administrative services (57.864.000; 9,3%)
  4. Public Administration (42.604.000; 6,8%)
  5. Health Care (41.702.000; 6,7%)

 

 

 

  • Arctic Region

Map

Detailled Map

 

Relative Location

The arctic region is the North- Eastern region on the map that is marked in yellow. In the Eastern Part, on Baffin Island there is the capital citiy of the province, Iqualit. The Arctic Region is composed of many small Islands around the Hudson Bay and ist Northern extents almost touch   the West Coast of Greenland. The arctic region is in Northern Canada. Ist Western Border is the arctic ocean, the Eastern Border is Greenland. It is Northern from the Hudson Bay and the Canadian Shield region. The furthest Western extent reaches all the way to the Alaskan Border.

 

Absolute Location

Northern Extent: 82°59´38.8752´´N

Southern Extent: 63°38´33.2808´´N

Western Extent: 140°53´19.2192´´W

Eastern Extent:   68°38´33.2808´´W

 

Place and Region

The Arctic region is not as diverse and varying as for example the Cordillera region because it is too cold. The ground is permanently frozen, so plants can barely grow. The only plants that grow are mostly shrubs, which are outstandingly strong. Their strength results from the strong arctic winds. Those winds reach up to more than 200 kilometers per hour and nothing really blockst hem because it is mostly flat land.

 

 

Kantlyng Cassiope tetragona White Arctic Bell-heatherInfostaben på tur til Svalbard 23.06-01.07.2005 Planten har hvite kronblader

White Artic Bell Heather

 

 

The physical landscape is shaped by flatlands, plains and mountains and mostly icy, only for 2 to 3 months per year it is not covered in ice.

 

Iqualit

 

Iqualit, Nunavut, Canada

 

The only wild animals in the arctic regions are Polar Bear, Walruss and Narwhal. The reason why there is not a varying wildlife are the same factors that affect the vegetation: It is too cold and there is barely any food to find. The cultural landscape in the arctic is different from all the other Physiographic regions. There is a very little population density because it is hard to build houses and keep them warm in temperature of 40° C below and colder. The cities are composed of small houses and only little groups of houses.

 

 

 

Iqualit_2

Iqualit, the capital of Nunavut, Canada

 

 

Formation

The arctic region was formed by flowing glaciers, which still cover 5% of the Canadian Arctic. Those Glaciers carved away rock and pressed the ground to a flat landsform. In the Winter a major part oft he arctic landsmass is formed by sea ice, so the area rapidly increases as the rivers, lakes and the ocean start freezing in September. In the South the waters are ice-free from June to October, in the North only from July to August.

 

This picture shows the glaciation that formed and shaped the arctic region.

Glaciation in the arctic

 

Human and Environmental Interaction

 

The main natural resources oil and natural gas. Since the rock is the same as in the Appalachians, it is estimated that there are similar mineral resources. The industry is based on mining and oil.

 

(in million dollars, numbers from 2014)

 

  1. Final Consumption Expenditure (2010)
  2. Imports of goods and services (1944)
  3. Final Domestic Demand ( 3093)
  4. Goods (300)
  5. Business and Capital ( 831)

 

  • Appalachian Region

Map

Detailled Map

 

Relative Location

The Appalachian region is the very Eastern region on this map. It covers the Eastern extent of Newfoundland and the provinces Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. It has similar

Precipitation as the Cordillera region because it is a Coastal region, too.

 

Absolute Location

Northern Extent: 51°43´37.3008´´N

Southern Extent: 45°31´18.2784´´N

Western Extent: 74°10´46.8768´´W

Eastern Extent:   52°59´52.9692´´W

 

 

Place and Region

 

Appalachians are composed of highlands, mountains (mainly rolling hills), narrow river valleys and Fjords. The biomes are Open Woodland and Coniferous and Mixed Forest. In those mountains it is not as hard to settle as in the Rocky Mountains or the Coastal Mountains because the Appalachians are not as steep and not as high. But they do affect the Settlement and the economy, because there are not really big open spaces where people could farm food.

 

Cabot Trail on Breton Island in Nova Scotia

 

Cabot Trail on Breto Island in Nova Scotia

 

Formation

 

The region was formed oceanic subduction, since it is right next to the ocean. When the tectonic plates subduct they form volcanoes and mountains. Those mountains were eroded by glaciers, which gave them their present shape.

subduction-diagram   glacial erosin

 

Human and Environmental Interaction

 

The main resource of the region are logging and coal mining. The logging started off as a big challenge because in the region there weren´t really good roads and the acces to the mining and logging places was very difficult.

 

People employed (Newfoundland)

 

Total: 236.200

 

  1. Forestry, Fishing ( 16.200)
  2. Services Producing Sector (182.000)
  3. Wholesale and Retail Trade (41.600)
  4. Educational Services (15.100)
  5. Construction (22.600)

 

GDP

 

Total: 26.005.500

 

  1. Mining and Oil Extraction (8.135.500)
  2. Construction (2.641.600)
  3. Retail Trade (1.459.500)
  4. Real Estate Rental and Leasing (2.221.000)
  5. Health Care and Social Assistance (1.827.000)

 

 

Settlement

 

Cordillera

 

Topography:

Due to the various mountain ranges, towns and cities are generally located on the Coast or in valleys. This also means that there is little room for expansion. If the population would grow, the population density would rapidly increase. Up north threr is far more room, however, the cimate stops people from living there.

 

Climate:

SPeaking of the climate in the southern half of the region is cold and and wet. And while that usually means people would stay away, the copious amount of rain makes the trees grow larger, which is good fort he forestry business. Along with that, there are a few pockets of land which are very rich and fertile.

 

Vancouver is right on the Coast, which is good for trade.

 

Interior Plains

 

Topography:

The plains’ large flat lands mean people can spread out because there is lots of room. Resulting from that the population density is way lower than in the Cordillera region.
Climate:

The southern half of the region is warmer than most other regions, which is one of the reasons people move to this part of the region. Like in the cordillera region only a few people live in th enorthern area because it is more than 30°C below 0 so it is way too cold.

 

Canadian Shield

 

Topography:

Due to the topography of the region there are not as many people as in other regions, even though it is one of the biggest regions in Canada. This is because the ground is mainly bare rocks with tough terrain, which not only makes travel difficult, but but also unsuitable for farmland.

 

Climate:

Climate truly plays a factor farther up north where barely anyone lives due to how cold it is.

 

The vast amounts of minerals play a factor.

 

St. Lawrence Lowlands

Topography:

Though the region is rather small, it houses half of the Canadian Population, though ares like Vancouver and in the Cordilleras are rather concetrated and densely populated. The soil in the St. Lawrence Lowlands is very fertile, which means plenty of farmlands, which causes many people to settle there.

 

Climate:

The temperature is rather warm compared to most of the other regions. The climate in the St. Lawrence Lowlands is comparable to the climate in the Southern Cordillera.

 

 

Places to visit

 

Cordillera

  • Vancouver- Why?

Vamcouver is abeautiful place which is close to nature like Stanley Park or the mountains. Also there are lots of different people and cultures in Vancouver.

 

Interior Plains

  • Calgary, Alberta- Why?

Calgary has lots of cultural events like the Calgary Stampede Rodeo event or the Old West Celebration event.

 

Canadian Shield

  • Quebec City- Why?

Quebec is one of the oldest settlements in North America and is a good place to experience the French Canadian culture.

 

St. Lawrence Lowlands

  • Toronto Ontario, CN tower, Niagara Falls- Why?

Toronto is the largest city in Canada, so there is lots of activities and sightseeing to do. The best spots for sightseeing in Toronto are the CN- Tower and Casa Loma. A little bit outside Toronto there are the world famous Niagara Falls and the Great Lakes.

 

 

Arctic

  • Iqualit, Nunavut

Nunatta Sunakkutaangit Museum

Toonik Tyme Spring Festival

 

Iqualit is the biggest city in the arctic region and the capital city of Nunavut. There are not a lot of outdoor activities because it is extremely cold, but there are lots of museums that provide good visualization and information about the arctic region.

 

Appalchian Region:

  • Calot Trail on Breto Island in Nova Scotia

The Calot Trail is a spectacular drive, overlooking both the ocean and the rolling hills. There are also some hiking trails through the forests that cover most of that region.

 

 

 

Sources:

http://www.stats.gov.nu.ca/en/Economic%20GDP.aspx

http://www.latlong.net

http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/geological-regions/

http://www.first-nations.info/arviat-inuit-community.html

http://www.abelard.org/briefings/antarctica_melting_ice.php

Manley, Joan H. Horizons. Boston, MA, U.S.A.: Heinle & Heinle, 1998. Print.

http://www.stats.gov.nl.ca/statistics/GDP/PDF/GDP_Industry.pdf

http://www.statcan.gc.ca/tables-tableaux/sum-som/l01/cst01/econ15-eng.htm