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Weather forms the Canadian psyche as much as hockey and the maple leaf. It occupies our
thoughts daily, particularly in winter. At the time of this writing – January 2005 – the weather has occupied Canadians' thoughts more than usual, as indeed the tsunami in Asia has put weather in the minds of people around the world.
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Climate Severity Environment Canada devised the climate severity index to ...
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Climatology Climatology is the study of CLIMATE over extended periods ...
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Cold Places in Canada During the prolonged darkness of winter, the air over the ...
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Cold-Weather Injuries Cold-weather injuries are all related to the cooling of the ...
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Global Warming Global warming is a planetary scale climate change that ...
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Nordicity Nordicity is a wide concept developed in Canada from the ...
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It may be said in Canada that weather is a "powerful part of our community." It begins
conversations and impels us to contact relatives facing severe conditions, calling for reassurance
and to commiserate. Like our often-fractious politics, we curse and praise the weather with equal
vehemence. Richard Adams, in Watership Down, said, "Many human beings say that they enjoy
the winter, but what they really enjoy is feeling proof against it." Our Canadian hardiness is
proof against our often-harsh climate. And harsh it is. This winter, while the east coast has been battered by severe storms, on the west coast relentless rain has caused mudslides that have exacted a toll in life and property. Across the country we've shivered our way through a gaggle of weather warnings. Winter weather, put mildly, is inconvenient, but extreme weather is hardly unusual in
Canada. Annual freezing rain averages range from the Prairies' 20-35 hours to 50-70 hours in the
Ottawa Valley and southern Quebec. Even Victoria averages a few hours of freezing rain per year
but the champ is St. John's, Newfoundland with 150 hours. The 20th century's worst ice storm hit
Ontario and Quebec January 4-10, 1998, causing an estimated $1 billion in damage. Though we may get our long johns in a bunch that others see Canada only as a land of cold
and snow, we must concede our frosty reputation. North America's coldest recorded temperature,
in 1947 in Snag, Yukon, was a bone-chilling -63° C. It was so cold that an exhaled breath made a
hissing sound as it froze. Canada has the world's lowest average daily temperature, -5.6° C.
Despite Canada's nippy statistics, we do not hold world records for all cold extremes. Ottawa is
only the world's second-coldest national capital, after Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. With cold comes snow, as people know well in the Atlantic Provinces, hit by three major storms in only eight days this winter. In the past 50 years, only twice have there been
three storms in a one-month period, in January 1981 and March 1993. The worst blizzard in Canadian railway history occurred between January 30 and February
8, 1947, when 10 days of blowing snow buried towns and trains from Calgary to Winnipeg.
Some Saskatchewan roads and rail lines remained impassable until spring. Children stepped over
power lines on their way to school and people dug tunnels to their outhouses. Winter doesn't give us our only weather extremes. Canada's longest, deadliest heat wave,
July 5-17, 1936, saw temperatures top 44° C in Manitoba and Ontario. The intense heat killed
1180 people, twisted steel rail lines and bridge girders, buckled sidewalks, wilted crops and
baked fruit on trees. The hottest day on record was at Midale and Yellowgrass, Saskatchewan on
July 5, 1937 when the temperature reached a scorching 45° C. Extreme temperatures aren't all. Canada's deadliest tornado struck Regina on June 30, 1912,
killing 40 people, injuring 300 and destroying 500 buildings. It lasted only three minutes but it
took 46 years to pay for the damage. On May 4, 1971 heavy rains in St-Jean-Vianney, Que.
opened a sinkhole 600m wide and 30m deep. The crater and mudslide killed 31 people and
swallowed 35 homes, a bus and several cars. Many of our significant weather events have happened in February, whose weather
superlatives include a deadly snowstorm in St. John's in 1959; a 1961 ice storm that left parts of
Montreal without power for a week; a 1979 blizzard that isolated Iqaluit, Nunavut for 10 days; a
1982 blizzard that marooned PEI for a week; the Ocean Ranger disaster on February 15, 1982;
the warmest Winter Olympics — 1988, in Calgary — when 18.1° C on February 26 was just a
tad below Miami's 19.4° C; and the greatest single-day snowfall of 145cm at Tahtsa Lake, BC on
February 11, 1999. Laura Neilson Bonikowsky is Associate Editor of The Canadian Encyclopedia.
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| Time waits for no man… and neither do trains... |
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| Pierre Elliott Trudeau, politician, writer, constitutional lawyer, prime minister of Canada 1968-79 and 1980-84 (b at ... |
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| Few countries were affected as severely as Canada by the worldwide Depression of the 1930s. It is estimated that ... |
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| Louis Riel, Métis leader, founder of Manitoba, central figure in the NORTH-WEST REBELLION (b at Red River ... |
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| The Group of Seven was founded in 1920 as an organization of self-proclaimed modern artists. The original members - ... |
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| Sir John Alexander Macdonald, lawyer, businessman, politician, first prime minister of Canada (b at Brunswick Place, ... |
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| Few countries were affected as severely as Canada by the worldwide Depression of the 1930s. It is estimated that ... |
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| John Ware, "Nigger John," horseman, rancher (b near Georgetown, SC 1845; d near Brooks, Alta 11 Sept 1905). ... |
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| Créditistes, Québec party involved in federal politics. For nearly 2 decades before its 1958 formation ... |
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| Julia Verlyn LaMarsh, "Judy," lawyer, politician, broadcaster, novelist (b at Chatham, Ont 20 Dec 1924; d at ... |
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Browse the rich visual resources of The Canadian Encyclopedia through thematic galleries of Canadian Art, History, Nature, People, and Science and Technology.
Illustrations, lively text, animations, sounds and games help make learning about Canadian history, art, geography, architecture and other topics entertaining as well as informative.
The ultimate test of your knowledge of Canada, trivial and otherwise. You can choose from more than 60 dynamic quizzes with visual or text clues. Your scores depend on the speed with which you answer and the number of clues you need. Results are sent to you by email and high scores are posted on the site.
This unique resource includes more than 6000 events from Canadian and world history. It can be searched by era, subject, keyword or date. To find out what happened on your birthday, select the month and day of your birth.
This selection of the 100 "greatest" events in Canadian history was made by editor in chief James H. Marsh to draw attention to events that have left an indelible memory in the minds of later generations.
| THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF MUSIC IN CANADA |
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| Frenette, Claude. Composer, b Montreal 10 Dec 1955, B MUS (Montreal) 1981, M MUS (Montreal) 1984, Teachers' certificate (Montreal) 1987, D MUS (Montreal) 1991. His composition teachers have been Michel Longtin , André ... |
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