Canada page9-14
    Ontario   


The Land

The name "Ontario" comes from the Iroquois word "Kanadario"
meaning "sparkling water." The name is fitting: not only is
Ontario bordered on the south by the Great Lakes and on
the north by Hudson Bay, but 177 390 km2, or one sixth
of its terrain, is covered by rivers and lakes.

Three main geological regions make up Ontario: the Great Lakes-St.
Lawrence Lowlands, the Canadian Shield and the Hudson Bay Lowlands.
The latter are narrow coastal plains bordering Hudson Bay and
James Bay; the land is wet and covered by scrub growth.
The Canadian Shield, covering the rest of northern Ontario from
Lake Superior to Hudson Bay and extending into the southern part
of the province, is a vast rocky plateau.
Although the soil is poor and not well suited
to large-scale farming, there is a wealth of minerals,
forests and water power.

The Canadian Shield and the Hudson Bay Lowlands cover 90 percent
of the province's 1 068 580 km2 of territory, but are home
to only 10 percent of the population.
Northern Ontario's towns were built because of the railway,
and today rails and roads carry the products of the mines
and mills southward.
Farther north, travel is often limited to air and water.
The extremes of the northern climate are a fact of life there.
At Winisk, mean daily temperatures reach only 12 to 15oC in July,
dropping to -25oC in January.

The five Great Lakes are the most visible results of the
ice age in Ontario, and the biggest, Lake Superior,
is the world's largest body of fresh water.

The Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Lowlands make up the rest of
southern Ontario and contain most of the population, industry,
commerce and agricultural lands.
The Lowlands include the Windsor-Thousand Islands-
St. Lawrence Valley triangle.

Mean annual summer temperatures reach 22oC in the south,
where the temperate climate and fertile soils nurture a major agricultural industry.
This relatively small area has more than
half of Canada's best agricultural land.

Toronto, Ontario's capital and Canada's largest city,
with a regional population of more than four million,
is Canada's leading producer of manufactured goods and
headquarters of a large number of Canadian companies.
Ottawa, the bilingual, bicultural national capital, sits at
the junction of the Gatineau, Rideau and Ottawa rivers.

           


The History

Ontario's first peoples arrived about 10 000 years ago,
during the last ice age.
The European explorers encountered the Iroquois and
Algonquin descendants of those first migrants
in the 17th century.
Sailing into the large bay that bears his name,
Henry Hudson became the first European to touch the shores of
present-day Ontario in 1610; in 1613, Samuel de Champlain
and Étienne Brűlé made the first contacts with the Aboriginal
people in the southern part of the province.

In 1774 the British ruled over southern Ontario,
then part of the British colony of Quebec.
Under the Constitutional Act of 1791,
"Quebec" was divided in two and Ontario renamed Upper Canada.
This became necessary with the tremendous
influx of Loyalist refugees after the American Revolution.

In 1840, the Act of Union saw Upper and Lower Canada reunited,
this time with the name Canada.
The two regions, Canada West and Canada East,
took part in the 1864 Confederation debate and, when the
Dominion of Canada was created in 1867,
became the separate provinces of Ontario and Quebec.

           

The People

From 1779 on, waves of English, Scottish and Irish immigrants
followed one another, moving up the St. Lawrence and
populating the country.
Today, immigration continues to be important to Ontario, and
there are large numbers of people of Italian, German, Chinese,
Dutch, Portuguese, Indian, Polish and Caribbean origin.

In 1991, Ontario had almost 250,000 people of Aboriginal,
Métis or Inuit origin.

With approximately 11 million people, Ontario is the country's
most heavily populated province.
While English is the official language, Ontario's Francophones
play an essential part in the province's cultural life and are
the largest language minority.
The provincial government provides services in French in those
regions where the Francophone population is sufficiently high.

           


The Economy

Ontario is Canada's most productive province, generating some
40 percent of the country's Gross Domestic Product.
Its manufacturing industries lead the way ($85 billion in 1992).
Ontario's competitive advantages include its natural resources,
modern transportation system, large, well-educated labour force,
reliable and relatively inexpensive electrical power, and proximity
to key U.S. markets: less than a day's drive
puts Ontario's products within reach of
120 million American consumers.

Automobiles are Ontario's major manufacturing industry and
most important export, employing more than 140 000 people
and providing 26 percent of Canada's total exports in 1989.

Mining has always played an important role in the development
of Ontario's economy.
Extraction of gold, nickel, copper, uranium and zinc
represents a multi-billion-dollar business.

Many Ontario towns have at least one industry connected to forestry.
Fully 87 percent of the forest land is owned by the provincial
government, which licenses logging rights.
The forest industry accounts for 5.8 percent of Ontario's exports.

Financial industries are also a source of prosperity.
Toronto is the world's fourth-largest capital market;
its stock exchange is North America's second-largest
by volume and third-largest by value traded.

Tourism, the province's third-largest industry,
is also important to the Ontario economy.
In 1990, tourist spending of more than $9.5 billion generated
about $13.4 billion in total revenue for the province
and more than 320 000 person-years of employment.

           

   Canada    Yukon
   Northwest Territories    Nunavut
   British Columbia    Alberta
   Saskatchwan    Manitoba
   Ontario    Quebec
   Newfoundland    New Brunswick
   Prince Edward Island    Nova Scotia

           



           








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