Friday, October 25, 2019
Nova Scotia :: essays research papers
 Nova Scotia      Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Nova Scotia, one of the three Maritime and one of the four Atlantic  provinces of Canada, bordered on the north by the Bay of Fundy, the province of  New Brunswick, Northumberland Strait, and the Gulf of Saint Lawrence and on the  east, south, and west by the Atlantic Ocean. Nova Scotia consists primarily of a  mainland section, linked to New Brunswick by the Isthmus of Chignecto, and Cape  Breton Island, separated from the mainland by the Strait of Canso. On July 1,  1867, Nova Scotia became one of the founding members of the Canadian  Confederation. The province's name, which is Latin for New Scotland, was first  applied to the region in the 1620s by settlers from Scotland.    Physical Geography    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Nova Scotia can be divided into four major geographical regions-the  Atlantic Uplands, the Nova Scotia Highlands, the Annapolis Lowland, and the  Maritime Plain. The Atlantic Uplands, which occupy most of the southern part of  the province, are made up of ancient resistant rocks largely overlain by rocky  glacial deposits. The Nova Scotia Highlands are composed of three separate areas  of uplands. The western section includes North Mountain, a long ridge of  traprock along the Bay of Fundy; the central section takes in the Cobequid  Mountains, which rise to 367 m (1204 ft) atop Nuttby Mountain; and the eastern  section contains the Cape Breton Highlands, with the province's highest point.  The Annapolis Lowland, in the west, is a small area with considerable fertile  soil. Nova Scotia's fourth region, the Maritime Plain, occupies a small region  fronting on Northumberland Strait. The plain is characterized by a low,  undulating landscape and substantial areas of fertile soil.    History    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  The area now known as Nova Scotia was originally inhabited by tribes of  Abenaki and Micmac peoples. The Venetian explorer John Cabot, sailing under the  English flag, may have reached Cape Breton Island in 1497.    Colonial Period    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  The first settlers of the area were the French, who called it Acadia and  founded Port Royal in 1605. Acadia included present-day New Brunswick, Nova  Scotia, and Prince Edward Island. The English, rivals of the French in Europe  and the New World, refused to recognize French claims to Acadia, which they  called Nova Scotia (New Scotland) and granted to the Scottish poet and courtier  Sir William Alexander in 1621. This act initiated nearly a century of Anglo-  French conflict, resolved by the British capture of Port Royal (now Annapolis  Royal) in 1710 and the French cession of mainland Acadia to the British by the  Peace of Utrecht in 1713. Thus, the bulk of the Roman Catholic French-Acadians  came under Protestant British rule.  					    
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