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Vancouver Island,
SW British Columbia, Canada, in the Pacific Ocean is the largest island off W
North America.
It
is c.285 mi (460 km) long and c.30 to 80 mi (50-130 km) wide and is
separated from the mainland by Queen Charlotte, Georgia, and Juan de
Fuca straits.
The rugged island, a partially submerged portion of the Coast Mts.,
rises to 7,219 ft (2,200 m) at Golden Hinde Mt. Level plains extend
inland from the eastern coastline.
The Pacific coastline is deeply indented by numerous fjords and
inlets. The island has a mild humid climate; W Vancouver Island
receives the greatest amount of precipitation in North America.
There are many lakes and streams but no navigable rivers. The island
is heavily forested, and lumbering and wood processing are major
industries. Vancouver Island is underlaid by a mineral-rich
batholith, from which iron, copper, and gold are mined. Coal is
extracted from a depression at the edge of the batholith; the mines
at Nanaimo provide most of the coal for British Columbia.
Fishing, agriculture, and tourism are other important economic
activities.
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Pacific Rim National Park, Fort Rodd Hill National
Historic Park, and Strathcona Provincial Park are there. Population
is concentrated along the east coast; Victoria
(the provincial capital),
Nanaimo, Port Alberni, and Esquimalt (site of a large naval base)
are the largest cities. There are many small ports and fishing
settlements.
Both Spain
and Britain claimed the island; it was sighted (1774) by Juan Pérez,
the Spanish explorer, and Capt. James Cook was the first (1778) to
land there. In 1788, John Meares, an English trader, built a fort on
Nootka Sound, which was later occupied by Spanish forces. In 1792 the island was
circumnavigated and chartered by Capt. George Vancouver. British
sovereignty over Vancovuer was confirmed (1846) when the U.S.-Canada
line was drawn through Juan de Fuca Strait by the Oregon Treaty.
Vancouver Island was made a crown colony in 1849 and
in 1866 became part of British Columbia.
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Canada brief history
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Alberta
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Nootka Sound
Yukon river
Manitoba
Auyuittuq National Park
Akshayuk Pass |
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