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New Brunswick borders on Nova Scotia, Quebec and the U.S. state of
Maine. It is rectangular in shape, extending 322 km north to south and
242 km east to west.
New Brunswick has a land mass of 73 500 km2, 85 percent of which is
forest. The northern part of the province is quite mountainous, the
tallest peak being Mount Carleton, 820 m high. The interior consists
mainly of a rolling plateau, flatter in the east and more hilly in the
southeast
The main rivers are the Miramichi, Nepisguit, Restigouche and Saint
John. Known as "oa-lus-tuk" or "beautiful river"
to the Indians, the Saint John waters the fertile lands of the western
part of the province over a distance of 725 km. Downstream, in the
Madawaska area, it traces a natural boundary between the state of
Maine and Canada.
Twice a day, with the rising tide of the Atlantic Ocean, 100 billion
tonnes of water stream past a rocky headland in the Bay of Fundy. The
current created is practically equal to the flow of all the world's
rivers over a 24-hour period. The eastern end of the Bay has tides of
nearly 15 m, the highest in the world, sufficient to completely
submerge a four-storey building.
The History
The existence of New Brunswick was known to the Europeans as early
as the 1400s, when intrepid Basque fishermen plied their trade off
Miscou in the northeast region of the province. At that time, the
region was inhabited by the Malecite and Mi'Kmaq Indians. The Mi'Kmaqs
were the first to receive Samuel de Champlain and the French when they
landed in New Brunswick in 1604. The Aboriginals established good
relations with the French from the outset, helping the French
settlers, known as Acadians, to adapt to their new country and taking
part in the French attacks on New England.
The British and French feuded over the area for a century. Control
passed back and forth until 1713, when all of Acadia was ceded to the
British under the Treaty of Utrecht. With time, France lost interest
in the Acadians, turning most of its attention to New France and the
burgeoning fur trade.
By 1755, England had established its dominance as a
colonial power. Fearing that the Acadians were a security threat, the
British deported, mainly to the United States, all Acadians who would
not swear allegiance to the British Crown. Their exile lasted eight
years, after which a significant proportion returned to their
homeland.
In 1783, the western part of Nova Scotia became the home of thousands
of Loyalists who had taken flight in the aftermath of the American
Revolution. These American colonists, wishing to remain faithful to
the British Crown, founded communities in the northern part of the
province. This mass influx of Loyalists created a rift between Nova
Scotia and New Brunswick, and New Brunswick became a separate province
in June, 1784. In 1867 it joined other provinces to form the Dominion
of Canada.
The People
In 1996, the population of New Brunswick was 761 075. With the
highest percentage of Francophones outside Quebec (almost 35 percent),
New Brunswick is Canada's only officially bilingual province.
The heritage of New Brunswick's people is a blended one, combining
elements of the French, British Loyalist, Scots and Irish traditions,
with later elements of German, Scandinavian and Asian. The little
municipality of New Denmark boasts North America's largest Danish
colony.
The Aboriginal people of New Brunswick number more than 12 000, most
of them Mi'Kmaq and Malecite.
The coasts and river valleys are the areas of heaviest population;
Saint John is the largest city, followed by Moncton and Fredericton,
the provincial capital.
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