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Located in the prairie region of Canada, Saskatchewan is bordered
by Manitoba, Alberta, the Northwest Territories and the United States.
The province is rectangular in shape and is 651 900 km2 in area. Half
of it consists of forests, one-third of cultivated lands, and
one-eighth is covered with water.
The northern zone rests on a formation of Precambrian rock
characteristic of the Canadian Shield. As a result, there are numerous
(over 100 000) lakes, rivers, bogs and rocky outcroppings.
The southern part of the province is relatively flat, with occasional
valleys created by erosion from the glacial era. This prairie zone is
where most of the people live.
Camel caravans might not seem out of place in certain
parts of Saskatchewan. Athabasca Provincial Park has sand dunes 30 m
high and semi-arid vegetation. Nowhere else in the world are dunes
found this far north.
The name Saskatchewan comes from the Cree word
"kisiskatchewanisipi," which means "swift-flowing
river." The province has three major rivers: the Assiniboine, the
South Saskatchewan and the Churchill.
The whole province enjoys a hot, dry summer but the town of Estevan is
the undisputed "sunshine capital" of Canada, getting 2540
hours of sunshine per year.
The History
The first European explorers and trappers to visit Saskatchewan
found established settlements of Aboriginal people. The Chipewyan
Indians lived in the north; the nomadic Blackfoot roamed the eastern
plains, while the Assiniboine inhabited the west. The territory of the
Cree, who were long-time residents of the north, also extended
southward to the plains.
The earliest explorer was Henry Kelsey, a Hudson's Bay Company agent,
who in about 1690 followed the Saskatchewan River to the southern
plains of Saskatchewan. On the heels of the trappers came fur-trading
companies and trading posts, which became the foundation of many
present-day settlements.
For 200 years, the Hudson's Bay Company owned and administered the
vast Northwest Territories. Realizing their agricultural potential and
the opportunities for colonization, the Government of Canada purchased
the Territories in 1870. After the Dominion Lands Act of 1872, which
encouraged homesteaders, and another Act to stimulate immigration, the
new railway began bringing settlers in to farm these rich lands.
When Saskatchewan separated from the Northwest Territories and entered
Confederation in 1905, Regina became the provincial capital. The years
following were years of prosperity, until the 1929 economic crash,
combined with a decade of drought and bad harvests, brought the lean
years of the Great Depression to the province.
In 1945, the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) became the
first socialist government elected in North America. Its leader, Tommy
Douglas, led the fight for public hospitalization and medicare,
earning Saskatchewan the reputation as the "social laboratory of
North America."
The recovery of the 1940s and 1950s saw the economy, once dependent
solely on agriculture, become more diversified with the development of
oil, uranium, potash, coal and other minerals.
The People
The Métis, people of mixed European and Aboriginal descent, were
among the first settlers, many of them having migrated from Manitoba.
With land available at token prices, agriculture gradually replaced
the fur trade. A major wave of immigration began in 1899 and continued
until 1929.
Today, Saskatchewan's population stands at approximately 1 019 478.
Saskatchewan is Canada's only province where the majority of the
population is of neither British nor French background. The population
has a variety of ethnic inheritances - German, Ukrainian,
Scandinavian, Amerindian, Dutch, Polish and Russian - as well as
British, French and many other non-European origins.
Regina and Saskatoon are the two main cities and together have about
one-third of the total population. Named in recognition of Queen
Victoria (Victoria Regina), the capital is the site of Wascana Centre,
one of the world's largest urban parks. Saskatoon, which has a larger
population, is bisected by the South Saskatchewan River.
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