Français Contact Us Help Search ... CanadaInternational Manitoba The History The People The Economy ... Manitoba official government web sites The Land Bordered by Ontario, Saskatchewan, Nunavut, Hudson Bay and the United States, Manitoba is one of the three Prairie provinces and is located in the centre of Canada. Its 650 000 km2 of landscape offer few extremes. Elevations rise slowly to the south and west from sea level at Hudson Bay. Most of Manitoba lies between 150 and 300 metres above sea level, but in the Turtle, Riding, Duck and Baldy mountains, heights rise to 700 metres or higher. The highest point in Manitoba is Baldy Mountain, in Duck Mountain Provincial Park, at 831 metres. Manitoba is known as the land of 100 000 lakes, a legacy of enormous Lake Agassiz, which covered much of the province after the glaciers retreated. The major rivers of western Canada flow into the lowland region of Manitoba, giving Manitoba 90 percent of the hydro-electric potential of the Prairie region. The northern topography is heavily glaciated and covered in forest, dominated by pine, hemlock and birch. Manitoba is one of the sunniest provinces in Canada. It has a continental climate, with great temperature extremes. Typical of southern Manitoba, the average January temperature in Winnipeg is about minus 20°C; the July average is about 19°C. In Thompson, in the centre of northern Manitoba, the averages for the same months are about minus 27°C and plus 15°C. | |
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