Canada, with 3.3 people per square kilometre, has one of the lowest population densities in the world. In 2001, most of Canada's population of 30 million lived within 200 kilometres of the United States. In fact, the inhabitants of our three biggest cities — Toronto, Montréal and Vancouver — can drive to the border in less than two hours. Thousands of kilometres to the north, our polar region — the Yukon Territory, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut — is relatively empty, embracing 41% of our land mass but only 0.3% of our population. Human habitation in the solitary north clings largely to scattered settlements: villages among vast expanses of virgin ice, snow, tundra and taiga.
- Publisher - Current Organization Name: Natural Resources Canada
- Licence: Open Government Licence - Canada
Data and Resources
-
Download the English JP2 File through HTTPJP2English French dataset JP2
-
Download the English ZIP (PDF,JPG) file through HTTPZIPEnglish French dataset ZIP
-
Download the French JP2 File through HTTPotherEnglish French dataset Other
-
Download the French ZIP (PDF, JPG) File through HTTPZIPEnglish French dataset ZIP
Similar records