Atlantic Canada, also known as the Atlantic provinces, is the region of Canada which is made up of four provinces on the Atlantic coast: the three Maritime provinces – New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island – and Newfoundland and Labrador. The population of the Atlantic provinces was 2,324,893 in 2007.[1] Archived 2007-10-13 at the Wayback Machine
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History | Year list (Timeline) |
- Pre-colonization
- New France (1534–1763)
- British Canada (1763–1867)
- Post-Confederation (1867–1914)
- World Wars and Interwar Years (1914–1945)
- Modern times: 1945–1960
- 1960–1981
- 1982–1992
- since 1992
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Topics |
- Constitutional
- Crown & Aboriginals
- Economic
- Etymology
- Former colonies & territories
- Immigration
- Military
- Monarchical
- National Historic Sites
- Persons of significance
- Territorial evolution
- Women
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Provinces and territories | |
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Government | |
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Politics | |
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Geography | |
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Economy |
- Agriculture
- Banking
- Bank of Canada
- Dollar
- Communications
- Companies
- Energy
- Fishing
- Oil
- Stock exchange
- Taxation
- Tourism
- Transportation
- Science and technology
- Social programs
- Poverty
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Society |
- Education
- Healthcare
- Crime
- Values
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Demographics | Topics | |
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Top 100s |
- Metropolitan areas and agglomerations
- Population centres
- Municipalities
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Culture |
- Architecture
- Art
- Cinema
- Cuisine
- Festivals
- Folklore
- People
- Holidays
- Identity
- Literature
- Music
- Nationalisms
- Online media
- Protectionism
- Sports
- Theatre
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Symbols |
- Coat of arms
- Flags
- Provincial and territorial
- Royal
- Heraldic
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Article overviews | |
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Research |
- Bibliography
- Historiography
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