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Explore150: Go Canada!

What place in Canada most defines you as a Canadian? Vote while you’re here, then follow us @Explore150 to join the discussion and show us on Instagram #Explore150!

Through this participatory process, you will identify and vote for your favourite natural, historic, and cultural sites across each province and territory, ultimately choosing the Canadian places and milestones we highlight in our Explore150 mobile app – to be launched November 1st! Stay tuned for updates on the project.

Do you have questions, comments or want to get involved? Get in touch through Explore150@takingitglobal.org

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419 results found

  1. Northern Lights Centre

    Science and folklore of the Aurora Borealis

    3 votes
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    0 comments  ·  Yukon  ·  Admin →
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  2. Mount Logan

    Mount Logan is the highest mountain in Canada and the second-highest peak in North America, after Mount McKinley (Denali). The mountain was named after Sir William Edmond Logan, a Canadian geologist and founder of the Geological Survey of Canada (GSC). Mount Logan is located within Kluane National Park and Reserve[3] in southwestern Yukon and is the source of the Hubbard and Logan Glaciers. Logan is believed to have the largest base circumference of any non-volcanic mountain on Earth (a large number of shield volcanoes are much larger in size and mass), with the massif containing eleven peaks over 5,000 metres…

    3 votes
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    0 comments  ·  Yukon  ·  Admin →
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  3. Halifax Public Gardens

    The Halifax Public Gardens are Victorian era public gardens formally established in 1867, the year of Canadian Confederation. The gardens are located in the Halifax Regional Municipality, Nova Scotia on the Halifax Peninsula near the popular shopping district of Spring Garden Road and opposite Victoria Park. The gardens were designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1984.

    3 votes
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    0 comments  ·  Nova Scotia  ·  Admin →
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  4. Confederation Trail

    Confederation Trail is the name for a 470 kilometre recreational rail trail system in the Canadian province of Prince Edward Island. It was developed in the 1990s, following the December 31, 1989 abandonment of all railway lines in the province by Canadian National Railway (CN).

    3 votes
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  5. Ivvavik National Park

    Ivvavik National Park is a national park located in Yukon, Canada. Meaning "nursery" or "birthplace" in Inuvialuktun, is the first national park to be established as a result of a land claim agreement with its natives. Protecting a portion of the calving grounds of the Porcupine caribou herd, the park allows only a minimal number of people to visit per year. On the shore of the Beaufort Sea, there is abundant game for the wolves and bears who co-habit the area. The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge lies just across the border in Alaska.

    3 votes
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    1 comment  ·  Yukon  ·  Admin →
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  6. Fort Amherst

    The site of British fortification built to guard the mouth of St. John's harbour, of which there are no visible remains; named after William Amherst who recaptured St. John's from the French in 1762

    3 votes
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  7. Fort William

    The site of a fort which served as the original headquarters of the British garrison in Newfoundland, and which was attacked three times by the French; the fort represented the first official military presence in St. John's, although it was supplanted by Fort Townshend in the 1770s, and demolished in 1881

    3 votes
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  8. St. John the Baptist Anglican Cathedral

    A magnificent stone cathedral designed by George Gilbert Scott for CanadaÕs oldest Anglican parish; a nationally significant example of Gothic Revival architecture, and one that conforms to the tenets of the Cambridge Camden Society

    3 votes
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  9. Battle of Duck Lake

    A 12-hectare (30-acre) grassy lot that served as the site of the first battle of the North-West Rebellion, considered an important victory for the MŽtis

    3 votes
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  10. Cumberland House

    The HudsonÕs Bay Company's first inland fur-trading post, around which SaskatchewanÕs oldest permanent settlement was founded by Samuel Hearne; only visible remnant today is a stone-walled 1890s gunpowder house

    3 votes
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  11. Frenchman Butte

    The site where the Wood Cree and the Alberta Field Force waged the Battle of Frenchman's Butte on May 28, 1885 as part of the North-West Rebellion

    3 votes
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  12. 3 votes
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    1 comment  ·  Saskatchewan  ·  Admin →
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  13. Pitt Meadows Museum

    The Museum maintains a small community archives with holdings that consist of documents created by the municipal government from the 1930s to the 1970s. These documents are primarily records created by the finance department and are not a complete collection.

    Other documents include those created by the Pitt Meadows School District from 1912 to 1945, containing correspondence, minutes, and financial records. As well, there are records of various community groups, businesses and families that reflect the social, cultural, and economic life of the community from the 1880s.

    Other holdings consist of 49 maps, 1000 photographic images, an oral history collection,…

    3 votes
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    0 comments  ·  British Columbia  ·  Admin →
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  14. Buntzen Lake

    Buntzen Lake, located just north of Ioco approximately 30 kilometres (km) from Vancouver, is a BC Hydro reservoir. It is 4.8 km long and covers an area of 182 hectares.

    Formerly known as Lake Beautiful, the lake is named after the first general manager of B.C. Electric Co., Johannes Buntzen. In 1903 the Buntzen hydroelectric project was put in service by the Vancouver Power Company to provide the first hydroelectric power to Vancouver. Previously, the city had to depend on a 1,500-kilowatt (kW) steam plant for its power supply.

    3 votes
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  15. Barkerville

    Barkerville was the main town of the Cariboo Gold Rush in British Columbia, Canada and is preserved as a historic town. It is located on the north slope of the Cariboo Plateau near the Cariboo Mountains 80 kilometres (50 mi) east of Quesnel along BC Highway 26, which follows the route of the original access to Barkerville, the Cariboo Wagon Road.

    3 votes
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  16. Garrison Creek

    The Garrison Creek is Toronto's most famous "Lost River". When the city was founded, you could fish salmon and canoe from Lake Ontario to what is now Bathurst Subway Station. It was buried in 1880 and now runs beneath the city in a Victorian brick sewer. Recent efforts, including the David Suzuki Foundation's Homegrown National Park Project, are bringing attention to this important cultural and ecological corridor.

    3 votes
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    0 comments  ·  Ontario  ·  Admin →
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  17. Little Italy (Neighbourhood) - Toronto

    An amazing neighbourhood in Toronto that carries with it amazing history and great places to visit and experience any time of the year.

    3 votes
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    0 comments  ·  Ontario  ·  Admin →
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  18. neys provincial park

    neys provincial park is beautiful, nice long sand beach and gorgeous water. neys also has lots of history since it is actually made on neys prisober of war camp 100.

    3 votes
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    0 comments  ·  Ontario  ·  Admin →
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  19. Fort William Historical Park

    So much history and the people are always nice, so much fun there.

    3 votes
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    0 comments  ·  Ontario  ·  Admin →
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  20. Fort Selkirk Historic Site

    Fort Selkirk is very cool Yukon historic site with many layers of story. Homeland of the Selkirk First Nation, it is a place for spiritual and cultural renewal. Centuries before The Hudson's Bay Company established a trading post there in 1848, the Chilkat Tlingits had controlled trade from the coast with the Selkirk people. Not surprisingly, they ransacked the fort in 1852 and maintained trade control for 40 more years when it became a settlement with government, church school, trading post etc. During the Klondike Gold Rush it was a major sternwheeller transportation and communications hub. Now after 20 years…

    3 votes
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    0 comments  ·  Yukon  ·  Admin →
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