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Chicoutimi-Arvida
Minas basin
Sagueney River
Kooteney River
Sault St. Marie
Moosanee

Thanks a ton

2007-02-27 15:24:20 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Homework Help

5 answers

Chicoutimi-Arvida: Québec
Minas basin: eastern part of the Bay of Fundy
Sagueney River: southern central Quebec
Kooteney River: North of Kootenay National Park
Sault St. Marie: Upper peninsula of North Michigan
Moosanee: north on the shore of James bay

2007-02-27 15:29:13 · answer #1 · answered by blackyholey 3 · 0 0

Jonquière, city of Quebec; pop. 54 842 (recens. 2001), 56 503 (recens. 1996), 57 933 (recens. 1991); superf. 216,04 km2; const. in 1975
Minas Basin, the southern branch of the upper Bay of Fundy ( Nova Scotia), is a semi-enclosed, silted-up remnant of a 200 million-year-old rift valley, once located near the Equator. In Micmac legend the Basin was originally the beaver pond of the man-god Glooscap, who lived on Cape Blomidon at the base of Cape Split.
Quebec's vitally-important aluminum industry owes its existence to the power and depth of the Saguenay River system.
Two geographical features dominate the Kootenays region of British Columbia: mountains and water. Four parallel mountain ranges, running in a generally northwest direction, march successively across the southeastern British Columbia landscape.
Sault St. Marie is located in Northern Ontario bordering Michigan

Moosonee is the northern terminus of the Ontario Northland railway which begins at North Bay, Ontario. The railway is owned by the Government of the Province of Ontario and operated by the Ontario Northland Transportation Commission. The ONR runs a year round (three days per week) mixed train which carries both freight and passengers plus the summer time Polar Bear excursion train (six days per week) between Moosonee and Cochrane. Some of the freight brought up to Moosonee is transferred to aircraft and barges for shipment further north.

2007-02-27 15:46:41 · answer #2 · answered by c0mplicated_s0ul 5 · 0 0

I think you mean Moosonee, Ontario. Not much going on there but for some reason it's quite popular as for tourists.

It's on the Southern tip of James Bay.

Moosonee is a mile and a half by water from Moose Factory, an Old Hudson Bay trading post.

FYI, there's also a Moosonee, NY.

2007-02-27 15:36:11 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Quebec.

Quebec.
British Columbia.
Ontario.
Ontario (At the southern end of James Bay.)

2007-02-27 15:33:14 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The previous poster had them all, except the Kootenay (note the spelling) River. Google Kootenay River and you'll get the correct location of the river.

2007-02-27 15:33:34 · answer #5 · answered by Bob W 3 · 0 0

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