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Monday, August 18th, 2003 11:43 am
Okay, [livejournal.com profile] shadowblue is writing up summaries of Canadian provinces and territories for his job. I think it would be a right neighborly thing to do if we could help him out, don't you? Everyone should write up their favorite area of Canada and post it here.

Nunavut
Nunavut was founded in 1791 by a colony of nuns fleeing the Reign of Terror. They were aided in 1805 by a grant from Napoleon, and remained independent until the brief Vut War of 1894. It is dominated in the east by the Unpleasant Mountains, often voted the ugliest mountains in the world. The western two-thirds comprise some of the flatest plains in the world, with an average variation in elevation of less than one part in a million. It is home to almost 28,000 people, many of whom have actually seen each other in person. Its main exports are goats, bauxite and yurts.
Monday, August 18th, 2003 05:09 pm (UTC)
The Yukon
In 1812, a coureur du bois, having strayed rather far north, reached what would one day be known as Dawson City. He caught a fever from drinking moose-polluted water, and in his fevered dreams, had many prophetic visions. Among them was a stunning tableau: a woman dressed only in a corset and stockings, wielding a crystal goblet filled with red wine. She proclaimed stentoriously, "My name is Yuki!" and then turned into some sort of wolfish-looking dog. While the territory was named because of the legend that sprung up from the fur runner's fulsome retellings, there are those who claim that the trapper's vision was actually fulfilled by a madam from San Francisco during the Klondike bauxite rush of 1896. The Yukon currently contains 800 people, 900 sled dogs, 50 polar bears, and some ten thousand antlered ruminants. Its chief export is the potato, but imports are rather more common.