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List of rivers of Alberta; List of rivers of British Columbia; List of rivers of Manitoba; List of rivers of New Brunswick; List of rivers of Newfoundland and Labrador; List of rivers of the Northwest Territories; List of rivers of Nova Scotia; List of rivers of Nunavut; List of rivers of Ontario; List of rivers of Prince Edward Island; List of ...
Karuara, People of the River: Miguel Araoz Cartagena, Stephanie Boyd [3] Kidnapping Inc. Bruno Mourral: Jasmuel Andri, Rolaphton Mercure, Patrick Joseph, Ashley Laraque, Gessica Généus: Canada, France, Haiti coproduction [57] Kryptic: Kourtney Roy [58] Lakeview: Tara Thorne [59] Last We Left Off: Connor Illsley, Jon Riera, Grayson Moore ...
Cape d'Or was called L'mu'juiktuk by the Mi'kmaq, the native people of Nova Scotia.The cape was a centre of tool production and trade for the Mi'kmaq because of veins of hard dense rock such as chert which could be shaped to form sharp edges for tools and weapons.
This project in progress is a partnership of the Pic River First Nation and Innergex II Income Fund (on the White River, near Marathon). Island Falls Hydroelectric Project - Installed capacity of 20 mW Q4 2009.
By 1755, based on Charles Morris's remarks concerning the removal of the Acadians, there were about 1400 people left there. (about 800 on the left bank, about 100 on the right bank & Kennetcook River, and about 500 on the St. Croix River and today's Windsor area. [2] Pisiguit had two parishes: La Sainte Famille and L'Assomption.
The Beatton River is a tributary of the Peace River, flowing generally east, then south through north-eastern British Columbia, Canada. The river rises at Pink Mountain, about 10 kilometres (6 mi) west of the Alaska Highway hamlet of the same name, and flows 240 kilometres (150 mi) generally east, then south, draining into the Peace River just ...
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The Canard river was known to the Mi'kmaq people as Apocheechumochwakade meaning "home of the black duck". The Mi'kmaq also used the mouth of the river for shad fishing. [1] Acadians settled along the river in the late 1600s and called it Rivière-aux-Canards after the French word for duck.