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  2. Alto (high-speed rail) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alto_(high-speed_rail)

    Alto (stylized as ALTO), also known as the TorontoQuebec City High-Speed Rail Network, [1] is an announced high-speed rail network in Canada that will connect Quebec City to Toronto. It was announced by the federal government and Justin Trudeau on February 19, 2025. A design phase for the project was announced with an estimated cost of CAD$3 ...

  3. Time in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_in_Canada

    The National Research Council (NRC) maintains Canada's official time through the use of atomic clocks. [3] The official time is specified in legislation passed by the individual provinces. In Quebec it is based on coordinated universal time. [4] The other provinces use mean solar time.

  4. Daylight saving time in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daylight_saving_time_in_Canada

    In the regions of Canada that use daylight saving time, it begins on the second Sunday of March at 2 a.m. and ends on the first Sunday in November at 2 a.m. As a result, daylight saving time lasts in Canada for a total of 34 weeks (238 days) every year, about 65 percent of the entire year.

  5. Quebec City–Windsor Corridor (Via Rail) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quebec_City–Windsor...

    The Quebec City–Windsor Corridor (French: Ligne de Québec à Windsor), also known as simply the Corridor, is a Via Rail passenger train service in the Canadian provinces of Quebec and Ontario. The Corridor service area has the heaviest passenger train frequency in Canada and contributes 67% of Via's revenue.

  6. Quebec City–Windsor Corridor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quebec_City–Windsor_Corridor

    The 401 is now the main transportation route of the corridor up to the Quebec border, where it becomes Autoroute 20 and continues east through the Quebec part of the corridor to Quebec City. Highway 403 , which connects to the 401 at both of its ends, largely follows the route of Highway 2 between Woodstock and Toronto including through ...

  7. CHU (radio station) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CHU_(radio_station)

    CHU can be practically unusable in most of Western Canada, Nunavut, and the Northwest Territories, for significant stretches of time. U.S. stations WWV and WWVH are the fallback in Western Canada. In the high Arctic, however, both the U.S. shortwave time stations and CHU become essentially unusable or unreliable.

  8. Central Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Canada

    Ontario, Canada's fourth largest subdivision (after Nunavut, Quebec, and the Northwest Territories), had, at the 2021 Canadian census, a land area of 892,411.76 km 2 (344,562.11 sq mi) [1] (10.15 per cent of Canada and the fifth largest after Nunavut, Quebec, the Northwest Territories, and British Columbia) and as of 2017, there was 177,390 km 2 (68,490 sq mi) [2] (21.55 per cent of Canada and ...

  9. Date and time notation in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Date_and_time_notation_in...

    The Government of Canada recommends that all-numeric dates in both English and French use the YYYY-MM-DD format codified in ISO 8601. [11] The Standards Council of Canada also specifies this as the country's date format. [12] [13] The YYYY-MM-DD format is the only officially recommended method of writing a numeric date in Canada. [2]