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Nearly eight million people live in Quebec, the vast majority along or near the St. Lawrence River. More
than three-quarters speak French as their first language. The resources of the Canadian Shield have helped
Quebec to develop important industries, including forestry, energy and mining. Quebec is Canada’s main
producer of pulp and paper. The province’s huge supply of fresh water has made it Canada’s largest
producer of hydro-electricity. Quebecers are leaders in cutting-edge industries such as pharmaceuticals
and aeronautics. Quebec films, music, literary works and food have international stature, especially in
La Francophonie,
an association of French-speaking nations. Montreal, Canada’s second largest city and
the second largest mainly French-speaking city in the world after Paris, is famous for its cultural diversity.
Quebec
Central canada
More than half the people in Canada live in cities and towns near the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence
River in southern Quebec and Ontario, known as Central Canada and the industrial and manufacturing
heartland. Southern Ontario and Quebec have cold winters and warm humid summers. Together, Ontario
and Quebec produce more than three-quarters of all Canadian manufactured goods.
Situated in the Appalachian Range, the province was founded by the United Empire Loyalists and has
the second largest river system on North America’s Atlantic coastline, the St. John River system. Forestry,
agriculture, fisheries, mining, food processing and tourism are the principal industries. Saint John is
the largest city, port and manufacturing centre; Moncton is the principal Francophone Acadian centre;
and Fredericton, the historic capital. New Brunswick is the only officially bilingual province, and about
one-third of the population lives and works in French. The province’s pioneer Loyalist and French cultural
heritage and history come alive in street festivals and traditional music.
New Brunswick
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Discover Canada