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Geography

Main article: Geography of Canada


Further information: Environment of Canada

A topographic map of Canada, in polar


projection (for 90° W), showing elevations shaded from green to brown (higher)
By total area (including its waters), Canada is the second-largest country in the
world, after Russia.[128] By land area alone, Canada ranks fourth, due to having the
world's largest area of fresh water lakes.[129] Stretching from the Atlantic Ocean in the
east, along the Arctic Ocean to the north, and to the Pacific Ocean in the west, the
country encompasses 9,984,670 km2 (3,855,100 sq mi) of territory.[130] Canada also
has vast maritime terrain, with the world's longest coastline of 243,042 kilometres
(151,019 mi).[131][132] In addition to sharing the world's largest land border with the
United States—spanning 8,891 km (5,525 mi)[a]—Canada shares a land border
with Greenland (and hence the Kingdom of Denmark) to the northeast, on Hans
Island,[133] and a maritime boundary with France's overseas collectivity of Saint Pierre
and Miquelon to the southeast.[134] Canada is also home to the world's northernmost
settlement, Canadian Forces Station Alert, on the northern tip of Ellesmere Island—
latitude 82.5°N—which lies 817 kilometres (508 mi) from the North Pole.[135]
Canada can be divided into seven physiographic regions: the Canadian Shield,
the interior plains, the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Lowlands, the Appalachian region,
the Western Cordillera, Hudson Bay Lowlands, and the Arctic Archipelago.[136] Boreal
forests prevail throughout the country, ice is prominent in northern Arctic regions and
through the Rocky Mountains, and the relatively flat Canadian Prairies in the
southwest facilitate productive agriculture.[130] The Great Lakes feed the St. Lawrence
River (in the southeast) where the lowlands host much of Canada's economic output.
[130]
Canada has over 2,000,000 lakes—563 of which are larger than
100 km2 (39 sq mi)—containing much of the world's fresh water.[137][138] There are also
fresh-water glaciers in the Canadian Rockies, the Coast Mountains, and the Arctic
Cordillera.[139] Canada is geologically active, having many earthquakes and potentially
active volcanoes, notably Mount Meager massif, Mount Garibaldi, Mount Cayley, and
the Mount Edziza volcanic complex.[140]

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