This large city is located where the prairies and Parkland areas meet.
Calgary
Hinted at by the region's name, this is a major industry in the Boreal Forest.
Forestry / lumber
This downhill activity is popular in the Rockies.
Skiing
Agriculture / farming
Just under the thin soil in the Canadian Shield, you will find this material.
Rock
This resource, necessary for fuel, is found in the Parkland region.
Oil / Fossil Fuels
Northern
The Rocky Mountains contain several of these large ice-sheets.
Glaciers
This region of the prairies contains many dinosaur fossils.
The Alberta Badlands
This food-producing industry is important in the Canadian Shield region.
Fishing
The Foothills region contains many of these raised land forms.
Hills
Most of the trees in the Boreal Forest keep their leafs all year round, a type of tree known as this.
Coniferous / Evergreen
These bodies of water flow downwards from the Rocky Mountains.
Rivers
These two other provinces also have prairie land.
Manitoba and Saskatchewan
The Canadian Shield contains many of these small bodies of water.
The Parkland region is a border region, a mix between these two other regions.
Prairie and Boreal Forest
These area, nearby Fort McMurray, produces a lot of fossil fuels and petroleum products.
The Oil Sands
This town in the Rockies is famous for its hotel, gold course, and mountain trails.
Banff
This crop, necessary for making bread, is very common on the prairies.
Wheat
This is the largest town in the Alberta Canadian Shield.
Fort Chippaweyan
This smaller city, named after an animal, is located half way between Edmonton and Calgary.
Red Deer
This large city, the furthest north in the world, is located at the edge of the Boreal Forest.
Edmonton
This Lake, west of Banff, attracts many tourists to its "Chateau".
Lake Louise
This is the largest city on the Alberta Prairies
Medicine Hat
These two provinces contain most of the Canadian Shield.
Ontario and Quebec