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Land is the main resource. Today, Saskatchewan supplies 28 per cent of Canada`s grain production. Saskatchewan is also a major producer of cattle and hogs. Oil and natural gas are the leading mineral resources. Saskatchewan`s 14,000-oil wells produce about 12 per cent of Canada`s total oil output. In addition, with an estimated two-thirds of the world`s reserves, Saskatchewan is the leading exporter of potash. The foundation of many present-day settlements and towns were the trading posts of the first European trappers. For 200 years the Hudson`s Bay Company owned and administered this area. Realising its agricultural potential and the opportunities for colonisation, the Government of Canada purchased the land in 1870 and encouraged immigration. The new railway began bringing settlers in to farm these rich lands.

Saskatchewan entered Confederation in 1905. Regina became the provincial capital.

Today, Saskatchewan`s population stands at approximately 1.1 million. It is Canada`s only province where neither the majority of the population is of British or French background. It has a variety of ethnic inheritances – German, Ukrainian, Scandinavian, Dutch, Polish, Russian. Regina and Saskatoon are the two main cities and together have about one-third of the total population.

Prairie Provinces Alberta

Alberta is one of the picturesque provinces, with many rivers, lakes and forests and broad expanses of prairies in the north. The southern half contains fertile wheat land and rolling park-line terrain, as well as the mountainous region that forms part of the Rockies and their foothills.

Alberta has a continental climate where long cold winters are balanced by mild to hot summers and an unusually high number of sunny days, no matter what the season.

The province has little water-power, owing to the gentle slope of the land, but energy is available from important deposits of oil, gas and coal. It is here where the old dream of gold came doubly true on the great plains, where fields of golden wheat surround gushing wells of black gold, making the province Canada`s leading producer of crude petroleum. It also ranks first in the production of natural gas, coal and their chemical by-products.

Next in importance is agriculture. About 30 per cent of the province consist of the farmland that supports large crops of wheat and huge herds of livestock. Forests cover more than half of the province`s surface.

The region occupied by present-day Alberta in the 18th century was owned by the Hudson`s Bay Company, in 1870 was acquired by the Dominion of Canada, and administered from the newly formed province of Manitoba. Beginning with the arrival of the railway in 1883, the population started to grow quickly. In 1905, Alberta, named in honour of the fourth daughter of Queen Victoria, become a province of Canada with Edmonton as its capital city. Nowadays, more than half of Alberta`s 2.7 million people lives in the two main cities – Edmonton and Calgary. With two-thirds of the population under the age of 40, the province has one of the youngest people in the world.

Alberta`s national parks are world famous: Elk Island Park east of Edmonton, Jasper scenic resort with ice fields, hot springs and wildlife sanctuary; and the world`s largest national park of Wood Buffalo.