Calgary

From Citizendium
Revision as of 16:47, 5 June 2008 by imported>Michael Geldorp (refs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.

Calgary is the largest city of the Canadian province of Alberta. Calgary is located some 80 km (50 miles) east of the Rocky Mountains in the Foothill region of southern Alberta. According to the city census of 2007 the population was just over one million people, making it the third largest city in Canada. With an area of 726 km2 it is also among the largest in area. Calgary is situated at an elevation of 1.128 m (3.700 feet) above sea level on the banks of the Bow and Elbow rivers.

In recent years Calgary has experienced a rapid economic growth, fueled by the oil industry, and it has attracted a large influx of people from other parts of the country as well as overseas.

Despite its recent growth Cowtown still wears its western image with pride, culminating each summer in the Calgary Stampede festival. In 1988 Calgary hosted the 1988 Winter Olympics.

History

Calgary was established as a North-West Mounted Police post in 1875 under the name Fort Brisebois and was renamed Fort Calgary a year later. Connection to the Canadian Pacific Railway system in 1883 was the starting point for rapid growth and in 1886 Calgary was incorporated as a town and a decade later as a city.

The discovery of major deposits of oil in Alberta in 1947 was the start of an oil boom that, with interruptions, continues to this day. With the oil boom the population of Calgary grew from around half a million people in the 1970s to more than a million in 2007, according to the civic census. A decline in the price of oil in the 1980s meant a downturn for the city in economic terms, a trend that wasn't broken until the 1990s. The economic slump had the positive effect of forcing Calgary to diversify its economy, an endeavour helped by the hosting of the 1988 winter olympics.

Geography and climate

Calgary's land area of some 726 km2 makes it larger than Toronto. Calgary sits in the Foothills region east of the Rocky Mountains where the Bow and Elbow rivers converge. Apart from these two rivers Fish Creek also flows through the city, through Fish Creek Provincial Park where it joins the Bow river as well.

The offcial elevation of Calgary is 1.128 m above sea level[1] but varies significantly throughout the city. The Bow river flow through the city at an elevation of roughly 1.060 m while Nose Hill rises to an elevation of 1.230 m.

There are two important boundaries in the immediate vicinity of Calgary. Geologically, the bedrock changes from sandstone and shale to dark-grey marine shale as the prairies morph into the foothills of the Rockies. Also, the vegetation changes from fescue grasses to aspen parklands on a line that runs north-south through the city

Climate

Demography

Government

Economy

References