
|
|
The sun shines throughout our cold winters
and warm summers, and over the mountains in the west, and the plains
in north, centre and south.
The Rocky Mountains are perhaps Alberta's most recognizable geographic
feature. Their rugged and spectacular scenery attract visitors from
all over the world. Much of Alberta's oil and gas are found beneath
the foothills that lie along the base of the Rockies. The rest of
the province is housed on a great plain, or prairie, which Alberta
shares with Saskatchewan on the east, and with the state of Montana
to the south. The plains are not totally flat. Their surface has
been gouged and twisted by the action of massive glaciers that once
covered the province. What is now Alberta lay buried under some
2,000 metres of ice only 8 or 10,000 years ago. The southern plain,
which was once covered in tall grass, is today a checkerboard of
farms. The badlands are a unique area in southeastern Alberta. They
are very dry and have little vegetation. Streams and rain have eroded
the soft rocks, leaving bluffs, gullies, and multicoloured layers
of stone. The Red Deer River has cut a deep, wide valley through
the badlands, exposing the fossils of plants and animals that lived
in Alberta millions of years ago, including the famous dinosaurs.
|
|
Click
here for current Alberta weather |
|