Geography of Ontario
Ontario is located in East/Central Canada. It is Canada's second largest province in total land area. Its physical features vary greatly from the Mixedwood Plains in the southeast to the boreal forests and tundra in the north. Ontario borders Manitoba to the west, Hudson Bay and James Bay to the north, Quebec to the east, and the Great Lakes and the United States to the south. The province is named for Great Lake Ontario, an adaptation of the Iroquois word Onitariio, meaning "beautiful lake", or Kanadario, variously translated as "beautiful water". There are approximately 250,000 lakes and over of rivers in the province.
Almost 94% of the population is concentrated within Southern Ontario, where the population was over 12,100,000 in the 2006 census. The Golden Horseshoe is the most populous part of Southern Ontario with a population of 8,102,163.
Population
Ontario is the most populous province in Canada. Southern Ontario is one of the densest regions in the country. The north is vast and sparse compared to the south. Ottawa is located in Ontario bordering Quebec. Located within the Golden Horseshoe, Toronto is the capital of Ontario, the financial centre of Canada, and the country's most populous city.Ontario is the second-most urbanized province after British Columbia, with 85.9% of the population living in urban areas.
Statistical Area Classification | 2011 Census | 2011 Census | 2006 Census | 2006 Census | Change |
Statistical Area Classification | Population | % of total | Population | % of total | Change |
Within CMAs | 10,270,006 | 79.9% | 9,591,529 | 78.9% | 7.1% |
Within CAs | 1,133,127 | 8.8% | 1,128,614 | 9.3% | 0.4% |
Total CMA/CA | 11,403,133 | 88.7% | 10,720,143 | 88.2% | 6.4% |
Strongly influenced | 644,299 | 5.0% | 631,410 | 5.2% | 2.0% |
Moderately influenced | 555,931 | 4.3% | 554,062 | 4.5% | 0.3% |
Weakly influenced | 225,197 | 1.8% | 232,107 | 1.9% | 3.0% |
Not influenced | 23,261 | 0.2% | 22,560 | 0.2% | 3.1% |
Outside CMA/CA | 1,448,688 | 11.3% | 1,440,139 | 11.8% | 0.6% |
Total | 12,851,821 | 100.0% | 12,160,282 | 100.0% | 5.7% |
City | 2016 | 2011 | 2006 | 2001 | 1996 | 1991 |
Toronto | 5,928,040 | 5,583,064 | 5,113,149 | 4,682,897 | 4,263,757 | 3,898,933 |
Ottawa-Gatineau | 1,323,783 | 1,236,324 | 1,130,761 | 1,063,664 | 1,010,498 | 941,814 |
Hamilton | 747,545 | 721,053 | 692,911 | 662,401 | 624,360 | 599,760 |
Kitchener-Cambridge-Waterloo | 523,894 | 477,160 | 451,235 | 414,284 | 382,940 | 356,421 |
London | 494,069 | 474,786 | 457,720 | 432,451 | 398,616 | 381,522 |
St. Catharines-Niagara | 406,074 | 392,184 | 390,317 | 377,009 | 372,406 | 364,552 |
Oshawa | 379,848 | 356,177 | 330,594 | 296,298 | 268,773 | 240,104 |
Windsor | 329,144 | 319,246 | 323,342 | 307,877 | 278,685 | 262,075 |
Barrie | 197,059 | 187,013 | 177,061 | 148,480 | 118,695 | 97,150 |
Greater Sudbury | 164,689 | 160,770 | 158,258 | 155,601 | 160,488 | 157,613 |
Kingston | 161,175 | 159,561 | 152,358 | 146,838 | 143,416 | 136,401 |
Guelph | 151,984 | 141,097 | 127,009 | 117,344 | 105,420 | 97,667 |
Brantford | 134,203 | 135,501 | 124,607 | 86,417 | 100,238 | 97,106 |
Peterborough | 121,721 | 118,975 | 116,570 | |102,423 | 100,193 | 98,060 | - |
Thunder Bay | 121,621 | 121,596 | 122,907 | 121,986 | 125,562 | 124,925 |
Belleville | 103,472 | 101,668 | 91,518 | 87,395 | 87,871 | - |
City | 2011 | 2006 | 2001 |
Toronto | 2,615,060 | 2,503,281 | 2,481,494 |
Ottawa | 883,391 | 812,129 | 808,391 |
Mississauga | 713,443 | 668,549 | 612,925 |
Brampton | 523,911 | 433,806 | 325,428 |
Hamilton | 519,949 | 504,559 | 499,268 |
London | 366,151 | 352,395 | 336,539 |
Markham | 301,709 | 261,573 | 208,615 |
Vaughan | 288,301 | 238,866 | 182,022 |
Kitchener | 219,153 | 204,668 | 190,399 |
Windsor | 210,891 | 216,473 | 208,402 |
Physical geography
Southwestern Ontario and a narrow strip along the coast of the Saint Lawrence River are in the Mixedwood Plains, a fertile and productive ecozone that is typically flat with rolling hills, and was once covered by forest before its use for agriculture, and later urbanization, resulted in deforestation of vast swaths of the area. To its north is the Boreal Shield, the largest provincial ecozone, extending from south-central Ontario to cover most of northern Ontario, where it abuts the Hudson Plains. The Northwestern Ontario portion of this area is part of the Midwestern Canadian Shield forests ecoregion of boreal forest that spreads west through Manitoba and Saskatchewan. The plains that cover the heartland of Ontario are a transitional ecozone characterized by boreal features in the south and tundra landscapes in the north. This extends the entire range of the northern coast of Ontario with Hudson Bay and James Bay, at which numerous wetlands act as staging and nesting grounds for migratory birds. The waters of the two bays are in the Arctic Archipelago Marine ecozone, forming its southern, subarctic extent.Geology
Ontario, owing to its size, has diverse geology that varies in structure, age, and lithology. About 61% of the province is covered by the Canadian Shield, mostly with Precambrian rock. These rocks contain large mineral deposits that are vital to the economy of northern Ontario. The shield can further be divided into three sections. The northwestern parts of the Shield, located roughly north and west of Sudbury, are known as the Superior Province; this is the largest of the three sections, covering about 70% of the Shield portion in Ontario. This region is more than 2.5 billion years old and is composed of felsic intrusive rocks. In the northernmost parts of the Superior Province, the geology of the region is dominated by granite and gneiss rocks. The central region of the Shield, known as the Grenville Province and located south of Sudbury, is 1.0 to 1.6 billion years old and is dominated by sedimentary rocks showing evidence of being subjected to metamorphism. It makes up about 20% of the Canadian Shield in Ontario. These rocks were metamorphosed between 990 million years ago and 1.08 billion years ago. The third region, known as the Southern province which is a narrow region from Sault Ste. Marie to Kirkland Lake, is made of rocks dating 1.8 to 2.4 billion years ago. The Hudson Bay lowlands, located north of the Canadian Shield, are mainly made of sedimentary rocks from the Silurian Period, although some parts date from the Ordovician and Devonian periods. This area covers 25% of the province. Most of the bedrock in the Hudson Bay lowlands is composed of limestone and carbonate-dominated sedimentary rock.Boundaries
The longest border is with the Canadian province of Manitoba to the west for approximately along a line defined as the Northwesternmost point of the Lake of the Woods to latitude 52°50' N then a diagonal line to the point where the shore of Hudson Bay meets the 89th meridian west of Greenwich. The boundary of Ontario on Hudson and James Bay does not extend beyond the shoreline, as all islands within the bays belong to Nunavut. The border with Quebec is defined by a line due north of the head of Lake Timiskaming to James Bay, and southeast from there, the Ottawa River for about. The boundary follows a small portion of land south of the Ottawa River until it meets the Saint Lawrence River near Cornwall.Ontario also shares borders with several U.S. states. From west to east, the Minnesota border consists of the Lake of the Woods, Rainy River, Rainy Lake and its tributaries. The border then includes the only 1 km of land of its entire 2,700 km U.S. border, the Height of Land Portage, which divides the Arctic Ocean and Nelson River watershed from that of the St Lawrence River and the Atlantic Ocean. The U.S./Minnesota border then follows tributaries of the Pigeon River to its mouth at Lake Superior. Ontario borders Michigan across Lake Superior, the Saint Mary's River, Lake Huron, the St. Clair River, Lake St. Clair, the Detroit River, and Lake Erie. The province also borders Ohio and Pennsylvania across Lake Erie. The 309 km boundary with New York includes Lake Ontario, the St. Lawrence and Niagara rivers.
Elevation
An extensive amount of land along the south and west shores of James Bay and Hudson Bay is low and swampy. The land in the North-east and North-west, generally north of Lake Superior, is the Canadian Shield where most of Ontario's highest points are found.Further south, many hilltops of the Algonquin, Haliburton and Madawaska Highlands, which are also part of the shield that covers much of the north, surpass altitudes of 500m.
The highest areas in the southern portion of the province are found in Dufferin, Grey and the western side of Simcoe counties, where the elevation ranges from 430m to 540m. Much of the higher land sits atop the Niagara Escarpment in a generally flat area known as the Dundalk Highlands. Just to the south, in Wellington County and Waterloo Region, general elevations are from 300m to 400m. A striking topographical feature of the Niagara Escarpment is its limestone cliff face, in general between 80m and 100 above the surrounding land, extending from the Niagara peninsula northwest to the Bruce Peninsula.
The flattest areas of the province can be found in the lowlands of the far north, and in southwestern and eastern Ontario.
Water
Ontario is known for the large number of lakes and rivers it contains. About one-fifth of the world's fresh water can be found in Ontario. Ontario is also known for being the only province in Canada that touches the Great Lakes. Ontario touches four of the Great Lakes: Huron, Lake Ontario, Erie and Superior.Ontario's vast rivers and lakes originally opened the province for exploration and have made possible hydroelectric power, mills and various forms of industrialization. Most of Ontario is fed by rainfall, and in most parts snow is relied on. Precipitation is most common in the southern and central parts of Ontario where variations among the seasons are not especially great; but winter and spring are less aqueous than in northern and northwestern Ontario.