Vancouver's Early History
The continental drift of the Pacific Ocean plate towards
the North American continent created the wrinkles on the west coast
called mountains. In fact, over three quarters of BC lies over 1,000
metres above sea level. There are actually three ranges of mountains
in the West: from the coast moving east: the Coast Mountains, the Columbia
Mountains (which includes the Purcell, Selkirk, and Monashee Range,
famed for their deep powder heli-skiing), and finally the Rocky Mountains
along the border with Alberta.
BC's highest mountain, 4,663 metre (15,388 feet) Fairweather Mountain,
is in the northwest corner of the province, just south of the Alaskan
border. The Rockies' highest mountain, Mount Robson (3,954 metres, on
BC's eastern edge, close to Jasper, Alberta, is the source of the Fraser
River. The Fraser is Canada's third longest river, which ends up in
the Pacific Ocean at Vancouver. The Rockies largest glacier, the
Columbia Icefield (over a mile thick in places, straddling the Albert/BC
border) is the source of the Columbia River, which winds its way through
British Columbia, and reaches the Pacific at Portland Oregon.
The Islands off the coast of Vancouver are also mountains, just with
their bases under the ocean. Vancouver Island is the largest North American
island in the Pacific Ocean. There are 6,500 islands off the BC coast,
with a total coastline stretching 27,000 kilometres
Click below for more Vancouver History:
Vancouver General History
Vancouver's Early History
Vancouver's First Settlers
Vancouver History 18th to 19th Century
Vancouver History Turn of the 20th Century
Vancouver History WWI to 1920's
Vancouver History in the 1920's
Vancouver History WWII
Vancouver After WWII to 1990's
Vancouver at the End of 20th Century
Vancouver's Current Real Estate Boom