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Senator Cairine Wilson of Canada (3d-anim-era) 2016-10-05

"Download File" link contains half of this pack, download the second half here: :)
http://www.civfanatics.net/downloads/civ3/graphics/canada022.zip

If u r looking for Trudeau LH go to http://forums.civfanatics.com/showthread.php?p=1996234#post1996234

Civilization: Canada
Bonuses: Industrious and Scientific
Title and leader: Senator Cairine Wilson
Best/shunned government: Democracy and Communism.
Agression: 01 (very low).
Cultural group: American.
Noun: Canadians
Adjective: Canadian
Colors: Dark Red (Catharge) and Gray (India)
UU: Avro Arrow
Civilopedia entry: RACE_CANADA



Cities:
Ottawa
Toronto
Montreal
Vancouver
Calgary
Edmonton
Quebec city
Winnipeg
Hamilton
London
Kitchener
St Catherines-Niagara
Halifax
Victoria
Windsor
Oshawa
Saskatoon
Regina
St John's
Sudbury
Jonquiere
Sherbrooke
Barrie
Kelowna
Abbotsford
Kingston
Trois Rivieres
Saint John
Thunder Bay
Moncton
Fredericton
Charlottetown
Whitehorse
Guelph
Iqaluit
Medicine Hat
Alert
Prince George
Red Deer
Swift Current
Lethbridge
Summerside
Stratford
Nanaimo
Kincordine
Corner brook
Coquitlam
Gatineau
Kamloops
Gander
Whistler
Brandon

Military leaders:
Wolfe
Montcalm
Brock
Currie
Pearkes

Scientific ones:
Sir Frederick Banting
Sid Altman
Bert Brockhouse
Gerhard Herzberg
David Hubel

Civilopedia:
Special thanks to Stainz for had written the Civilopedia.

The first settlers on Canadian soil are believed to be peoples of Asiatic decent who migrated via the Aleutian land bridge to the continent between 12 and 30 thousand years ago. By 10,000 B.C., several tribes were spread across almost 4,000,000 square miles. An elaborate social system, with economic and military networks would arise by 500 B.C.
The first European visitors were the Norsemen at the turn of the first millennium, setting camp in modern-day Newfoundland and trading with local native tribes. Canada was not permanently settled until the arrival of the French in the early 16th century. Jacques Cartier's misunderstanding of the native word [kanata], meaning [village] or [settlement], gave rise to the name 'Canada' for the land as a whole. A series of treaties shifted control of the region from the English to the French in 1679, back to England in 1713, to France again in 1748, and finally under British control once more in 1763.
England's Constitutional Act of 1791 saw the province of Quebec divided into Upper and Lower Canada. After the American Revolution many United Empire Loyalists left the United States and emigrated to Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Quebec. The division into Upper and Lower Canada gave the Loyalists who settled west of the Ottawa River the chance to organize and develop along their own lines.
Lord Durham published a report in 1840 that called for the union of the two territories into one. In 1841, the Act of Union created the territory which was given Cartier's term 'Canada'. The treaty of 1842 settled the boundary between the United States and the British territories in the east; and by the treaty of 1846 the 49th parallel was agreed upon as the boundary from the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific. In the east, in 1840, Upper and Lower Canada were reunited as the province of Canada.
In 1867 the British North America Act brought together the provinces of Canada, divided into Ontario and Quebec, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, to form the Dominion of Canada. In 1869, having acquired the rights from the Hudson's Bay Company, the Dominion transformed the former Rupert's Land and the area beyond the Rocky Mountains into the North West Territories. In 1870, the old Red River settlement joined the Dominion as the province of Manitoba. In 1871 British Columbia joined the union. In 1873 Prince Edward Island joined Confederation.
World War I saw the coming of age of Canada as a nation and the disillusionment of a generation concerning Empire and causes. WWI was the most costly conflict that Canada was ever involved with and was mainly fought to support the political aims and ambitions of the British Empire, although Canada's role earned it a seat in the League of Nations. Later, the country's military role in global affairs would be developed through peacekeeping.
The role of the United Nations supplying forces to keep the peace was first suggested by Canadian Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson, when he was serving at the UN as Canada's representative. This idea has become one of the central fixtures in UN activities throughout the world. Pearson was awarded a Nobel Peace Prize for the inspiration and Canada has become the most important and respected player in peacekeeping duties throughout the world.
As an affluent, high-tech industrial society, Canada today closely resembles the US in its market-oriented economicsystem, pattern of production, and high living standards. Since World War II, the impressive growth of the manufacturing, mining, and service sectors has transformed the nation from a largely rural economy into one primarily industrial and urban. With its great natural resources, skilled labour force, and modern capital plant Canada enjoys solid economic standing as a member of the global "Group of 7", along with the United States, Japan, Germany, Italy,Great Britain and France.

Avro Arrow, the UU:
Replaces Jet Fighter and cost 20 shields less.
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