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Cold Lake was first recorded on a 1790 map, by the name of Coldwater Lake. [6] Originally three communities, Cold Lake was formed by merging the Town of Grand Centre, the Town of Cold Lake, and Medley (CFB Cold Lake) on October 1, 1996. Grand Centre was renamed Cold Lake South, and the original Cold Lake is known as Cold Lake North.
Cold Lake viewed from Meadow Lake Provincial Park, Saskatchewan Major rivers of western Canada. Cold Lake [3] is a large lake in Northern Alberta and Saskatchewan, Canada. Most of the lake is within Alberta. It is one of the deepest lakes in Alberta with a maximum depth of 99.1 metres (325 ft).
Get the Cold Lake, AB local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days. Skip to main content. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us ...
Peyto Lake from lookout Lake Agnes Amethyst Lakes & ramparts Barrier Lake Bow Lake Cold Lake Fish Lakes (1 of 2) Glacier Lake Glenmore Reservoir Upper and Lower Kananaskis Lakes Lesser Slave Lake Lake Louise Maligne Lake Lake Minnewanka Moose Lake Ice fishing on Pigeon Lake Vermilion Lakes Waterton Lake. This is a list of lakes of Alberta, Canada.
Cold Lake: NW Saskatchewan / NE Alberta Alberta: CASCL S METEOR 1700S Cold Lake New radar commissioned on October 27, 2021, replacing the C-band 98E at Jimmy Lake (CWHN). Dryden: Western Ontario Ontario
The Lower Athabasca Region is a land-use framework region in northern Alberta, Canada.One of seven in the province, each is intended to develop and implement a regional plan, complementing the planning efforts of member municipalities in order to coordinate future growth.
By September 9, 2015, then-Environment Minister Shannon Phillips warned that Alberta was "on track to have the worst air quality in Canada". The 2015 Canadian Ambient Air Quality Standards report showed that the Red Deer area had "exceeded the acceptable amount of particulate matter and ozone exposure" from 2011 through 2013.
In 1980, a plant in Cold Lake was one of just two oil sands plants under construction in Alberta. [4] Although not developed as quickly and extensively as originally envisioned, an Imperial Oil plant in Cold Lake became the largest in situ oil sands project constructed in Alberta during the 1980s. By 1991, its daily oil production was 90,000 ...