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Tamarack is a residential neighbourhood in southeast Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. It was established in 2006 through the adoption of the Tamarack Neighbourhood Area Structure Plan (NASP). [ 8 ] It is one of the neighbourhoods located within The Meadows area.
Larix laricina, commonly known as the tamarack, [3] hackmatack, [3] eastern larch, [3] black larch, [3] red larch, [3] or American larch, [3] is a species of larch native to Canada, from eastern Yukon and Inuvik, Northwest Territories east to Newfoundland, and also south into the upper northeastern United States from Minnesota to Cranesville Swamp, West Virginia; there is also an isolated ...
Tamarack (Larix laricina) [12] generally grows to around 20m and considered to be of medium size. An adult Tamarack has scaly, reddish-brown bark, compared to a young Tamarack which has bark that is smooth and grey. Its leaves tend to reach between 10-25mm in length and are a pale green colour, except during fall when they become bright yellow ...
Edmonton-Meadows is a provincial electoral district in Alberta, Canada. The district was one of 87 districts mandated to return a single member (MLA) to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta using the first past the post method of voting. It was contested for the first time in the 2019 Alberta election.
The Meadows Transit Centre is located on 17 street and Tamarack Way. This transit centre has many amenities including park & ride, a drop off area, public washrooms, a large shelter, vending machines and a pay phone. [29] The transit centre was opened in April 2010 at a construction cost of $12 million. [28]
Tamarack is sometimes present. Bog Labrador tea, bog rosemary, and leatherleaf are the dominant low shrubs. Important herbs include star sedge which is significant in the wetter areas, water sedge, tussock cottongrass, cloudberry, small cranberry, and threeleaf false Solomon's seal.
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(this is the "first" HBC inland post and is at the join of the Sturgeon-Weir River and the Saskatchewan River so is the gateway to Lake Athabasca, in the Mackenzie River system) 1774: English "Pedlars" from Montreal have trading post below the Forks of the Saskatchewan. 1775 Peter Pond builds trading post in the northwest corner of Lake Dauphin ...