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The Act protects archaeological and palaeontological sites and objects in Saskatchewan.In particular, every archaeological or palaeontological object found in, or taken from, land in Saskatchewan is deemed to be the property of the Crown, and no person may disturb or dislocate such objects without a valid permit issued under the Act.
In Australia, public lands without a specific tenure (e.g. National Park or State Forest) are referred to as Crown land or State Land, which is described as being held in the "right of the Crown" of either an individual State or the Commonwealth of Australia (as Australia is a federation, there is no single "Crown" as legal entity).
The borders of Saskatchewan, which make it very nearly a trapezoid, were determined in 1905 when it became a Canadian province. Saskatchewan has a total area of 651,036 square kilometres (251,366 sq mi) of which 591,670 km 2 (228,450 sq mi) is land and 59,366 km 2 (22,921 sq mi) is water. [1]
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A topographic map of Saskatchewan, showing cities, towns, rural municipality borders, and natural features. Saskatchewan is the only province without a natural border. As its borders follow geographic lines of longitude and latitude, the province is roughly a quadrilateral, or a shape with four sides.
Situated in Crown land, the entirety of Kazan Lake is within an Important Bird Area of Canada. Near the north end of the lake is the three-hectare Gatehouse Island Wildlife Refuge ( 55°35′00″N 108°21′03″W / 55.5834°N 108.3507°W / 55.5834; -108.
In March 2013, Cumberland House Cree Nation had a registered population of 1,387 with 814 members living on-reserve or crown land and 573 members living off-reserve. [3] The First Nation has territory at five locations and is governed by a Chief and four councillors. [3] It is a member of the Prince Albert Grand Council. [3]
English: A series of SVG overviews of Saskatchewan rural municipalities, using open CEC Landsat-derived land cover data (2010) to generate a naturalistic colour scheme. More information here. Vector features are from Saskatchewan's ISC, the Government of Canada, and some manual digitization of urban footprints and abandoned railways.