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Lists of time zones; Newfoundland's Daylight Saving Act of 1917; 1972 British Columbia time plebiscite; Effects of time zones on North American broadcasting; National Research Council Time Signal; Date and time notation in Canada
In the regions of Canada that use daylight saving time, it begins on the second Sunday of March at 2 a.m. and ends on the first Sunday in November at 2 a.m. As a result, daylight saving time lasts in Canada for a total of 34 weeks (238 days) every year, about 65 percent of the entire year.
Canada (Pacific Time Zone) [10] British Columbia. Except Northern Rockies Regional Municipality, Peace River Regional District, and the south-eastern communities of Cranbrook, Golden and Invermere [11] France [12] Clipperton Island; Mexico. Baja California [13] United Kingdom. Pitcairn Islands; United States (Pacific Time Zone) [14] California ...
Converted small area of fishing camps west of Suomi ON from CST/CDT to EST/EDT; this improves alignment with boundaries shown on the official Ontario road map. Also applied a few cosmetic changes. 23:33, 25 October 2020: 1,114 × 942 (381 KB) MapGrid: Time zone boundary adjustment in the vicinity of Schefferville.
Pages in category "Time in Canada" ... 1972 British Columbia time plebiscite; C. Central Time Zone; D. Date and time notation in Canada; E. Eastern Time Zone;
The Government of Canada recommends that all-numeric dates in both English and French use the YYYY-MM-DD format codified in ISO 8601. [11] The Standards Council of Canada also specifies this as the country's date format. [12] [13] The YYYY-MM-DD format is the only officially recommended method of writing a numeric date in Canada. [2]
The other five were located in British Columbia with two, and Manitoba, Ontario and Yukon each with one. Between 2006 and 2011, twenty-four CAs experienced population decline. The fifteen CAs that experienced the greatest population decline were located in British Columbia (two), Manitoba (one), New Brunswick (one), Nova Scotia (three), Ontario ...
The province's name was chosen by Queen Victoria, when the Colony of British Columbia (1858–1866), i.e., "the Mainland", became a British colony in 1858. [24] It refers to the Columbia District, the British name for the territory drained by the Columbia River, in southeastern British Columbia, which was the namesake of the pre-Oregon Treaty Columbia Department of the Hudson's Bay Company.