The temperature and precipitation of British Columbia . TYPf:5 OP MEAN DAILY IfATIGEr OPTEMPfrKATUKb IM DKITISH COLUMBIA. (^cinde. of London /or comparison.) 30. zs ZO IS J^nL/ary \Feiro>, Sfi. Vit^fof/o PART I. The Temperature and Precipitation of British Columbia. The province of British Columbia is pr eminently a country of mountain and valley. The greatranges are the Rocky Mountains, which separate it from Alberta, the Selkirks, the Gold and the Caribooin the lower interior, the Cassiar Mountains in the far north, and the Coast Range which slopes towardsthe Pacific Ocean, and is, itself


The temperature and precipitation of British Columbia . TYPf:5 OP MEAN DAILY IfATIGEr OPTEMPfrKATUKb IM DKITISH COLUMBIA. (^cinde. of London /or comparison.) 30. zs ZO IS J^nL/ary \Feiro>, Sfi. Vit^fof/o PART I. The Temperature and Precipitation of British Columbia. The province of British Columbia is pr eminently a country of mountain and valley. The greatranges are the Rocky Mountains, which separate it from Alberta, the Selkirks, the Gold and the Caribooin the lower interior, the Cassiar Mountains in the far north, and the Coast Range which slopes towardsthe Pacific Ocean, and is, itself, parallelled by the partially submerged Island Range, which appears as\ancouver Island and Queen Charlotte Islands. In every depression there is to be found a stream oftortuous course, here and there broadening out into one of the lakes or arms which form such a distinguishingfeature of the country. Many of these valleys are broad and fertile for they form the channels of all thel)rincipal rivers of the Pacific Coas


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublisherottaw, bookyear1915