The prairie Provinces of Canada ( Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba) produce most of the grains that Canada exports, this is why they are called "Canada's Breadbasket". They are noted for their flat terrain.
The Prairies are considered Canada's breadbasket, and are the Canadian section of a much larger North American region called the Interior Plains. The Prairies consist of three provinces: Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba.
North Dakota and South Dakota are both part of the Great Plains region. The Great Plains region extends into Canada, but the area is known as the Prairies region in Canada. The Canadian provinces of Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchewan make up the Prairies region.
Northwestern Territories, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and Alberta.
Canada has 10 provinces and 3 territories.
The Interior Plains is a vast region of North America that stretches from Canada's western arctic region all the way down to the border of Mexico. The Great Plains is a term used mainly in the US, referring to a large section of the Interior Plains, west of the Mississippi. The term includes Canadian territory, but is rarely used in Canada. In Canada it is more common to refer to the entire Interior Plains as one unit, or to use the term prairie. Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba are commonly called the Prairie Provinces.
The three Prairie provinces of Canada Alberta, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan.
We have 10 Provinces and 3 Territories
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Canada's major Wheat-Farming areas are in the west in the region of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta. These three provinces are called the Prairie Provinces.
It is located in the Coastal Plains of Texas. But inside the Coastal Plains it's located in the Piney Woods.