Distribution of Freshwater - Drainage Patterns

A drainage basin is an area that drains all precipitation received as a runoff or base flow (groundwater sources) into a particular river or set of rivers. Canada’s major drainage regions are the Atlantic Ocean, Hudson Bay, Arctic Ocean, Pacific Ocean, and Gulf of Mexico. A lake can be defined as any inland body of water, usually fresh water, larger than a pool or pond. Canada is covered by as many as two million lakes. The largest set of lakes, the Great Lakes, straddle the Canada-US boundary and contain 18% of the world’s fresh water in lakes. Most Canadian rivers have developed since the last ice age. Almost 75% of the Canadian landmass contains water that drains northward into either the Arctic Ocean or into Hudson and James bays.

Données et ressources

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Dernière modification janvier 16, 2026, 20:49 (TU)
Créé le janvier 16, 2026, 20:49 (TU)
contains_pii non
crisis_categories Fortes pluies
criticality_level Faible
data_formats JP2; ZIP; other
fair_openness Level 2 - Machine-readable
geographic_scope Canada
sensitivity_level Faible
source_inventaire Inventaire_W
source_url https://open.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/e579a700-8893-11e0-9b1c-6cf049291510
subject form_descriptors, nature_and_environment, science_and_technology
update_frequency as_needed
year_most_recent 2022-03-14 19:49:12.434000
year_start 2016-09-26 15:23:04.328000