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Museum Entrance

Food. Currency. Language. Location. Canada . Museum Entrance. Sports. Curator’s Offices. Curator’s Office. Garret Ericson.

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Museum Entrance

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  1. Food Currency Language Location Canada Museum Entrance Sports Curator’s Offices

  2. Curator’s Office Garret Ericson My name is Garret Ericson. I am 21 years old and I attend Emporia State University where I play football. I am studying Elementary Education and hope to become a great teacher someday. I enjoy sports, hunting, fishing, and being outside. Contact me at [Your linked email address] Return to Entry

  3. Food Room 1 Return to Entry

  4. Poutine In the basic recipe for poutine, French fries are topped with fresh cheese curds, and covered with brown gravy or sauce. The French fries are of medium thickness, and fried so that the inside stays soft, while the outside is crunchy. The gravy used is generally a light chicken, veal or turkey gravy, mildly spiced with a hint of pepper, or a sauce brune which is a combination of beef and chicken stock, originating in Quebec. Heavy beef or pork-based brown gravies are rarely used. Fresh cheese curds (not more than a day old) are used. To maintain the texture of the fries, the cheese curd and gravy is added immediately prior to serving the dish. The hot gravy is usually poured over the cold cheese curds, so that the cheese is warmed without completely melting. Linked citation goes here Return to Exhibit

  5. Location Room 2 Return to Entry

  6. Language Room 3 Return to Entry

  7. Currency Room 4 Return to Entry

  8. Canada’s Currency The Canadian dollar, denoted by CAD or C, is the official currency of Canada. One hundred cents add up to one Canadian dollar. Canadians use coins and bills of denominations similar to those of the United States currency. The historical sizes of the coins less than 50 are identical to those of U.S. coins due to both nations using the Spanish dollar as the basis of their money. Modest quantities of U.S. coinage circulate in Canada at par, and some Canadian coins (generally less than one-dollar) circulate in some places in the United States as well, though recent changes to the appearance and composition of Canadian coinage have made it more difficult for these coins to be used in the United States. In Canada, it is common to find U.S. 1, 5, 10, and 25 coins in circulation Linked citation goes here Return to Exhibit

  9. Canada’s Location Canada is located in the northern portion of the continent of North America, extending, in general, from the 49th parallel northward to the islands of the Arctic Ocean. Its eastern and western boundaries are the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans respectively. Its land area totals 3,851,809 square miles (9,976,185 square kilometers). The easternmost portion of the country is a riverine and maritime environment, consisting of the provinces of Newfoundland, Labrador, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and New Brunswick. The central portion of the country, in its southern areas, is primarily boreal forest (the provinces of Ontario and Quebec). Linked citation goes here Return to Exhibit

  10. Canada’s Language Canada is bilingual, with English and French as the official languages. English takes precedence in statutory proceedings outside of Quebec, with English versions of all statutes serving as the final arbiter in disputes over interpretation. As of 1996, the proportion of Canadians reporting English as their mother tongue was just under 60 percent while those reporting French as their mother tongue was slightly less than 24 percent. The percentage of native English speakers had risen over the previous decade, while that of French speakers had declined. At the same time, about 17 percent of all Canadians could speak both official languages, though this is a regionalized phenomenon. Linked citation goes here Return to Exhibit

  11. Canadian Sports Sports in Canada consists of a variety of games. There are many contests that Canada value, the most common are Ice hockey, Lacrosse, Canadian football, basketball, soccer, curling and baseball, with Ice hockey and Lacrosse being the official winter and summer sports, respectively. Ice hockey, referred to as simply "hockey", is Canada's most prevalent winter sport, its most popular spectator sport, and its most successful sport in international competition. It is Canada's official national winter sport. Lacrosse, a sport with Native American origins, is Canada's oldest and official summer sport. Canadian football is Canada's second most popular spectator sport, and the Canadian Football League's annual championship, the Grey Cup, is the country's largest annual sports event. While other sports have a larger spectator base, association football, known in Canada as soccer in both English and French, has the most registered players of any team sport in Canada. Linked citation goes here Return to Exhibit

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