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NASA Satellite Image of Vancouver Island, BC, Canada
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Captain Cook's ship sailing off the coast of Vancouver Island
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History of Vancouver Island
Vancouver Island is separated from mainland British Columbia by the Strait of Georgia and the Queen
Charlotte Strait, and from Washington by the Juan De Fuca Strait.

Vancouver Island is a large island in British Columbia, Canada, off Canada's Pacific coast. It is 460 km (285
miles) long and up to 80 km (50 miles) wide. The largest island on the western side of North America at
32,134 km² (12,407 sq mi), it is the world's 43rd largest island, Canada's 11th largest island and Canada's
second most populous island after the Island of Montreal, which has 1.3 million more people. The island is
named in honour of George Vancouver, the British Royal Navy officer who explored the Pacific coast of North
America between 1791 and 1794.

Population

The 2001 census population was 656,312. British Columbia statistics in 2004 estimated the population at
734,860. Slightly fewer than half of these (331,491) live in Greater Victoria. Other major cities on Vancouver
Island include Nanaimo, Port Alberni, Parksville, Comox, Courtenay, and Campbell River.

Geography

Vancouver Island is located in the southwestern corner of the province of British Columbia. It is separated
from mainland Canada by the Strait of Georgia, Johnstone Strait, and Queen Charlotte Strait, and from the
U.S. by the Strait of Juan de Fuca. To the west of the island is the Pacific Ocean.

The Vancouver Island Ranges run most of the length of the island, dividing it into a wet and rugged west
coast and a drier, more rolling east coast. The highest point in these ranges and on the island is the Golden
Hinde, at 2195 m or 7200'. Located near the centre of Vancouver Island in the 2,500 km² (620,000 acre)
Strathcona Provincial Park, it is part of a group of peaks that include the only glaciers on the island, the
largest of which is the Comox Glacier. The Golden Hinde is also part of the Karmutsen Formation, which is a
sequence of tholeiitic pillow basalts and breccias. The west coast shoreline is rugged, and in many places
mountainous, characterised by its many fjords, bays, and inlets. The interior of the island has many lakes
(Kennedy Lake, northeast of Ucluelet, is the largest) and rivers. Vancouver Island formed when volcanic and
sedimentary rock scraped off the ancient Kula Plate and plastered against the continental margin when it
was subducting under North America 55 million years ago.
Location: Pacific Ocean
Coordinates: 49°00'N, 124°00'W
Area: 32,134 km²
Highest Point: Golden Hinde 2,198 m
(7,211 ft)
Province: British Columbia
Largest City: Victoria (78,659)
Population: 734,860 (as of 2004)
Density: 22/km²
Climate

The climate is the mildest in Canada, with temperatures on the coast even in January being usually above 0
°C (32 °F). In summer, maximum temperatures average 21-24 °C (70-75 °F). However, the rain shadow
effect of the island's mountains, as well as the mountains of Washington's Olympic Peninsula, creates wide
variation in precipitation. The west coast is considerably wetter than the east coast. Average annual
precipitation ranges from 6,650 millimetres (260 in) at Henderson Lake on the west coast (making it the
wettest place in North America) to only 635 millimetres (25 in) at the driest recording station in the provincial
capital of Victoria on the southeast coast's Saanich Peninsula. Precipitation is heaviest in the autumn and
winter. Snow is rare at low altitudes but is common on the island's mountaintops in winter.
A notable feature of Vancouver Island is the extension of Mediterranean-type summer dryness to latitudes
as high as 50°N. Only in the extreme north of the island near Port Hardy is the rainfall of the driest summer
month as much as one fifth that of the wettest months from November to March. West coasts of other
continents at similar latitudes have a practically even distribution of rainfall through the year.
Vancouver Island lies in the temperate rainforest biome. On the
southern and eastern portions of the island, this is characterized by
Douglas-fir, western red cedar, arbutus, Garry oak, salal,
Oregon-grape, and manzanita. This is the heavily populated region
of Vancouver Island, and a major area for recreation. The northern,
western, and most of the central portions of the island are home to
the coniferous "big trees" associated with British Columbia's coast
— hemlock, western red cedar, amabilis fir, yellow cedar,
Douglas-fir, grand fir, Sitka spruce, and western white pine. It is
also characterised by broadleaf maple, red alder, sword fern, and
red huckleberry.


Fauna

The fauna of Vancouver Island is similar to that found on the
mainland coast, with some notable exceptions and additions. For
example, grizzly bears, mountain goats, porcupines, moose,
skunks, coyotes, and numerous species of small mammals, while
plentiful on the mainland, are absent from Vancouver Island. The
island does support most of Canada's Roosevelt elk, however, and
one species — the Vancouver Island Marmot — is unique to the
island. The island's rivers, lakes, and coastal regions are renowned for their fisheries of trout, salmon, and
steelhead. It has the most concentrated population of cougars in North America.Vancouver Island was the
location of the observation of the episodic tremor and slip seismic phenomenon.


History

The island is believed to have been inhabited by humans since the withdrawal of Ice Age glaciation some
eight thousand years ago. By the late 1700s, the primary First Nations there were the Nuu-chah-nulth
(Nootka) on the west coast, various nations of the Salish language group on the south and east coasts, and
the Kwakiutl on the center and north of the island. The National Maps show a nation of Vancouver consisting
of the island and the mainland coastal regions from Queen Charlotte Sound to Cape Flattery.

European exploration
Europeans began to encroach on the island in 1774, when rumours of Russian fur traders caused the
Spanish to send a ship, the Santiago north under the command of Juan José Pérez Hernández. In 1775 a
second Spanish expedition, under Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra, was sent. Neither actually
landed.
Transport

Sea Marine transport is very important to Vancouver Island
for access to the mainland of British Columbia and
Washington. There are no bridges connecting the island to
the mainland, although the idea of building one has been
brought up many times. The only vehicle access to
Vancouver Island is via ferries operated by BC Ferries,
Washington State Ferry and Black Ball Transport Inc.


For more info on how to get to Vancouver Island, please
visit our
Directions to Tofino & Ucluelet page for
complete details about air, ferry and bus services!
James Cook
Vancouver Island came to the attention of the wider world after
the third voyage of Captain James Cook, who landed at Nootka
Sound of the Island's western shore on March 31, 1778 and
claimed it for the United Kingdom. The island's rich fur trading
potential led the British East India Company to set up a
single-building trading post in the native village of Yuquot on
Nootka Island, a small island in the Sound.
Esteban José Martínez
The island was further explored by Spain in 1789 by Esteban José Martínez, who built Fort San Miguel on
one of Vancouver Island's small offshore islets in the sound near Yuquot. This was to be the only Spanish
settlement in what would later be Canada. The Spanish began seizing British ships and the two nations
came close to war, but the issues were resolved peacefully with the Nootka Convention in 1792, in which
both countries recognized the other's rights to the area.

George Vancouver
Supervising the British activities was Captain George Vancouver from King's Lynn in England, who had
sailed as a midshipman with Cook, and from whom the island gained its name. While we know this Island
today as Vancouver Island--after George Vancouver--the English explorer had not intentionally meant to
name such a large body of land solely after himself. In his September 1792 dispatch log report for the British
Admiralty, Captain Vancouver reveals that his decision here was rather meant to honour a request by the
Spanish seafarer Juan Francisco Quadra that Vancouver "would name some port or island after us both in
commemoration of our meeting and friendly intercourse that on that occasion had taken place (Vancouver
had previously feted Quadra on his ship);....and conceiving no place more eligible than the place of our
meeting, I have therefore named this land...The Island of Quadra and Vancouver."

If Vancouver had been vain as some writers had charged, he could have chosen to name the entire Island
exclusively after himself instead of sharing its name with Quadra and placing the latter's name before his.
The newly discovered 'Quadra-Vancouver' island "was the most prominent name on maps of the coast, and
appeared on most [contemporary] British, French and Spanish maps of the period. But as Spanish interests
in the region dwindled, so did Quadra's name. The Hudson's Bay Company played a major part in the
transition; by 1824 'Vancouver's Island' had become the usual designation in its correspondence" for the
island. A quarter of a century later, Vancouver Island had become such a well known geographical feature,
that the founding of the Colony of Vancouver Island in 1849 gave this name full official status.

British settlement
The British colonial flag of Vancouver Island. It is used today as a local representative flag.Shortly thereafter,
in 1846, the Oregon Treaty was signed by the British and the US to settle the question of the US Oregon
Territory borders. It awarded all of Vancouver Island to what would be Canada, despite a portion of the island
lying south of the 49th parallel. In 1849, the Colony of Vancouver Island was established. Following the brief
governorship of Richard Blanshard, James Douglas, Chief Factor of the Hudson's Bay post, assumed the
role in 1851 — a position he would maintain for the next thirteen years.

Victoria
The first British settlement on the island was a Hudson's Bay Company post, Fort Camosack, founded in
1843, and later renamed Fort Victoria. Fort Victoria became an important base during the Fraser Canyon
Gold Rush in 1858, and the burgeoning town was incorporated as Victoria in 1862. Victoria became the
capital of the colony of Vancouver Island, then retained that status when the island was amalgamated with
the mainland in 1866. A British naval base, including a large shipyard and a naval hospital, was established
at Esquimalt, British Columbia in 1865, and eventually taken over by the Canadian military.The economic
situation of the colony declined following the Cariboo Gold Rush of 1861-62, and pressure grew for
amalgamation of the colony with the mainland colony of British Columbia (which had been established in
1858). The colony's third and last governor, Sir Arthur Kennedy oversaw the union of the two colonies in
1866.


Economy

Forestry Industry
Vancouver Island's economy outside Victoria is largely dominated by the forestry industry, with tourism and
fishing also playing a large role. Many of the logging operations are for paper pulp, in "2nd growth" tree farms
that are harvested approximately every 30 years. In recent years the government of British Columbia has
engaged in an advertising program to draw more tourists to beach resorts such as Tofino and Ucluelet.
Logging operations involving old-growth forests such as those found on Clayoquot Sound are controversial,
and have gained international attention through the efforts of activists and environmental organizations.

Vineyards
There are rapidly expanding vineyards and the island produces wines that outscored some French wines at
the St. Catharines Wine Tasting of 2005 in blind evaluations.

Internet
There is a fast building IT field on Vancouver Island. High Speed Internet is delivered to the island by various
companies. Wireless Internet connections can be found all over the island, many free for public use. Many
coffee shops provide free wireless Internet access and charge an average of five cents a minute for using
their computers.

Higher Education
Higher education plays an economic role in the Greater Victoria area being as both students and staff of the
many post secondary schools number well over 50,000. The University of Victoria is the largest school on
the island enrolling 19,475 students in 2006/2007 and employing 4,124 staff. Royal Roads University is
much smaller with 2,268 students and 680 staff. Camosun College is also located on a few campuses
across the Greater Victoria region and has 17,000 students and almost 1,000 staff (though close to half of
the students are under the distance education umbrella). Malaspina University-College is Vancouver Island's
other main university with its main campus in Nanaimo, as well as other campuses in Duncan, Parksville
and Powell River. Malaspina represents a unique combination of a degree-granting university and a practical
college. University Canada West, located in central Victoria, rounds out the list of degree granting
institutions. There are also numerous community colleges and international education centres. Lester B.
Pearson College of the Pacific is an international school dedicated to the promotion of world peace,
cooperation, and coexistence. It is named after former Canadian Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson.