| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Most populous of Canada's 3 prairie provinces | Alberta | 100%
|
| Mountain range that runs along the Atlantic coast of North America | {Appalachian} Mountains | 66%
|
| The East Coast of Canada, including Newfoundland | {Atlantic} provinces | 66%
|
| Region colonized by French settlers in the 1600s | Acadia | 52%
|
| Largest natural lake in British Columbia. Means 'big lake' in Tlingit | {Atlin} Lake | 48%
|
| The Northern-most permanently inhabited place in the world | Alert | 41%
|
| City in the Fraser Valley of British Columbia | Abbotsford | 32%
|
| Oldest provincial park in Canada | Algonquin | 27%
|
| Island at the mouth of the St. Lawrence River | {Anticosti} Island | 27%
|
| North America's most visited glacier | Athabasca | 27%
|
| Term for expressways in Quebec | Autoroute | 25%
|
| Battle site in Quebec where British and French fought in the Seven Years' War | Plains of {Abraham} | 25%
|
| Fertile valley in Nova Scotia next to the Bay of Fundy | {Annapolis} Valley | 14%
|
| Tributary of the Red River that runs through Saskatchewan and Manitoba | {Assiniboine} River | 14%
|
| Historic African Canadian settlement in Nova Scotia | Africville | 9%
|
| Peninsula on Newfoundland where St. John's is located | {Avalon} Peninsula | 9%
|
| Northern island where Lost Hammer spring is located | {Axel Heiburg} Island | 9%
|
| Community in Inuvik, Northwest Territories. Means 'barren ground grizzly place' | Aklavik | 5%
|
| Northern First Nation which declared a state of emergency over suicides in 2016 | Attawapiskat | 5%
|
| River in Northern British Columbia flowing into Alaska | {Alsek} River | 2%
|