Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Île Perrot

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Country
  
Canada

RCM
  
Vaudreuil-Soulanges

Postal code span
  
J7W J7V

Province
  
Québec

Region
  
Montérégie

Time zone
  
Eastern (EST) (UTC-5)

Area code(s)
  
(514) and (438)

Island group
  
Hochelaga Archipelago

Île Perrot

Similar
  
Île Bizard, Sainte‑Jeanne‑de‑Chantal, Île Jésus, Notre Dame Island, Lake Saint‑Louis

Île Perrot ([il pɛʁo]) is an island west of the island of Montreal in the Canadian province of Quebec. Part of the Hochelaga Archipelago, the island lies between Lake Saint-Louis and Lac des Deux-Montagnes. The island was granted by the Intendant Talon of New France to its founder François-Marie Perrot then Governor of Montreal on the 28th of October 1672.

Contents

Map of Perrot Island, Qu%C3%A9bec, Canada

Nearly 38,000 people live in one of Île Perrot’s four municipalities:

  • Notre-Dame-de-l'Île-Perrot
  • Pincourt
  • Terrasse Vaudreuil
  • L'Île-Perrot
  • Île Perrot holds the only working windmill in Quebec, dating from the time Île-Perrot was a seigneury in the French colony of New France. The windmill and associated miller's house were designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1969, and a Historic Monument under provincial heritage legislation in 1977. In the windmill's honour, what now constitutes the commercial artery of the island was named boulevard Don-Quichotte.

    Geology and soils

    The island is underlain by Cambrian-age quartzite. Angular blocks of this hard rock are visible on the surface over much of the island. The soil is a stony sandy loam podzol which has developed on acidic, nutrient-poor quartzite till. Over parts of the island, this till is covered with clay which is nutrient-rich and much less stony, but poorly drained and classified as gleysol.

    Vegetation

    Part of the island remains in forest, although housing developments have made significant inroads over recent years. Deciduous trees such as American beech, sugar maple, red maple, northern red oak, white ash, bitternut hickory and American basswood are dominant. The vegetation is more luxuriant than one would expect from the nature of the soils, and includes a great diversity of wildflowers.

    References

    Île Perrot Wikipedia