Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Fort Providence

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Country
  
Canada

Census division
  
Elevation
  
160 m

Population
  
734 (2011)

Area code
  
867

Constituency
  
Hamlet
  
1 January 1987

Area
  
255 km²

Local time
  
Tuesday 10:06 PM

Fort Providence httpsc1staticflickrcom3275645020843165580

Weather
  
-9°C, Wind E at 13 km/h, 74% Humidity

Fort providence nwt mosquito black fly and other fun insects to pink floyd


Fort Providence (Slavey language: Zhahti Koe or Zhahti Kue "mission house") is a hamlet in the South Slave Region of the Northwest Territories, Canada. Located west of Great Slave Lake, it has all-weather road connections by way of the Yellowknife Highway (Great Slave Highway) branch off the Mackenzie Highway, and the Deh Cho Bridge opened November 30, 2012 near Fort Providence over the Mackenzie. The bridge replaces the ice bridge and ferry, enabling year-round crossing of the river.

Contents

Map of Fort Providence, NT, Canada

Fort Providence is well known for hosting the annual Mackenzie Days celebrations in August each year.

Bison sanctuary fort providence northwest territories


Demographics

The recorded population was 734 in the 2011 Census, an increase of 1.0% from 2006. In the 2006 Census there were 727 people. Of these the majority, 670, were Aboriginal, made up of 580 First Nations, Dene people, and 65 Métis people. In 2012 the Government of the Northwest Territories reported that the population was 788 with an average yearly growth rate of -0.3% from 2001.

First Nations

The Dene of the community are represented by the Deh Gah Gotie Dene Band and the Métis by Fort Providence Métis Nation. Both groups belong to the Dehcho First Nations.

Climate

Fort Providence has a continental subarctic climate typical of the Northwest Territories' populated areas. It is marked by a long and bitterly cold winter season and short, warm summers, that in many ways are warmer than expected for an area so far north. Transition seasons are extremely short, with temperatures rising and falling quickly in respective seasons.

References

Fort Providence Wikipedia