{"id":4013,"date":"1981-11-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1981-11-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-62-no-6-nov-dec-1981-the-canadian-shield\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T02:54:56","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T02:54:56","slug":"vol-62-no-6-nov-dec-1981-the-canadian-shield","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-62-no-6-nov-dec-1981-the-canadian-shield\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 62, No. 6 &#8211; Nov.\/Dec. 1981 &#8211; The Canadian Shield"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">It takes up half the country on                     the map, and a special place in the consciousness of Canadians.                     Rugged and unconquerable, the Shield is a challenge &#8211; a good                     challenge for a people to have in their midst&#8230;<\/p>\n<p>                  <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/4\/2022\/08\/novdec1981_01.gif\" alt=\"image\" width=\"201\" height=\"138\" hspace=\"5\" vspace=\"5\" align=\"right\"><\/p>\n<p>It is inconceivably old, many hundreds of millions of years                     older than the mountains, the plains, the seabed, or the first                     traces of life on the planet. Born of the cataclysmic convulsions                     of the earth after it had solidified from a molten mass, the                     Canadian Shield dates back at least 21\/2 billion years. It                     has since been wrung by contractions of the earth&#8217;s crust,                     jolted by subterranean upheavals, crushed and clawed by Ice                     Ages, and eroded by the weather of countless centuries. But                     though scarred, bent and battered, the Shield has stood intact                     throughout the ages. Geologically, it is the solid foundation                     of our country. The same might be said of it historically                     and culturally as well.<\/p>\n<p>The Shield is the largest surface of Precambrian rock in                     the world, &#8220;Precambrian&#8221; meaning before the era 600 million                     years ago to which life on earth can be traced by the presence                     of fossils in rock formations. Precambrian rock underlies                     all the continents, but in most places this armoured plating                     of the globe is covered with layers of newer rock and soil,                     or with mountains that have burst up from the inner earth.                     Compared to the Canadian Shield, the world&#8217;s great mountain                     ranges are the merest infants. The Rockies, for instance,                     emerged some 150 million years ago; the Himalayas, 60 million                     years ago. The <em>youngest <\/em>parts of the Shield are 700                     million years old.<\/p>\n<p>Its gnarled highlands were once mountains themselves, and                     there are still some towering peaks of Precambrian rock in                     Labrador, New Quebec, and Baffin Island. But for the most                     part, four Ice Ages, each lasting about 100,000 years, have                     ground the ancient mountains down to their imperishable roots.                     In Canada, this elemental bedrock takes up almost half of                     the national land mass &#8211; some 4.7 million square kilometres                     or 1.8 million square miles of it, an area bigger than the                     entire Indian subcontinent. It also covers sections of New                     York, Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin.<\/p>\n<p>Its immensity in Canada alone is hard to picture. It stretches                     vertically for half a hemisphere from the United States border                     to beneath the polar ice cap. From east to west it sweeps                     in a broad arc from the Atlantic Ocean on the coast of Labrador                     to the Arctic Ocean in the westerly reaches of the Northwest                     Territories. It covers all of Labrador, 95 per cent of Quebec,                     70 per cent of Ontario, 60 per cent of Manitoba, 50 per cent                     of the Northwest Territories, 35 per cent of Saskatchewan,                     and a thin slice of Northern Alberta.<\/p>\n<p>Nearly all of this is an untamed wilderness inhabited only                     by wildlife &#8211; dense boreal forest, sparsely-wooded taiga,                     barren tundra. Only 10 per cent of Canadians live on the Shield.                     The rest are huddled along the southern border and the seacoasts,                     or scattered over the prairies. To most Canadians, the Shield                     is a good place to stay away from, except on a brief summer                     vacation. It is a strange and rather frightening place, haunted                     by eerily dancing northern lights, the weird cries of loons,                     the chilling nocturnal calls of timber wolves. It is a lonely                     land, and as far as the majority of Canadians are concerned,                     it can stay that way.<\/p>\n<p>There are, of course, more practical reasons for avoiding                     the Shield, reasons that go all the way back to the latest                     Ice Age. Two great ice sheets many thousands of metres thick                     pressed down on it for scores of thousands of years. When                     the weather warmed up, the ice withdrew northward in a gradual                     movement lasting 6,000 years and ending in continental Canada                     7,000 years ago. The sliding motion of this tremendous weight                     of ice scraped the Shield clean of its younger rock and arable                     topsoil, leaving all but small parts of it fit only to grow                     trees and other wild plants.<\/p>\n<p>Throughout history people have settled where they could                     grow crops and raise animals, so the Shield held little attraction                     to anyone but nomadic Indians. The first European known to                     have set eyes on it, a Norseman named Biarni Heriulfson whose                     ship was blown onto the east coast of Labrador in 986 A.D.,                     pronounced it a &#8220;worthless country&#8221; and sailed away. Moving                     along the south coast of the same Shield region in 1534, Jacques                     Cartier was equally unimpressed with its potential for human                     habitation. He wrote: &#8220;I did not find a cartload of earth                     though I landed in many places&#8230; In short I deem&#8230; that                     it is the land God gave to Cain.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>They changed the Shield from a barrier                   to a bridge<\/h3>\n<p>Later immigrants saw what Cartier meant. In the wake of                     the retreating ice sheets there sprang up a jumbled mass of                     rugged, closely-crowded hills, interspersed with treacherous                     muskeg bogs, tortuously winding rivers and creeks, and an                     endless maze of lakes. To add to its forbidding topography,                     the Shield is swept by polar air, bringing excruciatingly                     cold and stormy winter weather and at best a four-month frost-free                     growing season. In the warmer months, its muskegs and creeks                     provide the ideal breeding grounds for swarms of bloodthirsty                     black flies and mosquitoes capable of driving men and animals                     mad.<\/p>\n<p>In early times, only the boldest or most dedicated white                     men would venture out on the Shield: <em>coureurs de bois<\/em>,                     missionaries, explorers, voyageurs and fur traders. But this                     &#8220;worthless land&#8221; held treasures for those with the toughness                     and courage to seek them, the first being furs trapped by                     the Indians that could be sold for hefty prices overseas.                     To carry furs and trade goods back and forth, the traders                     and voyageurs made use of the system of rivers and lakes (including                     the Great Lakes) carved out on the land by the ice. By the                     time the trade reached its zenith in the early 19th century,                     the merchant-explorers of the Montreal-based North West Company                     had opened up canoe routes on the Shield and beyond clear                     to the Pacific and Arctic Oceans. By turning nature to their                     advantage, they turned the Shield from a barrier into a bridge.<\/p>\n<p>The loggers who exploited the next bounty from the Shield                     also made the most of nature. Squared timbers from the boreal                     bush were floated down the northern tributaries of the St.                     Lawrence River to Quebec City for trans-shipment to markets                     abroad. In later times sawmills and pulp and paper mills would                     take advantage of the Shield&#8217;s fortuitous combination of wood                     and water to develop Canada&#8217;s largest industry.<\/p>\n<p>The mineral riches of the Precambrian rock began to be developed                     in earnest in the 1880s. From then on, dogged prospectors                     fanned out all across the Shield to make successive strikes                     of base metals, gold, silver, iron, uranium, and other ores.                     Out of the bush rose a chain of mining towns from Labrador                     to the far Northwest Territories, bringing a human dimension                     to the Precambrian bridge between Eastern and Western Canada.                     The Shield today accounts for 40 per cent of Canada&#8217;s mineral                     production, even though &#8211; because there are no fossils in                     it &#8211; it cannot produce coal, oil or gas.<\/p>\n<p>The Shield does, however, contain a vast store of energy                     in its endless waters. Hydro-electric power from its roaring                     rivers and deep lakes was brought south largely through the                     ingenuity of Canadian engineers who overcame problems of long-distance                     transmission and ice. Power from the Shield, coupled with                     its minerals, spurred the growth of manufacturing industries                     in Central Canada. The Canadian financial community also grew                     around the Shield by supplying the capital needed for natural                     resource projects.<\/p>\n<p>Canada&#8217;s political history is tied to its economic history,                     and the massive bulk of the Shield has always loomed over                     Canadian economics. When the fur traders first traced the                     water routes to the West, Canada&#8217;s political destiny began                     to take shape. &#8220;The North West Company was the forerunner                     of the present confederation,&#8221; the great economic historian                     Harold Adams Innis wrote in 1930. &#8220;Canada emerged as a political                     entity with boundaries largely determined by the fur trade.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Its challenge was crucial to the growth                   of nationhood<\/h3>\n<p>Much against the popular wisdom then and now, Innis declared                     that the Canadian nation &#8220;emerged not in spite of geography                     but because of it.&#8221; He maintained that Canada is not, as is                     generally assumed, an artificial state built in defiance of                     the natural lines of communications in North America, which                     are supposed to run north to south into the United States.                     On the contrary, Innis said, Canada developed a distinctive                     political heritage because the size, shape, climate and watersheds                     of the Shield funnelled the main lines of communications into                     the northern hinterland.<\/p>\n<p>As historian W. L. Morton has pointed out, the heartlands                     of the United States and Canada could hardly be more different.                     To the south are rolling hills and wide and gentle pastures,                     one of the world&#8217;s most fertile regions. By contrast, the                     heartland of Canada is &#8220;one of the world&#8217;s most ancient wildernesses                     and one of nature&#8217;s grimmest challenges to man and all his                     works.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The will to take up that challenge has been crucial to Canadian                     nationhood. Probably the most far-reaching decision made in                     the early years of confederation was to build the Canadian                     Pacific Railway across the top of Lake Superior, rather than                     taking the much easier option of connecting it to American                     lines that ran south of the Great Lakes from east to west.                     The Superior route meant that the fledgling nation would not                     be beholden to the U.S. for its transcontinental commerce;                     it could not be pressured into giving in to American political                     demands under the threat of cutting off its east-west lifeline.                     By meeting the challenge of the Shield head-on, Sir John A.                     Macdonald&#8217;s government went a long way towards ensuring Canada&#8217;s                     future independence from the United States.<\/p>\n<p>No one knew at the time just what an incredible challenge                     they had accepted. Running down to the edge of the North Shore                     of Lake Superior was a wall of granite 1,600 kilometres or                     1,000 miles long which had to be systematically blasted away                     with dynamite made on the spot. In the narrow gaps between                     the stubborn hills were broad, charging rivers to be bridged,                     and spongy muskegs in which it was all but impossible to gain                     a foothold. One patch of this ooze gulped down seven roadbeds                     and three locomotives before it was finally crossed.<\/p>\n<p>The hardships endured by the railway workers as they smashed                     down the granite battlements were appalling. They laboured                     in some of the world&#8217;s most bitter weather in winter, and,                     in summer, the incessant assaults of black flies. The Shield                     exacted a heavy toll of life among the railway navvies, as                     it had done among the fur traders and voyageurs in earlier                     times.<\/p>\n<h3>Canadians see themselves in the mirror                   of the North<\/h3>\n<p>The vicissitudes of the Shield have never changed much,                     modern technology notwithstanding. It remains &#8220;a place where                     people get lost, get bushed, get driven mad by insects in                     summer, can freeze to death in winter,&#8221; as Barbara Moon put                     it in her book, <em>The Canadian Shield<\/em>. Yet there are                     much worse places in the world. The Shield harbours no volcanoes,                     and it is too rigid for serious earthquakes. There are no                     poisonous snakes or man-eating animals on it, and it is free                     of the environmentally-caused diseases that plague tropical                     lands.<\/p>\n<p>Summer vacationers know its accessible areas as a peaceful                     and beautiful part of the world, with just enough danger surrounding                     it to make it exciting. The Canadian city dweller with a feeling                     for the north woods may find himself having winter dreams                     of speckle trout, blueberries, birches, whisky jacks, and                     moose quietly feeding in tranquil ponds.<\/p>\n<p>Among a people who suffer (or think they do) from a lack                     of a distinctive identity, life on the Shield represents the                     things that are quintessentially Canadian &#8211; things like checked                     shirts, high-cut boots, tuques, parkas, packsacks, snowshoes,                     and bush aircraft. The human images associated with it are                     the stuff of Canadian mythology: the Indian trapper, the voyageur,                     the lumberjack, the prospector, the bush pilot.<\/p>\n<p>According to W. L. Morton, the basic Canadian identity has                     been shaped by living in a northern frontier economy in which                     people constantly come and go from the wilds to the settled                     areas. &#8220;And this alternate penetration of the wilderness and                     return to civilization is the basic rhythm of Canadian life,                     and forms the basic elements of the Canadian character whether                     French or English, the violence necessary to contend with                     the wilderness, the restraint necessary to preserve civilization                     from wilderness violence, and the puritanism which is the                     offspring of the wedding of violence and restraint.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>&#8220;The beauty of strength broken by strength                                       and still strong&#8221;<\/h3>\n<p>The awesome presence of the Shield has left an imprint on                     the cultures of both language groups. Possibly the most famous                     of all Canadian novels, <em>Marie Chapdelaine<\/em>, is about                     a family trying to wrest a living from the cold and lonely                     country around Lac Saint-Jean. The Shield is in the foreground                     of novelist Hugh MacLennan&#8217;s vision of his country: &#8220;This                     anomalous land, this sprawling waste of timber and rock and                     water&#8230; this empty tract of primordial silences and winds                     and erosions and shifting colours.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>If MacLennan&#8217;s description sounds somewhat sinister, he                     is in good company. Poet E. J. Pratt depicted the Shield as                     a sleeping reptile, &#8220;00 old for death, too old for life&#8230;                     as if jealous of all living forms.&#8221; Fellow poet James Reaney                     has written of &#8220;the feeling that Northern Ontario landscape                     gives you on a train journey, the feeling of a hostile, brooding                     presence.&#8221; But the Shield has its own stern grandeur: &#8220;The                     beauty of strength broken by strength and still strong,&#8221; as                     yet another poet, A. J. M. Smith, wrote.<\/p>\n<h3>Hammering out a national character                   on a hard anvil<\/h3>\n<p>&#8220;I know of no more impressive scenery in Canada for the                     landscape painter,&#8221; A. Y. Jackson said of the North Shore                     of Lake Superior. &#8220;There is a sublime order to it &#8211; the long                     curves of the beaches, the sweeping ranges of hills, the headlands                     that push into the lake.&#8221; Jackson was a member of the Group                     of Seven, who revolutionized Canadian art with their muscular                     rendering of their native landscape in the 1920s. &#8220;With bold                     impressionism [they] brought the Precambrian north into the                     Canadian consciousness and by their paintings made of its                     barren solitude an imagery of beauty and strength,&#8221; Morton                     wrote. &#8220;In this pioneering spirit the painters achieved the                     first great conquest of the arts in Canada, in which they                     made Canadian experience an idiomatic part of universal experience.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The Shield is certainly part of the universal experience                     of Canadians, including those who have never set foot on it.                     &#8220;The land has moulded the people, not the people the land,&#8221;                     D. M. LeBourdais wrote in <em>Canada&#8217;s Century<\/em>. With                     its toughness and intractability, the Shield has served as                     the anvil on which the Canadian personality has been forged.                     If the Canadian society is a stable one, that is partly because                     Canadians spend much of their energies contending with the                     elements rather than contending with each other. If Canadians                     are a sensible people, that is partly because of the hard                     lessons their land and climate hold for the foolish, the careless,                     and the improvident. If Canadians are durable and resourceful,                     that is partly because the Shield has demanded these qualities                     from them. It is a good thing for a nation to have a challenge.                     The Shield presents a challenge of the most positive kind,                     and Canadians are fortunate that nature has placed it in their                     midst.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[68],"class_list":["post-4013","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-68"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 62, No. 6 - Nov.\/Dec. 1981 - The Canadian Shield - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-62-no-6-nov-dec-1981-the-canadian-shield\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 62, No. 6 - Nov.\/Dec. 1981 - The Canadian Shield - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"It takes up half the country on the map, and a special place in the consciousness of Canadians. 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