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LANDMARKS OF THE WORLD - 100 Famous Landmarks for Kids
Transcription
Canada and the United States share the longest,
straightest, possibly boringest border in
the world. But, look closer, and there's plenty
of bizarreness to be found.
While these sister nations get along fairly
well, they both want to make it really clear
whose side of the continent is whose. And
they've done this by carving a 20-foot wide
space along the border. All five and a half
thousand miles of it.
With the exception of the rare New England
town that predates national borders or the
odd airport that needed extending, this space
is the no-touching-zone between the countries
and they're super serious about keeping it
clear. It matters not if the no-touching-zone
runs through hundreds of miles of virtually
uninhabited Alaskan / Yukon wilderness. Those
border trees, will not stand.
Which might make you think this must be the
longest, straightest deforested place in the
world, but it isn't. Deforested: yes, but
straight? Not at all.
Sure it looks straight and on a map, and the
treaties establishing the line *say* it's
straight... but in the real world the official
border is 900 lines that zig-zags from the
horizontal by as much as several hundred feet.
How did this happen? Well, imagine you're
back in North America in the 1800s -- The
49th parallel (one of those horizontal lines
you see on a globe) has just been set as the
national boundary and it's your job to make
it real. You're handed a compass and a ball
of string and told to carefully mark off the
next 2/3rds of a continent. Don't mind that
uncharted wilderness in the way: just keep
the line straight.
Yeah.
Good luck.
With that.
The men who surveyed the land did the best
they could and built over 900 monuments. They're
in about as straight as you could expect a
pre-GPS civilization to make, but it's not
the kind of spherical / planar intersection
that would bring a mathematician joy.
Nonetheless these monuments define the border
and the no-touching-zone plays connect-the-dots
with them.
Oh, and while there are about 900 markers
along this section of the border, there are
about 8,000 in total that define the shape
of the nations.
Despite this massive project Canada and the
United States still have disputed territory.
There is a series of islands in the Atlantic
that the United States claims are part of
Maine and Canada claims are part of New Brunswick.
Canada, assuming the islands are hers built
a lighthouse on one of them, and the United
States, assuming the islands are hers pretends
the lighthouse doesn't exist.
It's not a huge problem as the argument is
mostly over tourists who want to see puffins
and fishermen who want to catch lobsters,
but let's hope the disagreement gets resolved
before someone finds oil under that lighthouse.
Even the non-disputed territory has a few
notably weird spots: such as this tick of
the border upward into Canada. Zoom in and
it gets stranger as the border isn't over
solid land but runs through a lake to cut
off a bit of Canada before diving back down
to the US.
This spot is home to about 100 Americans and
is a perfect example of how border irregularities
are born:
Back in 1783 when the victorious Americans
were negotiating with the British who controlled
what would one day be Canada, they needed
a map, and this map was the best available
at the time. While the East Coast looks pretty
good, the wester it goes the sparser it gets.
Under negotiation was the edge of what would
one day be Minnesota and Manitoba. But unfortunately,
that area was hidden underneath an inset on
the map, so the Americans and British were
bordering blind. Seriously.
They guessed that the border should start
from the northwestern part of this lake and
go in a horizontal line until it crossed the
Mississippi... somewhere.
But somewhere, turned out to be nowhere as
the mighty Mississippi stops short of that
line, which left the border vague until 35
years later when a second round of negotiations
established the aforementioned 49th parallel.
But there was still a problem as the lake
mentioned earlier was both higher, and less
circular than first though, putting its northwesterly
point here so the existing border had to jump
up to meet it and then drop straight down
to the 49th, awkwardly cutting off a bit of
Canada, before heading west across the remainder
of the continent.
Turns out you just can't draw a straight(-ish)
line for hundreds of miles without causing
a few more problems.
One of which was luckily spotted in advance:
Vancouver Island, which the 49th would have
sliced through, but both sides agreed that
would be dumb so the border swoops around
the island.
However, next door to Vancouver Island is
Point Roberts which went unnoticed as so today
the border blithey cuts across. It's a nice
little town, home to over 1,000 Americans,
but has only a primary school so its older
kids have to cross international borders four
times a day to go to school in their own state.
In a pleasing symetry, the East cost has the
exact opposite situation with a Canadian Island
whose only land route is a bridge to the United
States.
And these two aren't the only places where
each country contains a bit of the other:
there are several more, easily spotted in
sattelite photos by the no-touching zone.
Regardless of if the land in question is just
an uninhabited strip, in the middle of a lake,
in the middle of nowhere, the border between
these sister nations must remain clearly marked.
The statue of Queen Victoria at the Manitoba Legislative Building and the statue of Queen Elizabeth II at Government House were torn down by a mob on July 1, 2021, in a protest about residential schools. The statue of Elizabeth II was repaired and reinstalled on June 2, 2023, though the statue of Queen Victoria was damaged beyond repair.[3]