Outline of New Brunswick
Appearance
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to New Brunswick:
New Brunswick is a Canadian maritime province. The province, with an area of 72,908 square kilometres (28,100 sq mi), has a humid continental climate. It is the only constitutionally bilingual (English–French) province. Its urban areas have modern, service-based economies dominated by the health care, educational, retail, finance, and insurance sectors, while the rural primary economy is best known for forestry, mining, mixed farming, and fishing. New Brunswick's capital is Fredericton, and its largest city is Moncton.
General reference
[edit]- Common English name(s): New Brunswick
- Official English name(s): New Brunswick
- Adjectival/Demonym(s): New Brunswick/New Brunswicker(s)
- French: Nouveau-Brunswick, Parisian French: [nuvo bʁœ̃swik], Quebec French: [nuvo bʁɔnzwɪk]
Geography
[edit]- New Brunswick is: a province of Canada.
- Population of New Brunswick: 747,101(2016 census)[1]
- Area of New Brunswick: 72,908 square kilometres (28,100 sq mi)
Location
[edit]- New Brunswick is situated within the following regions:
- Time zones (see also Time in Canada):
- Atlantic Standard Time (UTC-04), Atlantic Daylight Time (UTC-03)
- Extreme points of New Brunswick
Environment
[edit]- Climate of New Brunswick
- Ecology of New Brunswick
- Geology of New Brunswick
- List of protected areas of New Brunswick
- Wildlife of New Brunswick
Natural geographic features
[edit]- Islands of New Brunswick
- Lakes of New Brunswick
- List of dams and reservoirs in New Brunswick
- Rivers of New Brunswick
- Mountains of New Brunswick
Heritage sites
[edit]Regions
[edit]Native reserves
[edit]Municipalities
[edit]Demography
[edit]Government and politics
[edit]- Capital of New Brunswick: Fredericton
- List of post-confederation New Brunswick general elections (last 5)
- Political parties in New Brunswick
Branches of the government
[edit]Executive branch of the government
[edit]- Head of state: Queen of Canada, Queen Elizabeth II
- Head of state's representative (Viceroy): Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick, Brenda Murphy
- Previous lieutenant governors
- Head of government: Premier of New Brunswick, Blaine Higgs
- Previous premiers
- Cabinet: Executive Council of New Brunswick
- Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General
- Minister of Finance
- President of the Treasury Board
- Minister of Natural Resources
- Minister of Human Resources
- Minister of Health
- Attorney-General of New Brunswick
- Minister of Education and Early Childhood Development
- Minister of Transportation and Infrastructure
- Minister of Agriculture, Aquaculture and Fisheries
- Minister of Economic Development
- Minister of Post-Secondary Education, Training and Labour
- Minister of Energy and Mines
- Minister responsible for Efficiency New Brunswick
- Minister of Government Services
- Minister responsible for Aboriginal Affairs
- Minister of Social Development (Canada)
- Minister of Healthy and Inclusive Communities
- Minister of Environment and Local Government
- Minister of Tourism, Heritage and Culture
- Head of state's representative (Viceroy): Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick, Brenda Murphy
Legislative branch of the government
[edit]- Parliament of New Brunswick (unicameral): Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick
- Federal representation
Judicial branch of the government
[edit]- Federal Courts of Canada
- Canadian court of appeal: Court of Appeal of New Brunswick
- Superior court: Court of Queen's Bench of New Brunswick
- Provincial Court: Provincial Court of New Brunswick
- Military court: Court Martial Appeal Court of Canada
Law and order
[edit]- New Brunswick Bar Association: the provincial law society
- Capital punishment: none.
- Canada eliminated the death penalty for murder on July 14, 1976.
Military
[edit]Canadian Forces Being a part of Canada, New Brunswick does not have its own military.
Local government
[edit]History
[edit]History, by period
[edit]- Pre-European era
- French Colonial era
- British Colonial era
- Since confederation
- History of the Acadians
History, by region
[edit]Culture
[edit]- Provincial decorations and medals
- Festivals in New Brunswick
- Cinema of New Brunswick
- Mass media in New Brunswick
- Museums in New Brunswick
- Music of New Brunswick
- Public holidays in New Brunswick
People
[edit]- List of people from New Brunswick
- Acadians
- William Bennett (clergyman)
- Ethnic groups in New Brunswick
Religion
[edit]- Religion in New Brunswick
- Christianity in New Brunswick
- Islam in New Brunswick
- Hinduism in New Brunswick
- Judaism in New Brunswick
- Irreligion in New Brunswick
Sports
[edit]- Sport in New Brunswick
- UNB Varsity Reds
- Moncton Aigles Bleus
- Moncton Mets (baseball)
- Moncton Miracles (basketball)
- Saint John Riptide (basketball)
Symbols
[edit]- Coat of arms of New Brunswick
- Flag of New Brunswick
- Provincial flower: purple violet
- Provincial bird: Black-capped chickadee
- Provincial tree: balsam fir
- Provincial motto: Spem reduxit (Hope was restored)
- Provincial capital: Fredericton
Economy and infrastructure
[edit]- Media in New Brunswick
- Currency: Canadian dollar
- NB Power
- Horizon Health Network
- Vitalité Health Network
- Transport in New Brunswick (category)
Education
[edit]- Primary and secondary education
- Higher education in New Brunswick
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "New Brunswick [Province] and Canada [Country] (table). Census Profile". Statistics Canada. November 29, 2017. Retrieved June 8, 2020.
External links
[edit]Wikivoyage has a travel guide for New Brunswick.
- New Brunswick at Curlie
- Official site of the Government of New Brunswick
- Official site of Tourism New Brunswick
- New Brunswick at the Department of Canadian Heritage
- Maritime Tourism
- Symbols of New Brunswick Archived 2009-06-15 at the Wayback Machine
- New Brunswick Museum
- New Brunswick Lighthouses
- Historical and Genealogical Resources of New Brunswick historical census, birth, marriage and death records, immigration, settlement, biography, cemeteries, burial records, land records, First Nations and more
- From Louis to Lord: New Brunswick Elections, 1960–2003