Charlevoix ( , ) is a Cultural area and natural region in Quebec, on the north shore of the Saint Lawrence River as well as in the Laurentian Mountains area of the Canadian Shield. This dramatic landscape includes rolling terrain, fjords, headlands, and bays; the region was designated a World Biosphere Reserve by UNESCO in 1989. Administratively, it comprises the Charlevoix and Charlevoix-Est regional county municipalities within the larger Capitale-Nationale administrative region.
Features of note include:
The impact created the forty-mile-wide crater that is the heart of Quebec's Charlevoix region, ranging from just west of Baie-Saint-Paul to just east of La Malbaie. Today, the area inside the crater is home to 90 percent of Charlevoix residents and is a very pastoral setting by comparison to what it could have been.This area was subsequently reshaped by glaciation during the last ice age.
There have been several major earthquakes in the region in recorded history:
Maple forests including paper birch ( Betula papyriferae), alder ( Alder) and elm ( Elm) and with an understory of sumac ( Rhus typhina), Acer pensylvanicum and Cornus alternifolia; mixed fir ( Abies sp.) forest with Corylus cornuta, Sambucus pubens and Taxus canadensis; Taiga up to an altitude of 300 metres with fir and spruce (Picea spinulosa); estuarine tidal marsh and flats dominated by Scirpus americanus meadows including Zizania palustris, Sagittaria cuneata and S. latifolia; tundra with Ericaceous plant zones consisting of Kalmia spp., Ledum groenlandicum; stunted vegetation community (krummholz) with Picea mariana and Abies balsamea; agro-ecosystems with cereals, fruits and legumes, and river ecosystems.
Animal species in the area include beluga whale ( Delphinapterus leucas), wolf ( Canis lupus), boreal woodland caribou ( Rangifer tarandus caribou), North American cougar ( Puma concolor couguar) and blue whale ( Balaenoptera musculus).
Today, the economic landscape has diversified and major factors in the local economy are now forestry, silica mining, agriculture and tourism. The forest education centre ‘Les Palissades’ or the ecological centre ‘Port-au-Saumon’ are important institutions for environmental education in the area.
The Train de Charlevoix, a Heritage railway, linked the coastal communities of Charlevoix to Quebec City, from 2008 to 2024.
Charlevoix Airport is a small regional airport serving the region.
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