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Reykjavik (Iceland)
This city of more than 100,000 people is Iceland's chief port, the centre of its cod-fishing industry, and its capital. Located in southwest Iceland, it is the northernmost metropolis in the world. It sits on the edge of More...
Narsaq (Greenland)
Narsaq, 'the plain' in Greenlandic referring to the beautiful plain on which the town is built, lies on the southern tip of Greenland just south of Narsarsuaq where there is an airport. The waters around the More...
Nuuk (Greenland)
The capital, Nuuk, formerly known as Godthab (Good Hope) on the south-western coast, was founded in 1721 and is the largest and oldest Danish settlement on Greenland. It boasts an ice-free harbour on the Davis Strait and More...
Qaqortoq (Greenland)
Qaqortoq (also Julianhab) is located on Julianehab Fjord, an inlet of the Labrador Sea on the southeastern coast of Greenland. Founded in 1755 by Anders Olsen, a Norwegian merchant, and named after Queen Juliana Maria of More...
Quebec City
Sometimes called the "Gibraltar of North America," Québec City is carved into the 350-foot cliff of Cape Diamond, situated at the confluence of the St Lawrence and Saint-Charles rivers in the southern part of Quebec province. More...
Montreal (Canada)
Montreal, a major port on the St Lawrence Seaway, is in the south of Quebec Province, Canada, on the Ile-de-Montréal (Montreal Island), at the confluence of the St Lawrence and Ottawa rivers. The city's heritage is apparent More...
Halifax or Sydney (Nova Scotia)
Halifax is the capital city of Nova Scotia, Canada, and a busy port on the southern part of the province's eastern shore. It has one of the biggest and deepest natural harbours along the eastern seaboard of North More...
Charlottetown (Prince Edward Island)
Charlottetown is located on Prince Edward Island, one of Canada's most beautiful provinces. Its red sandstone cliffs and gently rolling green hillsides led 16th-century explorer Jacques Cartier to More...
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