Why is it that so many Germans emigrated to the US but very few emigrated to Canada?

Posted April 30th, 2012 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

The only people of “German” descent in Canada that I have met are of Russian mennonite extraction and their “German” lineage actually originates in the low countries or Switzerland. Very few people actually from Germany ever emigrated to Canada.
Maybe the Poles yeah, but Ukrainians came here for all the land grants they were given to farm. They were never given such grants in the US.
Much was the same case for Russian Mennonites I guess though. Most of them traveled over with the Ukrainians I believe.

i bet u didn’t know THIS! very educationg!!!!?

Posted January 29th, 2012 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

Flying squirrels are the oldest living line of modern squirrels (modern, as opposed to their precursors, the early-Eocene squirrel-like rodents called “paramyids”). Evidence of their relative’s existence goes back to the late Eocene period, between 38 and 55 million years ago! Tree squirrels made their first appearance on this earth during the late Oligocene period, about 30 million years ago. Ground squirrels came in waves, with some appearing 28 million years ago (very late Oligocene period), late Miocene period (8 million years ago) and very late Pliocene period (2.5 million years ago).

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North American flying squirrels are not very well represented in the fossil record, for several reasons.

Their fine bone structures do not fossilize well, and due to their arboreal lifestyle, dead specimens rarely were situated so that fossilization could occur. Flying squirrel teeth are often the only fossil record that survive the ravages of time. Attempts have been made, in the past, to identify extinct flying squirrel species’ via dentition characteristics, but it was found that using this method alone was inaccurate more often than not. A high degree of expertise is required to make distinctions between extinct tree and flying squirrel teeth, so skeletal (including the skull) AND dental characteristics combined present the most accurate method of identification.

So, there being a paucity of information to be gleaned from fossil records (these records are virtually all Pleistocene Era records, by the way), we have little data to enlighten us about the flying squirrel’s time here on this continent.

What we do know, however, is:

What we now call the southern flying squirrel likely emigrated to North America via the Bering Land Bridge via Asia roughly 25 million years ago during the early Miocene era. This squirrel was adapted for life in temperate mixed deciduous-coniferous forests, and migrated north and south with the glacier activity through the eons.

More adapted to warmer climes than the northern, southern flying squirrels found themselves migrating as far south as Central America during the Pleistocene era, roughly 100,000 years ago. Relict populations exist to this day in higher-elevation areas of Central America and Mexico, their connectivity forever lost due to climate changes and more recently, large-scale deforestation.

What we now call the northern flying squirrel is a relative newcomer to North America, having emigrated to North America during another incarnation of the Bering Land Bridge roughly 12 million years ago, during the early Pliocene era. This route of emigration via the Bering Land Bridge is not unusual, as many of North America’s mammals, both extinct and extant, followed a similar route. In fact, it is generally accepted that our First Nations people emigrated to this continent via the Bering Land Bridge roughly 12,000 years ago, although there is some evidence that there may have been “ancient mariners” who rafted across the Pacific Ocean

The general thinking today is that the northern flying squirrels came from different stock than that of the southern flying squirrel. The most convincing argument for this theory is the squirrel’s baculum, a small supporting bone of the penis that aids in the mating process and is present in many mammal species. The northern flying squirrel’s baculum is structurally much more comparable in shape possessed by the Asian genus Hylopetes than that of the southern flying squirrel’s. Shown on the right is the baculum of the northern flying squirrel (much enlarged!).

The Bering Land Bridge (Beringia)

The Bering Sea, Bering Strait and Beringia (a term to describe an area ranging from the Kolyma River in the Russian far east to the Mackenzie River in the Northwest Territories of Canada) was named for Vitus Bering, a Danish explorer for a Russian czar in the 18th Century.

At some points, this land mass, which at times sported a rich mixed forest environment, was thousands of miles wide, depending upon sea levels in the Bering Sea.

An animated video on how post-glacial flooding affects the size and scope of the Bering Land Bridge can be found here.

Below is a graphic detailing the extent of the last ice age. Flying squirrels, like most of our mammals, had to pack their bags and head south to warmer, more suitable areas such as the taiga biomes shown below. Once a warming trend began to melt these huge masses of ice from south to north, wildlife also moved northward.

The United states is very different from its allied great britain and canada specifically regard to the?

Posted April 18th, 2011 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

government’s role in?

1) defense
2) natural resources
3) immigration
4) medical services

united states is very different from its allies britain and canada most especially regard goverment,s role in?

Posted April 5th, 2011 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

A defense

B natural resources

C immigration

D medical services

thank you so much god bless you

Heard criteria is very strict for Immigrating from UK to Canada? Is this true? Is it really hard to get in?

Posted January 15th, 2011 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

Canada immigration – Landing by road – very important and urgent?

Posted May 26th, 2010 by immigratecanada and filed in Uncategorized

Hi everyone,
I have got my 16 months old daughter’s immigration(on the passport) from Buffalo office. My daughter is in Canada with us as a visitor now. I was told by the CIC representative that she needs to go outside and then come back to Canada for completing her immigration process (i.e. she needs to land to canada).
I am planning to get her landing process done by crossing the southern border and then come back to Canada. My question is If I go to the Niagara falls border then do I need to go through the USA
immigration then come back to Canadian immigration. If Yes then is there any way I skip the USA immigration and direct go to the Canadian immigration at the border. The problem for going to the USA immigration is that we (my wife and I both) do not have a valid
visa to the USA. Also we both are just the permanent resident of Canada not citizens yet.
Any suggestion would be highly appreciated for avoiding USA immigration.
Thanks and Regards