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Seven Wonders of Canada 1/1 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Wonders_of_Canada reference science, encyclopedia 2026-05-05T08:19:06.576406+00:00 kb-cron

The Seven Wonders of Canada was a 2007 competition sponsored by CBC Television's The National and CBC Radio One's Sounds Like Canada. They sought to determine Canada's "seven wonders" by receiving nominations from viewers, and then from on-line voting of the short list. After the vote, a panel of judges, Ra McGuire, Roy MacGregor and Roberta L. Jamieson, picked the winners based on geographic and poetic criteria. Their seven picks were revealed on The National on June 7, 2007, making the official Seven Wonders of Canada, the Canoe, the Igloo, Niagara Falls, Old Quebec City, Pier 21 Halifax, Prairie Skies, and the Rockies. CBC anchor Peter Mansbridge commented on the top winner, “its hard to imagine Canada being Canada without the canoe. Explorers, missionaries, fur traders and First Nations—theyre all linked by this subtle and simple craft. To many, the quintessential Canadian experience begins by picking up a paddle. Thats why the canoe is one of the seven wonders” (Osler 2014). There were over 25,000 nominations and 1 million votes cast, according to the CBC website. The top audience votes were the Sleeping Giant, Niagara Falls, the Bay of Fundy, Nahanni National Park Reserve, the Northern Lights, the Rockies, and the Cabot Trail. The CBC website has a dedicated section for the Seven Wonders of Canada (https://www.cbc.ca/sevenwonders/index.html).

== CBC's Seven Wonders of Canada ==

== Top seven in voting ==

Full voting results

== Short list ==

== See also ==

Wonders of the World (disambiguation) Wonders of the World

== References ==

Ra McGuire; Roy MacGregor; Roberta L. Jamieson (2007). "Judges' Choices for The Seven Wonders of Canada". CBC News. Retrieved 2009-12-22. "Top 7 Audience Selections for the Seven Wonders of Canada". CBC News. 2007. Retrieved 2009-12-22. Sanford, Osler (2013). Canoe Crossings: Understanding the Craft that Helped Shape British Columbia. Heritage House Publishing, Victoria, British Columbia. CBC website, Seven Wonders of Canada. https://www.cbc.ca/sevenwonders/index.html