LYCOS RETRIEVER Beta Retriever Home  |  What is Lycos Retriever?   
Alberta
built 221 days ago
P2 Energy Solutions, Alberta (formerly Qbyte) is a wholly owned subsidiary of P2 Energy Solutions. P2 Energy Solutions focuses on the development and support of data, software and enterprise services to meet the information and business process needs of the energy industry. P2 Energy Solutions is the oil and gas industry's most comprehensive source of business management solutions. With solutions deployed at more than 500 companies worldwide, P2 Energy Solutions enables clients to achieve greater productivity while maintaining effective controls. The company has an 80-year history of serving the oil and gas industry and understands its workflow processes. P2 Energy Solutions has the breadth and depth of expertise to meet the expanding financial, operational and data management needs of energy companies from private independents to supermajors.
Source:
Grain elevator in southern Alberta The capital city of Alberta is Edmonton, located just south of the centre of the province. Calgary is a major distribution and transportation hub as well as being one of Canada's major commerce centres. Edmonton is the primary supply and service hub for Canada's oil sands and other northern resource industries. According to recent population estimates, these two metropolitan areas have now both exceeded 1 million people, Calgary being slightly more populous than Edmonton.[3] Other municipalities in the province include Red Deer, Lethbridge, Medicine Hat, Fort McMurray, Grande Prairie, Camrose, Lloydminster, Wetaskiwin, Banff, Cold Lake, and Jasper.
Alberta has very majestic National Parks, and superlatives can only describe them. Ruggedly mountainous Jasper National Park is Canada’s largest mountain national park, where vacationers can enjoy the thunderous sound of water rushing down Sunwapta Falls, and the peacefulness of Miette Hot Springs. Banff National Park holds the title of Canada’s first and oldest national park and is made up of glaciers, forests, meadows, mountains, and valleys. Waterton Lakes National Park joined Montana’s Glacier National Park and deemed the world’s first international peace park. Wood Buffalo National Park is Canada’s largest national park
Alberta has over 180,000 km of highways and roads, of which nearly 50,000 km are paved. The main north-south corridor is Highway 2, which begins south of Cardston at the Carway border crossing and is part of the CANAMEX Corridor. Highway 4, which effectively extends U.S. Interstate Highway 15 into Alberta and is the busiest U.S. gateway to the province, begins at the Coutts border crossing and ends at Lethbridge. Highway 3 joins Lethbridge to Fort Macleod and links Highway 4 to Highway 2. Highway 2 travels northward through Fort Macleod, Calgary, Red Deer, and Edmonton before dividing into two highways. The section of Highway 2 between Calgary and Edmonton has been named the Queen Elizabeth II Highway to commemorate the visit of the monarch in 2005.
Oil and Gas Exploration Development Company, Oil Investment Opportunity, Natural Gas and Oil Exploration Calgary, Alberta – December 19th, 2005 --/PRNewswire/-- TAG Oil Ltd. (TSX-V: TAO / OTCBB: TAGOF) announced today that the SuppleJack South-1 well (TAG: 13.33%) has completed drilling operations at a total depth of 1951m. The well has been logged and the main target “SN-0 Sandstone” has been penetrated. A seven meter thick high quality sand has tested a thin zone of free oil over water. The Joint Venture has agreed to whipstock the SuppleJack South-1 well bore approximately 600m to the south with anticipation of increasing the free oil column in the new well bore. The whipstock well will ... further test three shallower zones penetrated in SuppleJack South-1, which the JV has also interpreted to contain thin moveable hydrocarbon columns. It is expected the whipstock operation should be completed by December 31st, 2005.
Source:
Alberta was originally part of the vast territory granted to the Hudson's Bay Company by King Charles II in 1670, and its early history was dominated by the fur trade. The first European known to have reached (1754) present-day Alberta was Anthony Hendon of the Hudson's Bay Company. There was ... much exploration of the region by the Montreal-based North West Company, which merged with the Hudson's Bay Company in 1821. Traders arrived from the upper Great Lakes before Sir Alexander Mackenzie crossed (1793) the region on his way to the Pacific. In 1794 a Hudson's Bay Company fort was built at the site of present-day Edmonton. Destroyed by natives in 1807, it was rebuilt 12 years later and for 50 years thereafter served traders and missionaries within a wide radius.
Source:
SEARCH
MORE ABOUT
  Alberta