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Saskatoon| Largest city in Saskatchewan, Canada, on the South Saskatchewan River; population (1996) 221,400. It is the commercial, processing, and distribution centre of a vast grain-farming area. Related manufacturing plants produce flour, linseed oil, glycol, glucose, mixed feeds, and agricultural equipment. Other industries include meat-packing, oil-refining, biotechnology, telecommunications, electronics, and the production of chemicals and fibre optics. Potash is mined nearby. The University of Saskatchewan was established here in 1907. |
| Founded in 1882 as a Methodist temperance colony, the city is named after a local native berry. |
| The railway reached Saskatoon in 1890, but the city only expanded rapidly with the influx of immigrant settlers to the prairie lands in the first decade of the 20th century. |
| Features include the Ukrainian Museum of Canada, a branch of the Western Development Museum, the Mendel Art Gallery, and the Wanuskewin Heritage Park, commemorating the native culture of the northern Plains Indians. |
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