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Île Perrot

Île Perrot
Island
Île Perrot, showing its municipalities:Green: Ville de l'Île-PerrotYellow: Notre-Dame-de-l'Île-PerrotRed: PincourtBlue: Terrasse-Vaudreuil
Île Perrot, showing its municipalities:
Green: Ville de l'Île-Perrot
Yellow: Notre-Dame-de-l'Île-Perrot
Red: Pincourt
Blue: Terrasse-Vaudreuil
Coordinates: 45°21′01″N 73°54′09″W / 45.35028°N 73.90250°W / 45.35028; -73.90250Coordinates: 45°21′01″N 73°54′09″W / 45.35028°N 73.90250°W / 45.35028; -73.90250
Country Canada
Province Quebec
Region Montérégie
RCM Vaudreuil-Soulanges
Area
 • Land 41.94 km2 (16.19 sq mi)
Population (2011)
 • Total 37,399
 • Density 891.7/km2 (2,309/sq mi)
Time zone Eastern (EST) (UTC-5)
 • Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
Postal code span J7W
J7V
Area code(s) (514) and (438)

Île Perrot (French pronunciation: ​[il pɛʁo]) is an island west of the island of Montreal in the Canadian province of Quebec. Part of the Hochelaga Archipelago, the island lies between Lake Saint-Louis and Lac des Deux-Montagnes. The island was granted by the Intendant Talon of New France to its founder François-Marie Perrot then Governor of Montreal on the 28th of October 1672.

Nearly 38,000 people live in one of Île Perrot’s four municipalities:

Île Perrot holds the only working windmill in Quebec, dating from the time Île-Perrot was a seigneury in the French colony of New France. The windmill and associated miller's house were designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1969, and a Historic Monument under provincial heritage legislation in 1977. In the windmill's honour, what now constitutes the commercial artery of the island was named boulevard Don-Quichotte.

The island is underlain by Cambrian-age quartzite. Angular blocks of this hard rock are visible on the surface over much of the island. The soil is a stony sandy loam podzol which has developed on acidic, nutrient-poor quartzite till. Over parts of the island, this till is covered with clay which is nutrient-rich and much less stony, but poorly drained and classified as gleysol.


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