TANTRAMAR MARSHES


The 'Tantramar Marshes' are on the southern part of the Isthmus of Chignecto, which joins Nova Scotia to New Brunswick and the Canadian mainland.
The marshes penetrate inland from the Bay of Fundy for 10 kilometers. Acadians, who called the region ''Beaubassin'', built dikes in the early 1700s to stop the tidal influx of salt water, creating rich agricultural land on the deep sedimentary soils.
The name ''Tantramar'' is derived from the Acadian French "Tintamarre", meaning 'din' or 'racket', a reference to the noisy flocks of birds which feed there. The marshes are an important stopover for migrating waterfowl such as semi-palmated Sandpipers and Canada Geese. Today the marshes are the site of two bird sanctuaries.
In the past, the Tantramar Marshes were called the "World's Largest Hayfield". The hay was shipped for commercial sale along the Eastern Seaboard and Europe as late as the 1930s. As a salt marsh, with its rich, sticky, red mud and soil, the hay grown there is high in iodine. In a world where food additives were not yet being used, iodine-rich hay made the Tantramar a valuable source for healthy, high quality fodder.
A few historic hay barns still dot the landscape. In the 1930's there were over 400 post-and-beam hay barns scattered across the marsh. Today there are less than 30.
The following rivers drain from and around the marshes:

Aulac River

LaPlanche River

Missaguash River

Tantramar River

Contents
Tantramar Region
External links
Further reading

Tantramar Region


Over time, the marshes have come to identify the overall inter-provincial region and include the following communities:
Nova Scotia

Amherst

Amherst Point

East Amherst

Fort Lawrence

West Amherst
New Brunswick

Aulac

British Settlement

Halls Hill

Jolicure

Middle Sackville

Midgic

Mount Whatley

Point de Bute

Sackville

Upper Point de Bute

Upper Sackville

Westcock
The Tantramar Heritage Trust is a charity dedicated to preserving heritage resources related to this region.

External links



Photography of the Tantramar Marshes.

Marshland: Records of Life on the Tantramar | MTA Archives.

Placeopedia.com map of the Tantramar Marshes.

Acadian Ancestral Home - a repository for Acadian history & genealogy

Bill Hamilton Flashback — an informative and entertaining look at the history and people of the Tantramar region

Further reading



★ ''Maritime dykelands: The 350 Year Struggle'', published by the Province of Nova Scotia, 1987

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