Cub Hills

The Cub Hills[1] are a hilly plateau located south-east of the geographical centre of the Canadian province of Saskatchewan.

[3] The Cubs Hills are 150 km (93 mi) north-east of Prince Albert and are in the Northern Saskatchewan Administration District and Census Division #18.

Throughout the plateau, evidence left behind by the glaciers includes deposits of eskers and push moraines and tunnel valleys, which were created by subglacial erosion by meltwater.

Boreal forest, muskeg, rolling hills, and small lakes and rivers are prominent features of the landscape today.

All seven species of trout in Saskatchewan are found in the Cub Hills, including brown, rainbow, cutthroat, brook, tiger, lake, and splake.

There is a wide variety of animals that make the Cub Hills home, including moose, white-tailed deer, elk, black bears, timber wolves, lynx, snowshoe hares, beaver, and muskrats.