How can parts of Canada be "missing" gravity?
Bear in mind that the variations are pretty small, on the order of a few millionths of the so called "standard" acceleration due to gravity. They're measured in units called milligals, a thousandth of a gal, which is the unit of acceleration in the Centimeter-Gram-Second system of units. High school physics (at least when I went) generally uses a value for the acceleration due to gravity near the earth's surface of 9.8 meters/sec/sec, which in the C.G.S. system is 980 cm/sec/sec. It actually varies with latitude because of earth's rotation making it not quite a sphere, from 978.049 at the equator to 983.221 at the poles, so a milligal is about a millionth of the normal field. Anomalies due to things like salt domes, oil-bearing structures, undulating strata, topographic variations, and ore bodies, rarely exceed a few milligals and are often only a fraction of a milligal, so gravity measurements need instruments accurate to a few parts in a hundred million.
No doubt a few of you are now thinking of bad puns about gals, tiny women, thousandths of a tiny woman. Try to restrain yourselves or I'll tell you all about the Bouguer anomaly and you can switch to bad puns about French boogers.