Attawapiskat River

ARTICLE CONTENTS:  |  Links to Other Sites
Attawapiskat River, 748 km long, formed by the confluence of the Pineimuta, Trading and Otoskwin rivers at Attawapiskat Lake, in northeastern Ontario, flows east, jogs north and runs east to the flatland by JAMES BAY. Its drainage area is 50 200 km2 and its mean discharge 626 m3/s. Its mouth, mired in bog and marsh, is a migratory stopover for great numbers of ducks and geese. The whole course is largely uninhabited except for a few trading posts and the small Cree settlement of Attawapiskat at the river mouth. The name, from the Algonquian atawabiskat meaning "rock bottom," refers to its limestone bed, once the bottom of an ancient sea.

Author JAMES MARSH


Links to Other Sites
Otoskwin-Attawapiskat River Provincial Park
Information page for Otoskwin-Attawapiskat River Provincial Park in northern Ontario. From ontarioparks.com.

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