Athabasca Falls Explained

Athabasca Falls
Coordinates:52.6642°N -117.8836°W
Location:Jasper National Park, Alberta, Canada
Type:Segmented Horsetails
Run: [1]
Number Drops:2
Watercourse:Athabasca River

Athabasca Falls is a waterfall in Jasper National Park on the upper Athabasca River, approximately south of the townsite of Jasper, Alberta, Canada, and just west of the Icefields Parkway.

Geography and geology

Athabasca Falls is a Class 5 waterfall, with a total drop height of 24m (79feet) and a width of 46m (151feet).[1] A powerful, picturesque waterfall, Athabasca Falls is not known so much for its height as for its force, due to the large quantity of water falling into the gorge, which can be substantial even on a cold morning in the fall, when river levels tend to be at their lowest. The river falls over a layer of hard quartzite and through the softer limestone below, carving a short gorge and a number of potholes.[2]

Access

The falls can be safely viewed and photographed from various viewing platforms and walking trails around the falls. Access is from the nearby parking lot, which leads off Highway 93A just northeast of the falls. Highway 93A takes off from the nearby Icefields Parkway, and crosses the falls on the way north to the town of Jasper. Whitewater rafting often starts below the falls to travel downstream on the Athabasca River to Jasper.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Athabasca Falls, Alberta, Canada - World Waterfall Database. 2020-11-03. www.worldwaterfalldatabase.com. en.
  2. Web site: Parks Canada Agency. Government of Canada. 2017-08-02. Athabasca Falls - Jasper National Park. 2020-10-13. www.pc.gc.ca.