Englehart River Explained

Englehart River
Pushpin Map:Canada Ontario
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of the mouth of the Englehart River in Ontario
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:Canada
Subdivision Type2:Province
Subdivision Name2:Ontario
Subdivision Type3:Region
Subdivision Name3:Northeastern Ontario
Subdivision Type4:District
Subdivision Name4:Timiskaming
Length:105km (65miles)
Discharge1 Location:Englehart River near Englehart (WSC - 02JC001)
Discharge1 Avg:17.83m3/s
Source1:Fallduck Lakes
Source1 Location:Terry Township
Source1 Coordinates:48.1942°N -80.4508°W
Source1 Elevation:324m (1,063feet)
Mouth:Blanche River
Mouth Location:Marter Township
Mouth Coordinates:47.8467°N -79.8394°W
Mouth Elevation:180m (590feet)
River System:Saint Lawrence River drainage basin
Basin Size:1110km2

The Englehart River is a river in Timiskaming District in northeastern Ontario, Canada.[1] It is in the Saint Lawrence River drainage basin and is a right tributary of the Blanche River.

Its watershed is about 1110km2 in size[2] and the river is about 105km (65miles) long.[3]

Geography

The Englehart River begins at Fallduck Lakes in Terry Township. It flows southeast, and after passing under Highway 66, it flow through a swampy river corridor with several oxbow lakes and backwater sloughs. The silty clay river banks have shrub thickets with some black ash and balsam poplar. The higher banks support stands of old growth white cedar and white spruce.

The river enters Long Lake in the northwest and exits the lake in the southeast, heading east, passing over one of two dams and under Ontario Highway 573 at the community of Charlton (in the municipality of Charlton and Dack), then heads under Ontario Highway 560. The river passes over a series of waterfalls and rapids (Sunday Creek Falls, Horseshoe Falls, Hell's Gate, High Falls, and Nuisance Rapids), turns north, flows under Ontario Highway 11 and the Ontario Northland Railway mainline at the town of Englehart, then reaches its mouth at the Blanche River at Marter Township. The Blanche River flows via the Ottawa River to the Saint Lawrence River.

Tributaries

Provincial parks

The Englehart River Fine Sand Plain and Waterway Provincial Park protects a (nearly) contiguous portions of the Englehart River between Highway 66 and the northwestern part of Long Lake, as well as noncontiguous sections on the southeastern portion of Long Lake. The park, created to protect a recreational canoe route, is southwest of the Town of Kirkland Lake and west of the Town of Englehart.

The park includes, as its name indicates, an area with fine sandy ground moraine till on the west side of the Englehart River. Other notable features are two Areas of Natural and Scientific Interest (ANSI):

  1. The Teepee Creek Gap ANSI has a small 20adj=midNaNadj=mid gorge through which the Teepee Creek flows before draining into Englehart River. Its vegetation is characterized by a mix of coniferous and intolerant hardwood species.
  2. The Kushog Lake Dune Complex ANSI contains several linear dune ridges that are remants of postglacial conditions in the glacial Lake Barlow basin area. The dominant tree species there are poplar, jack pine, black spruce, and larch.

The Englehart River Fine Sand Plain and Waterway Provincial Park is a non-operating park. There are no facilities or services provided. Permitted activities include canoeing and hunting. The canoe route is recommended for intermediate to advanced-level paddlers.

Another small portion of the Englehart River is protected in the Kap-Kig-Iwan Provincial Park, located on the river between the communities of Charlton and Englehart.

Geology

The river's course through Englehart River Fine Sand Plain and Waterway Provincial Park is in the Cross Lake Fault, the northeast facing escarpment of which is the southwest boundary of the Lake Timiskaming Rift Valley.

See also

References

Other map sources:

Notes and References

  1. FBCRS. Englehart River. 2014-05-13.
  2. Web site: Englehart River near Englehart (02JC001) . https://archive.today/20140514014120/http://www.wsc.ec.gc.ca/applications/H2O/graph-eng.cfm?station=02JC001&report=daily&year=1921 . dead . 2014-05-14 . . 2010-04-30 . 2014-05-15 .
  3. Web site: Englehart River Fine Sand Plain and Waterway Provincial Park - Interim Management Statement. PDF. 2006-05-26. 2014-05-15.