Gaspé Bay Explained

Gaspé Bay is a bay of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, located on the northeast coast of the Gaspé Peninsula, Gaspésie-Îles-de-la-Madeleine region, Quebec, Canada.[1]

History

Gaspé Bay is where Jacques Cartier took possession of New France (now part of Canada) in the name of François I of France on July 24, 1534 - the beginning of France's overseas expansion.[2]

British General James Wolfe raided the Bay in the Gulf of St. Lawrence Campaign (1758), the year before the Siege of Quebec.

48.767°N -64.289°W

Paleobotanical fossils and trace fossils of Archaeognatha from the Devonian period have been found on the bay's shores.[3]

The town of Gaspé, Quebec lies on a part of its southern shore, while most of its northern shore is in the Forillon National Park. The main rivers draining to the bay are the Dartmouth River and the York River (the latter one has its mouth in the city center of Gaspé).

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gaspé Bay - toponymy . Gouvernement of Quebec . Commission de Toponymy Quebec . 15 August 2024 . fr . 5 December 1968 . ... deep marine embayment occupies a vast syncline and penetrates about thirty kilometers inland where the York, Dartmouth and Saint John rivers flow..
  2. Web site: Jacques Cartier. Allaire. Bernard. 2016-07-18.
  3. Book: Grimaldi . David. Engel . Michael . Evolution of the Insects . Cambridge University Press. . 2005 . 66 . English . 9780521821490.