Great Whale River Explained

Great Whale River
Name Native:
    Map:Great Whale map.png
    Map Size:250
    Subdivision Type1:Country
    Subdivision Name1:Canada
    Subdivision Type2:Province
    Subdivision Name2:Quebec
    Subdivision Type3:Region
    Subdivision Name3:Nunavik
    Length:724km (450miles)[1]
    Discharge1 Avg:680m3/s
    Source1:Lake Saint-Luson
    Source1 Coordinates:54.825°N -70.5381°W
    Source1 Elevation:500m (1,600feet)
    Mouth:Hudson Bay
    Mouth Location:Kuujjuarapik / Whapmagoostui
    Mouth Coordinates:55.2664°N -77.7897°W
    Mouth Elevation:0m (00feet)
    Basin Size:42700km2

    The Great Whale River is a river in Nunavik, Quebec, Canada. It flows from Lac Saint-Luson through Lac Bienville west to Hudson Bay. While the lower section of the river (after Lac Bienville) has a very powerful current, with many waterfalls (up to 15m (49feet) or 20m (70feet) in height) and rapids, the upper section consists of a series of lakes interconnected by steep rapids and ledges.

    Great Whale River also has a branch originating from Caniapiscau Reservoir. For canoeists, this is the easiest access (a bridge on the Trans-Taiga Road at Lac Montausier 54.7315°N -70.1959°W).

    Both the northern village of Kuujjuarapik, whose inhabitants are mostly Inuit, and the Cree village of Whapmagoostui are situated at the mouth of the river, near the site of the former RCAF Station Great Whale River. The villages were formerly known collectively as "Great Whale River" and "Poste-de-la-Baleine."

    The portion between Lake Bienville and the mouth of the Coats River has also been called Abchigamich River, but this name was dropped in 1946 by the Commission de géographie du Québec. Also, the name has often been wrongly translated into French as Rivière de la Grande Baleine (not until 1962 did the Commission de géographie du Québec officially adopt the current Grande rivière de la Baleine).

    History

    The Great Whale River was a place favored by the Cree and Inuit for hunting beluga long before the arrival of Europeans. Even though both were nomadic, the mouth of the river was often an encampment site and served as unofficial border.

    The name of the river was recorded in 1744 in the logbooks of Hudson's Bay Company employees Thomas Mitchell and John Longland, while exploring the bay's coast. The entry for July 25 made the first mention of the "Great White Whail River". It may have come from the Cree Whapmagoostui, meaning River of the Whale, and referring to the hunting of white whale or beluga there.[2]

    In the early 1970s, the state-owned provincial power utility Hydro-Québec planned to construct three hydroelectric power stations on the Great Whale River as a part of the James Bay Project.[3] Although detailed planning for the project was only begun in 1986, opposition from Crees, Inuit, environmental organizations like Greenpeace and the Friends of the Earth and other activists led the Premier of Quebec, Jacques Parizeau, to announce in November 1994, that the project was suspended indefinitely. However, the project may still be revived in the future.

    List of lakes on the upper section

    See also

    Sources

    Further reading

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. http://atlas.nrcan.gc.ca/site/english/learningresources/facts/rivers.html Atlas of Canada
    2. Web site: Grande rivière de la Baleine . 2008-12-04 . Commission de toponymie du Québec . French . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160303183110/http://www.toponymie.gouv.qc.ca/ct/topos/carto.asp?Speci=3224&Latitude=55,26611&Longitude=-77,78472&Zoom=1700 . 2016-03-03 .
    3. http://www.ainc-inac.gc.ca/pr/agr/que/jbnq5_e.PDF James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement, ch. 8.1.3, pp. 114-115.