Lake Ainslie Explained

Lake Ainslie
Pushpin Map:Nova Scotia
Location:Inverness County, Nova Scotia
Type:Glacial Lake
Inflow:Trout Brook
Outflow:Margaree River
Basin Countries:Canada
Length:20km (10miles)
Width:7km (04miles)
Area:57.4km2
Depth:5.75m (18.86feet)
Max-Depth:18m (59feet)
Volume:0.33km3
Elevation:57m (187feet)
Islands:none

Lake Ainslie is the largest natural freshwater lake on Cape Breton. The Southwest Margaree River starts at the lake and empties into the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. The lake is approximately long and averages in width.[1]

It was formed during the Pleistocene, about two million years ago, when glacial outwash blocked the drainage of the valley of Loch Ban. It is underlain primarily by sedimentary deposits of the Horton and Windsor Formations, dating back about 350 million years.[2]

A number of bald eagles nest around the lake. The lake was named after George Robert Ainslie, the Lieutenant Governor of Cape Breton Island from 1816 to 1820, when Cape Breton became part of Nova Scotia.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lake Ainslie - Home. December 8, 2014.
  2. Web site: Lake Ainslie Water Quality Report. May 1991 – September 1993. December 8, 2014.